Build a social
portfolio from your resume.
The fastest way for a social media manager to build a portfolio website is to paste an existing social resume into Portfolio, which reads your accounts, platforms, and growth and drafts a clean, case-led site in about a minute. You then frame each case as a before, an approach, and an after, split paid from organic, and publish to your own domain. It is a better fit than a generic drag-and-drop builder because it starts from your resume and produces a matched, ATS-safe resume alongside the site, which is the document most hiring pipelines screen first.
Three ways to build it.
A social manager can build a portfolio by hand, in a generic website builder, or by pasting a resume into Portfolio. Here is how the three compare on the things that matter for a social role.
| What a social manager needs | By hand | Generic site builder | Portfolio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time to first draft | Hours to days | An evening of setup | About a minute |
| Built from your social resume | No, you write it all | No, an empty canvas | Yes, paste and go |
| Content grid plus metrics | If you build it | You lay it out yourself | Visual grid designs ready |
| Matched ATS-safe resume | Separate tool | No | 48 layouts, live scoring |
| Custom domain with TLS | Manual hosting setup | On paid plans | On every plan, automatic |
| Coding needed | Often yes | No | No |
| Reads on the first crawl | Depends how you host | Often client-rendered | Server-rendered HTML |
A generic builder is the right call if you want a fully custom visual layout and enjoy building it. For a resume-driven case-led site done in a minute, that is what Portfolio is for.
From resume to site, for a social manager.
The build is the same paste-and-edit flow, with the case structure a social manager needs already in place. Here is the exact sequence.
Drop in your social resume or a LinkedIn export. The parser pulls out your platforms, accounts, and the growth you drove.
You get an about page, a case section, a platform and tools block, and contact, each grounded in what your resume actually says.
Turn each case into a before, an approach, and an after, split paid from organic, and swap client account screenshots for relative metrics, then pick a visual grid design.
Connect a custom domain and Portfolio issues TLS automatically. The pages ship as real HTML a recruiter or an AI answer engine can read.
The same paste also produces a matched resume with a live ATS score, which is the document most social pipelines screen first.
Words to keep in the resume.
The builder produces a resume as well as a site. Make sure the competencies a social recruiter searches are present in it, in the exact terms they use.
Run the finished resume through the free ATS score checker against a real posting before you apply.
Designs that suit a social manager.
Of the 60 designs and 48 resume layouts, these are the ones to reach for, and the ones to skip, for a social site.
A design that shows content in a clean grid but gives each case a metric and a short write-up. Your portfolio should look considered, since it is itself a content sample.
A raw feed of posts with no context or metrics reads as a scrapbook, not a case. Choose a layout that lets you frame each grid with a goal and a result instead.
Pick a single-column layout so a platform and tools list parses cleanly, and lead each role with a growth number rather than the accounts you posted on.
A domain in your own name reads as more established than a free subdomain and is easy to add to a pitch or a link-in-bio.
When the builder is the wrong tool.
Portfolio is a resume-to-website builder, not a fit for every social situation. Here is where it helps and where a different route wins.
Use the builder if you
- +Already have a social resume and want a case-led site from it without an evening of layout work.
- +Manage brand or creator accounts and can show deliberate growth with content and numbers behind it.
- +Freelance or want to, and need one link that shows range across platforms and clients for pitches.
- +Want the matched ATS-safe resume the same paste produces.
Choose another route if you
- −Could only fill it with client account data you are not allowed to publish. Get permission or use relative figures first.
- −Have a strong live account that already shows your work better than a separate site would.
- −Would rely on vanity follower counts with no engagement behind them. Build a case with a real result instead.
- −Are on a deadline. Fix the resume for the ATS first, then build the site after.
Building a social site.
The practical questions social managers ask before they build.
What is the best portfolio builder for a social media manager?
The best builder for a social manager is one that starts from your resume and lets each case pair a content grid with real growth numbers. Portfolio does this and produces a matched, ATS-safe resume alongside the site. A generic drag-and-drop builder can also work if you want a fully bespoke layout and are willing to build it yourself.
Do I need to know how to code to build a social portfolio?
No. You paste your resume, add your content and metrics to each case, choose a design, and publish. Portfolio handles hosting and the TLS certificate for your custom domain, so there is no HTML or CSS to write even though the finished site looks designed.
How do I show results without exposing client data?
Use public post metrics and relative figures with the brand unidentified, or get written permission for specifics. The builder only uses what you give it, so keep private ad-account screenshots and internal analytics out of the draft. Saying you grew engagement by a percentage against a baseline proves the result without the risk.
Can I connect my own domain?
Yes, on every plan, and Portfolio issues the TLS certificate automatically. A domain in your own name reads as more established than a free subdomain and is easy to add to a pitch or a link-in-bio.
How long does it take to build a social portfolio?
The first full draft appears in about a minute after you paste your resume. Framing each case, adding content and metrics, and choosing a design usually takes another thirty to sixty minutes. Connecting a custom domain adds a few minutes while DNS propagates.
Keep going.
See what to include, test your resume, or read the full product.
Turning a social resume bullet into a portfolio piece.
A social media manager's resume is full of follower counts, and a follower count proves almost nothing on its own. Here is how to turn one vanity line into a piece a hiring manager will trust.
The bullet that means little
Take a standard line: "Grew the Instagram following from 10k to 80k." A hiring manager cannot tell whether that growth was bought, borrowed from a viral fluke, or built into something that actually helped the business. On a portfolio it has to become a story with a mechanism.
Rebuild it as a case
Show the strategy behind the number. The audience you were trying to reach, the content format that worked and the one that did not, the posting rhythm, and, crucially, what the growth did for the business, engagement quality, traffic, or conversions, not just the follower total. A reviewer trusts growth they can see the engine behind.
What a social lead reads first
The first read is for whether you understand a platform natively and can tie content to a goal. A lead wants to see that you know why a format works on one channel and dies on another, and that you measure something beyond reach. One channel grown with a clear strategy beats a spread of accounts with no thesis.
Show the creative, and keep clients safe
Social is visual, so include the actual posts and campaigns, but respect what is confidential. Where results or client relationships are restricted, index growth to a baseline and abstract the brand. A reviewer values an honest engagement rate over an unverifiable record.
Where each piece belongs
Use the landing section for the platforms and audiences you know. Make the work section a set of campaign cases with the strategy visible, not just the screenshots. Keep the about section for how you think about a brand's voice online, which is the judgment a lead is buying.
Paste a resume.
Get a social site.
Start free. Drop in your social resume and get a clean, case-led website plus a matched ATS-safe resume in about a minute. Connect your own domain when you are ready.