My profile description is pretty brief--with just some of my background and interests. Is it important to put qualifications such as education, degrees, former and current jobs? Is it helpful to put more personal information about interests, philosophies, hopes and dreams? What would be the advantage of putting more information? Does google score a hubber any higher? Would it help in the searches? Etc, etc...?
I disagree with Kschang. If you can convince a reader, through your brilliant writing skills, thorough knowledge of the subject and friendly attitude that you are someone worth reading you could get a backlink from it.
A good profile can provide information that you are indeed an authority that can be believed as well as set the tone for readers to like you. A profile can be a resume in that you are selling yourself and your writing to the reader.
If you could convince just 1 out of 1000 readers to spread the word it would be quite valuable. It's a numbers game, and a good profile just might help.
I agree with both Wilderness and Kschang.
Firstly - most readers will never visit any of your other work. They won't visit your profile. They will just visit one page, from the search engine, to get the information they are looking for.
Secondly - Google can't "read" what's on your profile. To Google, the page is just a bunch of keywords and/or links - lots of them or a few.
Thirdly - Wilderness is correct in that if you do have pertinent information, some readers who are after more in depth information may sometimes visit your profile. However this is fairly rare. What I'd recommend as well/instead of putting your qualifications on your profile, is putting a little 'blurb' in your hub about your experience or qualifications to write on that topic, for instance:
Xyz is a qualified pharmacist who has worked in the field for twelve years. She has published two books and is a member of abc pharmacy association. Her interest in [hub topic] stems from some of the experiences she had with a friend who had [disease].
I think if you're, say, a pharmacist who will be writing Hubs related to that field then it makes sense to add it to your HP profile. If you're a pharmacist who writes about everything-but-the-kitchen-sink, then whether you add "pharmacist" to your profile is pretty much a matter of whether you prefer to or don't.
My think is, I've never had any intention of putting some types of personal details or personal background details online. (The Google+ profile, or something similar, asks things like "last place of employment". I'm not putting that kind of detail on any Internet profile.)
What I started to realize, though, is that if I wrote about something on which I had a lot of personal experience and/or previous study (not specific research for a specific Hub), I didn't want to go dig up references that I hadn't used for the Hub, but I had to figure out how to let the reader know I wasn't just pulling information out of "thin air" either. If I were a pharmacist, for example, in offline life (or in previous work), I may not have been writing about pharmacy, but instead about something I had a solid understanding of (like, for example, having a well behaved pet or dealing with loss in life - that kind of thing). With too many different subjects doing a neat, little, blurb for each can be tricky. (Somebody with a couple of career switches, some grown kids, a few decades of living as a grown up, and some personal interests in life can have a lot of personal experience that's pretty hard to condense into something like a blurb (for reasons only someone trying to do that would really understand/see).
So, I left my own "background" pretty much limited on my HP profile, included better info in my Google profile, and yet more info on stuff linked from that; and figured if anyone's really wondering what makes me qualified to write about something he can go look. One issue/challenge I've had with writing from assimilated knowledge/personal experience, though, is that I feel the need to make first-person references (once considered completely unacceptable) in order to let readers know that I had "intimate familiarity" with the subject. Even that, though, didn't let readers know some things weren't just a matter of personal experience, but also of study/work experience. (Not everyone has such "complications", though. (I'm not young, so enough time living as an adult tends to make things like experiences and work background complicated sometimes.)
It can be difficult to write 'objectively' with personal knowledge/experience for some don't feel badly. It takes practice. My own profile, I refer to knowledge and skills but to no specific 'industry'. We all have (or will have) many skills acquired over our lifetime it's presenting it to the public with a 'point' I believe that matters. People usually search for something to help them - just sit and think - will this help somebody? answer the what, where, when, why and how. Just have fun doing that
by Dylan Anthony 16 months ago
Hi, I'd like feedback on this article. Thanks in advance.https://hubpages.com/living/bathroom-cl … -your-home
by pulled name 11 years ago
I was going to treat a hub like a blog on a topic, but I seem to see that hubs are just individual articles or am I totally missing the idea?
by Whitstable Views 7 years ago
Hi,Hi,I keep getting the message that my hubs could be featured, but no matter how often I change them, they never are. I keep getting told that they may contain "spammy elements" but I'm not sure what these might be. Many of my hubs were previously published in my local newspaper, the...
by Jackie Lynnley 6 years ago
Hi Hubbers,I'd like some help with passing the Quality Assessment Process. Will you please give feedback on my article [url=https://hubpages.com/religion-philosophy/Jesus-Healed-Them-All]Jesus Healed Them All - Putting Faith in Prayer and the Word of God[/url]. What can I do to...
by irmisol 9 years ago
Authors should be free to write about alternative medical treatments that they personally found useful for a minor ailment, but claiming a recipe cures all forms of stage 4 cancer, or any other serious terminal illness, is unethical. Especially if the hub is plugging a book with the same unsound...
by Becki Rizzuti 9 years ago
For the past year or so, I've been paying very close attention to this subject. Squidoo pushed its lensmasters for a long time into providing personal content full of first-person perspective and personal pronouns. This has been a problem for me, personally, because I prefer to write in the second...
