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Meet Linkgo: An AI-Native Link-in-Bio That Doubles as Your Shop

May 5, 2026
Meet Linkgo: An AI-Native Link-in-Bio That Doubles as Your Shop

Meet Linkgo: An AI-Native Link-in-Bio That Doubles as Your Shop

Most creators set up a link-in-bio page once, paste it into every social profile, and never look at it again. The page works the same on Tuesday as it did on launch day. It doesn't notice that your latest reel sent a wave of new followers, or that your printables link outsells your newsletter five-to-one. It just sits there. Linkgo is the link-in-bio for creators who want that page to actually work: it ranks links by what converts, sells products inline, and shows you in one view which channels turned into revenue.

Why most link-in-bio tools stop short

The category started as a workaround. Instagram only lets you post one URL in your bio, so creators needed a small landing page that funneled into many destinations. Tools shipped to fill that gap, and the bar stayed there: a vertical stack of buttons, ordered by drag-and-drop, hosted on someone else's domain.

That was fine in 2018. It is no longer enough. Three things have changed for creators since then.

First, every creator now monetizes from more than one direction — affiliate links, digital downloads, paid newsletters, merch, course launches, sponsorships. A static list of nine buttons can't reflect a business with that much going on.

Second, the buying surface moved up. Followers expect to tap a link and either buy something or learn enough to come back later. Sending them to a third-party checkout that loads a shipping form is a leak in the funnel.

Third, creators have data now. Reels analytics, TikTok analytics, newsletter open rates — every other surface tells you what worked. The link in your bio, the place where attention converts to action, has historically been the dark spot in the report.

Linkgo was built to fix all three.

What Linkgo actually does

Three things sit at the core of the product, and the rest of it supports them.

It ranks your links by what's converting, not by what you dragged to the top this morning. If you have nine links on your page and the third one — your free Notion template — has been driving most of the recent click-throughs, the page learns and shows it higher to new visitors. You can pin or freeze any link if you want it to stay put for a launch week. The system explains why a link moved, so you're never staring at a reordered page wondering what happened.

It sells products from the same page. A Linkgo "shop tile" is a real product with images, price, variants, and inline checkout. A buyer never has to leave to a third-party cart, paste an address, and abandon. Digital products deliver automatically; physical products hand off to the fulfillment integration of your choice. This is the part that makes a Linkgo page a lightweight storefront rather than a directory.

It shows you what worked, by channel and by link, in one view. A single dashboard answers the questions creators actually ask: which platform sent the most traffic last week, which link converted the highest, what time of day people buy. You can see the full path — Instagram reel → Linkgo → checkout — without stitching together three tools.

Around those three pillars sits the housekeeping you'd expect: a custom domain if you want one, scheduled link drops for launches, A/B testing on headlines and ordering, and theme controls so the page looks like it belongs to you.

Is Linkgo just another link-in-bio page?

It's the most common question, so let's answer it directly. Linkgo lives in the link-in-bio category, but it's built around a different assumption. Most tools in the category treat your audience as visitors to be redirected. Linkgo treats your audience as customers to be converted, and treats your page as a small business surface that should learn from its own results. If all you need is a static list of links, almost any tool in the category will do. If you want a page that ranks, sells, and reports — the kind of surface that gets meaningfully better the more traffic you send it — that's where Linkgo fits.

How the AI ranking works (and what it won't pretend to know)

The page learns from real signals — clicks, scroll depth, conversions, revenue per visitor — weighted by recency. A link that earned a lot of clicks six months ago doesn't dominate forever; the model favors what's working this week. That's why a printables drop you announced on Sunday can climb to the top of the page by Wednesday without you touching anything.

The honest part: ranking only works once you have meaningful traffic. New pages with five visitors a day don't have enough signal for the model to do anything useful, so it stays out of the way and respects your manual order. As traffic ramps, recommendations gradually take over. Pinned links override recommendations entirely — useful during a launch week when you know what you want at the top regardless of what the data says.

There's no chatbot, no "AI suggests" panel that nags you with copy ideas, no auto-generated headlines you didn't write. The intelligence is in the ranking and in the analytics — the parts where data actually beats taste — and stays out of the parts where your voice matters.

Who Linkgo is for

This product is built for creators who treat the link in their bio as part of their business, not as a footer. A few concrete pictures of who that is:

  • A YouTuber whose channel sends the most traffic but whose Instagram converts highest, and who wants to stop guessing which to focus on.
  • A newsletter writer with a paid tier, a free tier, a referral program, and a couple of affiliate partnerships — too much to fit cleanly in a static list.
  • An indie maker who sells a small catalog of digital products (templates, presets, ebooks) and wants checkout to happen on their page, not on a third-party cart that asks for a phone number.
  • A small physical-goods shop that uses Instagram and TikTok as the top of the funnel and wants the link in bio to move people to checkout in a single tap.

If you have one URL — your homepage — and that's already your best-converting page, you may not need Linkgo. The product earns its keep when there are five-to-fifteen things you'd send people to and you want the page to figure out which one to lead with.

What you can set up in your first afternoon

A new page can go live in under an hour. The minimum-viable setup looks like this:

Add four to nine links — pages you already promote, your most recent piece of work, your shop, and your newsletter. Drop one product tile if you sell anything; the inline checkout takes a few minutes to wire up. Connect Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube so traffic gets attributed back to the right channel. Pick a theme that matches the rest of your branding. Publish, paste the URL into every bio.

Come back in a week. The dashboard will tell you which platform actually drives clicks, which link converts highest, and what the page is starting to surface to new visitors on its own. From there it's mostly small adjustments — a launch tile during a release, a pin during a campaign, a swap when something stops performing.

The honest trade-offs

A few things to know before you migrate.

If your audience is small and your traffic is low, the ranking and analytics features won't have much to chew on yet. Linkgo will still work as a clean, fast link page, but the parts that justify the category shift kick in once you're sending it real traffic. Inline checkout adds a small overhead at setup — a payout account, tax settings, a fulfillment choice for physical goods. It's a one-time setup, but it's not zero. And a learning page can occasionally surprise you: a link you forgot about climbs because the data says it's working. The page tells you why, and pinning is one click, but if you want a page that never reorders, manual mode is always there.

Try it

Linkgo turns your link-in-bio into a smart shop — try it at linkgo.dev.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What makes Linkgo different from traditional link-in-bio tools?

Linkgo uses AI to rank your links based on real-time conversion data rather than manual ordering. It also allows you to sell products directly on your page with inline checkout and provides detailed analytics showing which channels and links drive revenue.

How does Linkgo's AI ranking system work?

Linkgo's AI ranks links by analyzing recent clicks, scroll depth, conversions, and revenue per visitor, prioritizing what performs best currently. It requires meaningful traffic to function effectively and allows you to pin links to override AI ranking during special campaigns.

Can I sell products directly through my Linkgo page?

Yes, Linkgo supports product tiles with images, prices, variants, and inline checkout, enabling buyers to purchase without leaving your page. Digital products are delivered automatically, while physical products integrate with your chosen fulfillment service.

Who is Linkgo best suited for?

Linkgo is ideal for creators who monetize through multiple channels and want their link-in-bio to actively convert visitors into customers. This includes YouTubers, newsletter writers, indie makers, and small physical-goods shops with several links to promote.

What setup is required to get started with Linkgo?

You can set up a Linkgo page in under an hour by adding 4 to 9 links, connecting your social channels for traffic attribution, adding product tiles if you sell items, choosing a theme, and publishing your page. The dashboard then provides insights to optimize your links over time.

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Meet Linkgo: An AI-Native Link-in-Bio That Doubles as Your Shop | Eodin