Have you ever landed and on a website (maybe a consultant, a creator, even a company you admire) and read their About page, only to feel... nothing? They're forgettable, interchangeable walls of text filled with jargon, vague values, and maybe a stock photo. Half of them sound like they were spat out by ChatGPT after a 30 second prompt. You read them, you maybe nod politely, and you instantly forget them. It’s sad, frankly, because this page should be the heartbeat of a brand or a person.
AI is a phenomenal tool. It can structure your thoughts, polish your prose, even generate entire drafts faster than you can brew coffee. If you know what you want to say, AI can help you say it better, faster. But that's the catch: you have to be clear on what you want to say.
But this epidemic of emptiness isn't just about bios. It’s everywhere. Generic marketing. Interchangeable services. Creators desperately echoing the same five "hacks" because they haven't figured out their own damn point of view. It's a sea of empty calories where substance should be.
The Real Problem? Not What You Think.
So, what’s the malfunction? Why do smart, capable people pump out this marketing BS?
You'll tell yourself it's because you "hate writing about yourself," or you're "too busy," or you just need "better copywriting skills." Laziness? Lack of time? Bullshit. Those are convenient excuses. Symptoms, not the disease.
Let’s cut the crap. This isn't a writing problem. It's not a marketing problem. It's a clarity problem.
AI Doesn't Create Substance. It Amplifies Whatever You Give It.
And here’s why this matters more than ever: AI can now write a flawless About page. It can draft your marketing emails, generate blog posts, even mimic conversational styles. It excels at producing polished, professional-sounding text.
But AI is just a tool. A powerful mirror. Feed it generic prompts rooted in an unclear sense of self, and it reflects back world-class, high-gloss emptiness. It amplifies whatever you give it. It cannot originate your core purpose. It cannot excavate your unique worldview. It cannot bleed your lived experience onto the page.
Here's What You Don’t Want To Hear.
And now that you’re here let's go deeper, because this is where it gets uncomfortable: Most business problems aren't business problems at all. They are usually personal problems reflecting onto the business. The root of that generic About page, that misaligned marketing, that feeling of being stuck? It’s usually a lack of deep, painful, rigorous self-awareness.
Think about it. Your business, especially as a solopreneur, is an extension of you. It's the vehicle you're building to exchange your value with the world. But if you don't know the driver, the engine, the destination... how can the vehicle function?
- Lack of self-awareness means you can't choose a resonant niche. You pick one based on market trends or what others are doing, not what uniquely aligns with your skills, values, and energy. Outcome: You feel like a commodity.
- Lack of self-awareness means you can't build an authentic brand. You mimic others or hide behind jargon because you don't know what makes you uniquely valuable or what story you're meant to tell. Outcome: You're invisible in a crowded market.
- Lack of self-awareness means your strategy is built on shaky ground. It's based on external "shoulds" rather than your intrinsic motivation and risk tolerance. Outcome: Strategic indecision and constant struggle.
This isn't some abstract, feel-good concept. This is the fundamental operating system for your business. If the system is unclear, the output is garbage.
Think You're Already Clear?
Yeah, I know. "Who is this guy calling me unaware?" Fair enough. Maybe you think you're self-aware. But if you were crystal clear on who you are, what you uniquely stand for, and the specific change you're here to make... would writing about it really be that hard? Would choosing your niche feel like torture? Would your strategy feel so damn confusing?
Clarity isn't just knowing your favorite color. It's understanding your psychological wiring. It's knowing your non-negotiable values even when money is on the table. It's identifying the unique intersection of your skills, passions, and worldview that only you inhabit.
Knowing who the hell you are simplifies everything. Trying to build a powerful brand or business without that internal clarity is like trying to navigate a minefield blindfolded while getting directions from Instagram gurus.
Ignoring This Has Real, Painful Costs.
This isn't some esoteric, "woo-woo" nonsense. This lack of clarity has real, painful consequences:
- It leads to generic positioning, making you feel like a commodity competing on price.
- It attracts misaligned clients who drain your energy because they don't connect with your core values.
- It fuels imposter syndrome because you're trying to project an image that doesn't feel authentic deep down.
- It results in strategic indecision about your niche, your offers, your pricing. Your internal compass isn't calibrated.
- Ultimately, it's a fast track to burnout and the regret of knowing you have unique potential but haven't built the right vehicle to express it.
If your only reason for being in business is "to make money," good luck. You're literally competing with everyone. If you want to build something impactful and fulfilling, you have to address the inner game.
Okay, So What Do You Do About It?
Look, I'm not here to be your therapist. But I am here to tell you that skipping this foundational work is strategic suicide for anyone trying to build something meaningful and authentic today.
And yes, it is work. Deep work. The kind that requires turning off the noise, ditching the motivational Instagram fluff, and honestly confronting who you are and what you actually want to build. Forget the gurus promising Lambos for breakfast. Forget the hacks and shortcuts.
In nearly 10 years of building things and seeing countless others try and fail, the only thing that consistently works is doing the damn work.
But here’s the kicker: while it requires effort, this "inner work" is the most strategic, leveraged activity you can do. Alignment isn't just feel-good nonsense. It’s the engine of a sustainable, impactful business. It unlocks focus, resilience, and the kind of energy that doesn't come from caffeine or hype, but from deep congruence.
The Only Way Out Is Through.
I can’t hand you self-awareness on a silver platter. But I can push you to ask the right questions. Stop tinkering with the font on your About page for a minute. Stop chasing the next marketing trend.
Ask yourself a different question this week:
If you stripped away all the external validation and income goals, what core belief about the world compels you to do the work you do? What change must you make to feel you haven't wasted your shot?
Figure that out. Because the strategy, the brand, the About page (that doesn't suck), the business that feels truly yours... it all starts there. Build from the inside out. It’s the only way you'll build something that matters.