Copyright © 2024 The Arena Media Brands, LLC and respective content providers on this website. HubPages® is a registered trademark of The Arena Platform, Inc. Other product and company names shown may be trademarks of their respective owners. The Arena Media Brands, LLC and respective content providers to this website may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website.
Copyright © 2024 Maven Media Brands, LLC and respective owners.
As a user in the EEA, your approval is needed on a few things. To provide a better website experience, hubpages.com uses cookies (and other similar technologies) and may collect, process, and share personal data. Please choose which areas of our service you consent to our doing so.
For more information on managing or withdrawing consents and how we handle data, visit our Privacy Policy at: https://corp.maven.io/privacy-policy
Show DetailsNecessary | |
---|---|
HubPages Device ID | This is used to identify particular browsers or devices when the access the service, and is used for security reasons. |
Login | This is necessary to sign in to the HubPages Service. |
Google Recaptcha | This is used to prevent bots and spam. (Privacy Policy) |
Akismet | This is used to detect comment spam. (Privacy Policy) |
HubPages Google Analytics | This is used to provide data on traffic to our website, all personally identifyable data is anonymized. (Privacy Policy) |
HubPages Traffic Pixel | This is used to collect data on traffic to articles and other pages on our site. Unless you are signed in to a HubPages account, all personally identifiable information is anonymized. |
Amazon Web Services | This is a cloud services platform that we used to host our service. (Privacy Policy) |
Cloudflare | This is a cloud CDN service that we use to efficiently deliver files required for our service to operate such as javascript, cascading style sheets, images, and videos. (Privacy Policy) |
Google Hosted Libraries | Javascript software libraries such as jQuery are loaded at endpoints on the googleapis.com or gstatic.com domains, for performance and efficiency reasons. (Privacy Policy) |
Features | |
---|---|
Google Custom Search | This is feature allows you to search the site. (Privacy Policy) |
Google Maps | Some articles have Google Maps embedded in them. (Privacy Policy) |
Google Charts | This is used to display charts and graphs on articles and the author center. (Privacy Policy) |
Google AdSense Host API | This service allows you to sign up for or associate a Google AdSense account with HubPages, so that you can earn money from ads on your articles. No data is shared unless you engage with this feature. (Privacy Policy) |
Google YouTube | Some articles have YouTube videos embedded in them. (Privacy Policy) |
Vimeo | Some articles have Vimeo videos embedded in them. (Privacy Policy) |
Paypal | This is used for a registered author who enrolls in the HubPages Earnings program and requests to be paid via PayPal. No data is shared with Paypal unless you engage with this feature. (Privacy Policy) |
Facebook Login | You can use this to streamline signing up for, or signing in to your Hubpages account. No data is shared with Facebook unless you engage with this feature. (Privacy Policy) |
Maven | This supports the Maven widget and search functionality. (Privacy Policy) |
Marketing | |
---|---|
Google AdSense | This is an ad network. (Privacy Policy) |
Google DoubleClick | Google provides ad serving technology and runs an ad network. (Privacy Policy) |
Index Exchange | This is an ad network. (Privacy Policy) |
Sovrn | This is an ad network. (Privacy Policy) |
Facebook Ads | This is an ad network. (Privacy Policy) |
Amazon Unified Ad Marketplace | This is an ad network. (Privacy Policy) |
AppNexus | This is an ad network. (Privacy Policy) |
Openx | This is an ad network. (Privacy Policy) |
Rubicon Project | This is an ad network. (Privacy Policy) |
TripleLift | This is an ad network. (Privacy Policy) |
Say Media | We partner with Say Media to deliver ad campaigns on our sites. (Privacy Policy) |
Remarketing Pixels | We may use remarketing pixels from advertising networks such as Google AdWords, Bing Ads, and Facebook in order to advertise the HubPages Service to people that have visited our sites. |
Conversion Tracking Pixels | We may use conversion tracking pixels from advertising networks such as Google AdWords, Bing Ads, and Facebook in order to identify when an advertisement has successfully resulted in the desired action, such as signing up for the HubPages Service or publishing an article on the HubPages Service. |
Statistics | |
---|---|
Author Google Analytics | This is used to provide traffic data and reports to the authors of articles on the HubPages Service. (Privacy Policy) |
Comscore | ComScore is a media measurement and analytics company providing marketing data and analytics to enterprises, media and advertising agencies, and publishers. Non-consent will result in ComScore only processing obfuscated personal data. (Privacy Policy) |
Amazon Tracking Pixel | Some articles display amazon products as part of the Amazon Affiliate program, this pixel provides traffic statistics for those products (Privacy Policy) |
Clicksco | This is a data management platform studying reader behavior (Privacy Policy) |