· mypage.cc
Link in Bio for Students
A link in bio for students puts your portfolio, resume, GitHub, and LinkedIn on one page recruiters can scan in seconds. Land internships with a real page.
When you are a student looking for an internship, a first job, or a research spot, you are scattered across the internet. Your projects are on GitHub, your resume is a PDF in a folder, your network is on LinkedIn, your design work is on Behance, and your contact is in an email signature somewhere. A recruiter or professor who wants to know who you are has to hunt for all of it. Most of them will not bother. A link in bio for students fixes that by putting everything that matters on one page they can scan in under a minute.
This is the page you put at the top of your resume, in your LinkedIn headline, in your email signature, and on your business card at a career fair. One link, and the person on the other end sees your projects, your resume, and your contact, all at once, all looking like you took it seriously.
Why a Page Beats a List of Links
A plain stack of grey buttons says you grabbed the first free tool and moved on. For a student trying to stand out, that is the wrong first impression. The people deciding whether to interview you are reading hundreds of applications, and the ones who look prepared get the callback.
A designed page reads as effort and taste, which is exactly what you are trying to signal. With more than 60 premium themes, each a complete design system, you can pick a look that fits your field, clean and technical for engineering, bold and visual for design, calm and editorial for research. And because pages on mypage.cc ship near-zero JavaScript, your page loads instantly even when a recruiter taps it from their phone between meetings.
Lead With Your Best Project
Recruiters care about what you have built far more than what you list. Put your strongest project at the very top of the page, with a real image and a clear link to the live demo or repo.
An image gallery block lets you show several projects in a clean grid, each linking out to GitHub, a live site, a case study, or a video walkthrough. Use video embeds when a project is better seen running than described. Lead with quality, not quantity. Three excellent projects beat ten half-finished ones, and a focused page is easier to scan than a wall of links.
Put Your Resume One Tap Away
Your resume should never be more than one tap from the page. Add a clear link block that points to a hosted PDF of your latest resume, and update it the moment you have a new version. Because the page links out, the recruiter always sees your current file without you reissuing the link anywhere.
Pair the resume link with a short bio at the top of the page. Two or three lines is enough: who you are, what you study, and what you are looking for. The AI on mypage can draft that opening from a single sentence, so you are not staring at a blank field trying to describe yourself.
Connect LinkedIn, GitHub, and Everything Else
The people reviewing you will want to verify and dig. Make that easy with a clean social icons row linking your LinkedIn, GitHub, and any field-specific profile like Behance, Dribbble, or a personal blog. Keep the icons compact and out of the way so they support the page without competing with your projects.
This is the same idea as a one link for all social media hub, focused on the accounts that prove you are serious. A recruiter who lands on your page can move from your projects to your code to your network without ever leaving, and that smooth path keeps their attention on you.
Make Contact Effortless
The whole point is to get a reply. Add a contact button so a recruiter or professor can email you or book a quick call in one tap. A contact block with your email or a meeting link removes the friction that loses you opportunities, because the moment someone is interested, you want zero steps between that interest and a message.
If you want to gather interest at a career fair or from a class, lead-capture forms on Pro let people leave their details right on the page, so you walk away with a list instead of a stack of paper.
Start Free and Look the Part
Everything you need to make a strong student page is on the free tier. It carries a small “Made with mypage” badge, which for a student page is no problem at all. You get the themes, the galleries, the links, and the fast page. If you later want a custom domain on your own name, like yourname.com, Pro adds that along with deeper analytics so you can see which projects recruiters actually click.
Your work deserves better than a folder of links and a PDF nobody opens. Put it on one fast, designed page that shows your projects, your resume, and your contact at a glance, and hand that one link to everyone who could open a door for you.
Claim your page at mypage.cc/yourname. It is free, and you can be live in about two minutes.