· mypage.cc
How to Get More Clicks on Your Link in Bio
Practical ways to get more clicks on your link in bio: order links by priority, write strong labels, lead with one action, and use analytics to iterate.
Your link in bio is the one place where every follower lands when they want more from you. If the page is cluttered, slow, or vague, most of them leave before they tap anything. The good news is that clicks are not random. A few clear choices about order, wording, and speed move the numbers in a way you can measure. Here is how to get more of them without gimmicks.
Order your links by priority, not by habit
Most people add links in the order they think of them, then never touch the list again. Visitors read top to bottom and their attention drops with every scroll, so the position of a link matters as much as the link itself.
Put the thing you most want people to do at the top. If you are launching a product this week, that goes first, above your usual links. If you are a creator who earns from a newsletter, the signup belongs near the top, not buried under three social icons. Reorder the page whenever your goal changes. On mypage.cc you can drag blocks into any order in seconds, so the page can follow your priority for the week rather than the order you happened to add things.
A useful habit is to ask, for each link, “would I be upset if this got the fewest taps?” If the answer is no, it does not belong near the top.
Write labels that promise something
A label like “Link” or “My stuff” tells a visitor nothing. A label like “Watch the new video” or “Book a 20 minute call” tells them exactly what happens when they tap, and what they get for it. Specific, action-led wording almost always beats vague wording.
Lead with a verb where you can: watch, read, book, shop, listen, join. Add a small detail that signals value or freshness, like “new,” “free,” or a price. “Get the free packing checklist” works harder than “Resources.” You are not writing clever copy, you are removing the small hesitation that makes someone scroll past.
Lead with one clear top action
The fastest way to lose clicks is to ask for everything at once. When a page has fifteen equal links, every option competes with the others and visitors freeze. Decide on the single most important action for right now and make it the obvious hero of the page.
That does not mean delete everything else. It means create a clear hierarchy: one primary action at the top, then a short group of supporting links, then the rest. A contact button, a tip jar, or a featured video can serve as that hero depending on who you are. mypage.cc gives you blocks for links, contact buttons, a built-in tip jar, and video embeds, so the top action can be whatever actually drives your goal, not just another gray button.
Cut the list down
It feels safe to add every link you own. In practice, a long list lowers clicks on the ones that matter, because attention is finite and choice is tiring. A focused page of five or six strong links almost always outperforms a wall of twenty.
Try this: list everything, then keep only what serves your current goal and your audience’s most common request. Move the rest off the page or into a secondary group lower down. You can always bring a link back when its moment arrives. Fewer, better links also make the page look more intentional, which builds the trust that earns the tap. For more on structure, see our link in bio best practices.
Make the page load instantly on mobile
Almost everyone reaches your page from inside a social app, on a phone, often on a weak connection. Those in-app browsers are slower than a desktop tab, and a page heavy with scripts shows a blank screen or a spinner for a beat. That beat is where people bounce, before a single link is even visible.
Speed is one of the most underrated ways to lift clicks, because a tap you never lost is a tap you do not have to earn twice. mypage.cc public pages ship near-zero JavaScript and load from the edge, so they appear almost instantly even on a flaky connection. The fastest page is the one that is already on screen when the visitor’s thumb arrives.
Use analytics to iterate, then repeat
Guessing gets you only so far. The real gains come from watching what people actually tap and adjusting. mypage.cc shows views, link clicks, referrers, countries, and clicks per view, so you can see which links pull their weight and which just take up space.
Watch clicks per view first. It tells you whether the page as a whole is doing its job. Then look at individual links: a strong link low on the page is a candidate to move up, and a weak link near the top is a candidate to cut or relabel. Change one thing, give it a week, and compare. Small, steady edits beat a big redesign you never measure. Our guide on how to track link in bio clicks goes deeper on reading the numbers.
Put it together
Getting more clicks is not a trick, it is a loop. Order by priority, write labels that promise something, lead with one clear action, keep the list short, load fast on mobile, then read the analytics and do it again. Each pass tightens the page.
You can build a page that does all of this for free. Claim mypage.cc/yourname, pick a theme, add your links in priority order, and publish. It takes about two minutes to go live, and from there the only job is to keep iterating.