How to Access Your Profile Editor
Log in to your iconic.pro portal. In the left-hand navigation, select Directory Profile. You'll see a live preview of your current public listing alongside the editable fields. Changes are auto-saved as you type and publish when you click Save Profile.
Editable Profile Fields
- Profile PhotoUpload a professional headshot (JPG or PNG, min 400×400px). Shown in your directory listing and on your public verification page.
- Professional BioUp to 500 characters. Write in first person. Focus on your approach, who you serve, and what makes your practice distinctive.
- SpecializationsSelect up to 5 specialty tags from the controlled vocabulary. These power directory filtering — choose the ones clients most commonly search by.
- LocationCity and state/country. Not displayed at street address precision. Used for geographic directory filtering.
- Service TypeIn-person, virtual, or both. Affects which clients find you in filtered search.
- Website URLYour primary web presence. Opens in a new tab from your directory listing.
- Booking LinkOptional direct booking URL (Calendly, Jane App, etc.). Clients can book directly from your listing.
- LanguagesLanguages you offer services in. Helps multilingual clients find appropriate practitioners.
What You Cannot Edit Directly
Your credential designation, tier, issue date, and active status are controlled by the credentialing system — not by you in the profile editor. These fields update automatically when your credential status changes. Your full legal name as it appears on your credential is also set by your application and requires a formal change request if correction is needed.
Profile Optimization Tips
When writing your bio, lead with your credential designation and the specific client outcome you help with. Avoid jargon that only other practitioners would recognize — write for a prospective client who is comparing several practitioners. Use your specialization tags strategically: choose the terms clients actually search for rather than the technical modality names you'd use with peers.