Most professionals know they should share their thinking online. Writing builds trust, demonstrates expertise, and gives recruiters something deeper than a bullet-point CV.
The problem is execution. Standing up a blog means choosing a platform, picking a theme, configuring DNS, and maintaining yet another site you'll update twice and abandon. So the idea stays in your notes app.
There's a simpler path: publish articles directly on your professional profile.
Why articles belong on your profile
Your CV answers what you've done. Articles answer how you think.
When someone lands on your profile after a conference talk, a referral, or a job application, they're deciding whether to take the next step. A well-written piece on a topic you know — how you approach product discovery, what you learned scaling a team, a case study from a client project — does more for that decision than another line on your experience section.
The best part: it lives alongside your work history. Visitors don't need to hunt for your Substack, Medium, or personal WordPress site. Your latest writing appears on the same URL as your CV.
What most people do instead (and why it falls short)
Medium or Substack — Great for distribution, but you're building an audience on someone else's platform. Your profile link sends people away from your professional home.
Notion or Google Docs — Fast to set up, terrible for first impressions. Slow loading, weak SEO, and the unmistakable look of internal documentation.
A separate blog — Full control, but high overhead. Hosting, themes, plugins, security updates. Most professionals don't need a CMS — they need to publish occasionally and look credible doing it.
Nothing — The default. Your LinkedIn posts disappear in the feed. Your expertise stays invisible.
A profile-native approach
Curvit Pro includes a Writing section and full article publishing on your profile:
- A Writing section on your profile highlights your latest posts alongside experience and projects
- Dedicated article pages at
curvit.me/@you/articles/your-post-slug(or on your custom domain) - Rich editing with cover images, inline media, and publish date control
- The same design language as your profile — no theme mismatch, no third-party branding
You upload your CV once. Your profile is already live. Adding an article is extending something that exists, not starting from zero.
What to write (when you're not a "content person")
You don't need to publish weekly. A few strong pieces beat a dormant blog:
- A case study from a project on your CV, with more context than a bullet point allows
- A perspective piece on a trend in your industry
- A "how I work" essay that helps clients or hiring managers understand your approach
- Notes from a talk you gave, expanded into something readable
The goal isn't to become a full-time writer. It's to give interested visitors a reason to remember you.
SEO and sharing
Articles on your profile inherit the SEO foundations Curvit already provides: clean URLs, proper meta tags, structured data, and fast page loads. When someone searches your name, your profile and your writing can both appear.
Each article gets its own shareable URL for newsletters, social posts, and email signatures — but the canonical home remains your profile.
Getting started
If you already have a Curvit profile, upgrading to Pro unlocks the Articles dashboard. Write a draft, add a cover image if you want one, publish when ready. Your Writing section updates automatically.
If you're starting fresh, upload your CV first. Build the profile. Then add your first article when you have something worth saying — not before.
Your professional presence shouldn't stop at what you've done. Show how you think.
Create your profile free — upgrade to Pro when you're ready to publish.