Five structures
Switch between Classic Cover, Compact Circle, Banner Circle, Hero Portrait, and Cutout Editorial.
Choose a visual structure first, then customize its colors, background, cards, avatar, text, and destinations in the profile editor.
Classic Cover
Compact Circle
Banner Circle
Hero Portrait
Cutout Editorial
Switch between Classic Cover, Compact Circle, Banner Circle, Hero Portrait, and Cutout Editorial.
Templates adapt their image treatment, spacing, typography, and card layout across phones and larger screens.
Changing a template changes presentation, not the saved profile name, bio, links, or analytics history.
A template controls the hierarchy of the profile: where the avatar appears, how much space the hero image receives, and how quickly visitors reach the first destination card.
Background and card themes then refine the selected structure without requiring the profile to be rebuilt.
Compact Circle prioritizes immediate access to links. Hero Portrait and Classic Cover devote more space to personal branding. Banner Circle supports a familiar social-profile structure, while Cutout Editorial creates a more expressive portfolio presentation.
The best template is the one that makes the profile's primary action obvious on the devices your audience actually uses.
A template can look balanced with three short sample links and still feel crowded with real campaign titles. Preview the actual avatar, bio, cards, and images before publishing.
Check the first screen on a phone, then review tablet and desktop layouts. Long titles and low-contrast backgrounds deserve special attention.
No. The template changes the visual structure while keeping the profile content and destinations.
Yes. The five profile structures use responsive layouts for phone and larger screens.
Yes. Profile Template, Background Theme, and Card Theme are separate controls in the editor.