Kompi Blog

link in bio ideas

A practical guide to link in bio ideas with examples, use-cases, placement tips, decision rules, and copy/paste ideas.

Kompi Editorial·Updated 2025-12-28

Key takeaways

  • Pick one primary action (menu, booking, review, signup, offer).
  • Place it where people naturally pause (counter, table, entrance, packaging, receipt).
  • Track performance per placement so you can improve what matters.
  • Businesses in Ideas are increasingly using smarter tools to grow faster and track results more accurately.

Idea library you can copy

Below is a practical idea library you can copy. Each idea includes what to link to, a CTA line, and a tracking tip so you can improve results over time.

High-impact ideas you can implement

  • Primary action page
  • What to link to: A landing page with one main action and 2–4 supporting actions
  • CTA: Scan for link in bio ideas
  • Tracking tip: Create one QR per placement so you can compare performance
  • Offer of the week
  • What to link to: A page you can update weekly without reprinting
  • CTA: Scan for this week’s offer
  • Tracking tip: Track clicks over time; keep what performs and replace what doesn’t
  • Contact or booking
  • What to link to: A simple booking/contact form with minimal fields
  • CTA: Scan to contact us
  • Tracking tip: Measure form starts vs completes; shorten the form if completion is low
  • Reviews or feedback
  • What to link to: A feedback page or review destination
  • CTA: Scan to leave feedback
  • Tracking tip: Use separate QR codes for different locations/channels
  • FAQ or help
  • What to link to: A page answering the top 5 questions people ask in your context
  • CTA: Scan for quick answers
  • Tracking tip: Track which FAQs get clicked and expand those first

Examples tailored to Ideas

  • Segmented destination
  • What to link to: A landing page with a section specifically for Ideas
  • CTA: Scan for Ideas info
  • Tracking tip: Add UTMs so you can distinguish this audience
  • Social follow
  • What to link to: A page with social buttons + best content
  • CTA: Scan to follow
  • Tracking tip: Track which platform gets most taps and focus content there

CTA swipe file (copy/paste)

  • Scan for link in bio ideas
  • Scan to get started
  • Scan for a quick answer
  • Scan to see pricing
  • Scan to contact us
  • Scan to book
  • Scan for today’s offer
  • Scan to join updates
  • Scan for examples you can copy
  • Scan to track results

CTA tips that increase scans:

  • Say what happens after scanning (menu, offer, booking, review).
  • Keep it short (6–10 words).
  • Make the destination match the promise.
  • Add a reason when useful (e.g., “today’s specials”, “10% off”, “skip the line”).

High-performing use cases for Ideas

Make It Instantly Actionable
The best link in bio ideas are the ones people can use immediately. Give a clear next step, not a vague prompt.

Place It Where Decisions Happen
Put the QR code or link at the moment someone is deciding: on the table, on packaging, at the entrance, on receipts, or on signage.

Track And Iterate
Treat it like a campaign. Track scans/clicks, see what works, and update the destination without reprinting when possible.

How to implement this with Kompi

Instead of guessing or using disconnected tools, Kompi helps you implement link in bio ideas properly: create, track, and improve performance in one place.

The winning pattern is simple: one clear action, the right placement, and tracking so you can iterate.

A good “Kompi flow” you can use:

1) Create a destination that matches the placement (menu, offer, booking, contact, review, or signup).

2) Generate a QR code or short link for that specific placement.

3) Track scans/clicks and compare placements.

4) Improve the destination or CTA based on what’s working.

What to use in Kompi:

• QR menus: /qr-menus (great for restaurants, cafes, and venues).

• QR codes: /qr-code/dynamic (editable + trackable) or /qr-code/static (fixed destination).

• QR codes with logos: /qr-code/with-logo (branding + better recall).

Short links and tracking: /features/url-shortener and /links (for readable, trackable destinations).

Tip: don’t use one QR code everywhere. Create a separate QR code per placement (window, table, receipt, flyer). That way your analytics tells you what’s actually working.

Once you have 3–5 placements running, you’ll have enough data to double down on the top performer and cut what doesn’t convert.

FAQs

• Q: What are the best link in bio ideas?
A: The best link in bio ideas are simple, measurable, and tied to one clear action. Start with 1–3 high-intent placements, track performance, then scale what works.

• Q: Should I use a static or dynamic QR code?
A: If you want to update the destination later or track results per placement, use a changeable destination (dynamic/editable). If you will never change the destination and tracking doesn’t matter, a static destination can work.

• Q: How do I track QR code performance?
A: Use a trackable destination (short link + analytics) and separate QR codes per placement so you can compare performance accurately instead of guessing.

• Q: What’s a good scan-to-action rate?
A: It depends on context, but the biggest driver is “clarity of promise”. A strong CTA + easy next step can outperform a generic “scan me” by multiples. Use your baseline, then improve placement and destination first.

• Q: What’s the biggest mistake people make with link in bio ideas?
A: Sending scans to a slow, messy page with too many choices. Fix it by using one primary action, fast load, and a clear “what happens next” line.

• Q: How many QR codes should I create?
A: Start with 1–3. If performance matters, split by placement (table vs counter vs window). If campaigns matter, split by campaign. Don’t split everything at once.

• Q: How can Kompi help with link in bio ideas?
A: Kompi helps you create trackable links and QR codes, measure clicks/scans, and iterate quickly. You can update destinations and improve performance over time.

• Q: What should my QR code link to first?
A: Link to a simple landing page with one main action, then include 2–4 supporting actions. This usually converts better than sending people directly to a generic external destination.

Final thoughts

The best results come from testing, tracking, and iterating. Focus on what delivers real engagement, and use tools that give you clear feedback instead of assumptions.

A simple 3-week playbook

Week 1 — Launch the first 3 placements
  • Pick 3 placements where customers already pause (counter, table, receipt/window).
  • Create one QR per placement (don’t reuse the same code everywhere).
  • Set each QR to a specific destination (menu / order / review / Wi-Fi / booking).
  • Add a clear CTA next to the QR (tell people exactly what they’ll get).
  • Verify tracking works (scan, click, and confirm analytics records).
Week 2 — Measure and iterate
  • Compare performance by placement (scans/clicks per location).
  • Change only one variable at a time (CTA text OR destination OR placement).
  • Swap weak destinations for a simpler one-step page (less choice, more action).
  • Create a ‘winner’ version and roll it out to 2 more placements.
  • Log results weekly so you build a repeatable playbook.
Week 3 — Systemize and scale
  • Turn top performers into templates (copy, destination, design).
  • Add a second conversion path (review + signup, booking + menu, etc.) only after the primary works.
  • Create a monthly rotation plan (seasonal offers / limited-time menus).
  • Standardize signage so staff can deploy new QRs in minutes.
  • Scale the same framework to other locations/channels (flyers, delivery bags, receipts).