LinkedIn Headline Examples / Career Coaches

    LinkedIn Headline Examples for Career Coaches

    Career coaching buyers are outcome-driven: a new job, a promotion, a pivot. Put that outcome front and center.

    7 headline templates for career coaches

    Swap the [brackets] for your specifics. Keep the structure; it is what works.

    • I help [audience] land [outcome] | Career Coach
    • Career Coach | Helping [audience] get hired faster, for more money
    • Helping [audience] pivot into [field] | Career Coach
    • Career Coach for [audience] | Resumes, interviews, and offers
    • I help mid-career professionals get unstuck | Career Coach
    • Career Coach | Ex-recruiter | Now helping [audience] land the role
    • Helping [audience] negotiate offers they deserve | Career Coach

    The anatomy of a headline that works

    • 1. Lead with the outcome you create, not your title.
    • 2. Name the audience you serve, specifically.
    • 3. Add one proof point: a number, a former employer, a notable client.
    • 4. Keep it under 220 characters and front-load the good part.
    • 5. Cut the buzzwords (visionary, guru, ninja, rockstar).

    Tips for career coaches

    • Lead with the tangible win: 'get hired faster', 'negotiate a bigger offer'.
    • Insider credibility (ex-recruiter, ex-hiring manager) is powerful in this niche.
    • Name the career stage you serve (new grads, mid-career, executives).

    The same rules that make a post work make a headline work. In our study of 895 LinkedIn posts, specificity was one of the two strongest levers, and posts that led with a concrete number beat their baseline 61% of the time vs 52% without. Put a specific outcome in your headline for the same reason.

    A good headline gets the click. Your content earns the client.

    Mylance turns your real expertise into LinkedIn content that brings inbound, in your own voice. Drop your handle for a free positioning and content plan.

    Or grade one of your posts against the data.

    Frequently asked questions

    What should a career coach put in their LinkedIn headline?

    Lead with the outcome you create and the audience you serve, not just the word "career coach". The strongest career coach headlines name who you help, the result you deliver, and one proof point (a number, a former employer, or a notable client). See the examples above for templates you can adapt.

    How long should a LinkedIn headline be?

    LinkedIn allows up to 220 characters. You do not need to use all of them, but do not waste the space with just your job title. Lead with your most compelling outcome in the first few words, since that is what shows up in search results and previews.

    Do LinkedIn headlines affect search?

    Yes. Your headline is one of the most heavily weighted fields in LinkedIn search, so include the terms your ideal audience would actually type. It also appears next to your name everywhere on the platform, so it is doing constant work whether you optimize it or not.