what should be included in a
company profile?
A company profile should explain who your business is, what you do, why you can be trusted, and how clients, partners or procurement teams can take the next step with you.
what sections should a company profile include?
A company profile should include a cover page, company overview, services or capabilities, target sectors, experience, project examples, leadership or team information, compliance details, contact information and a clear call to action.
For tender, corporate, construction, logistics, engineering, mining, training or industrial businesses, the profile may also need project history, methodology, safety, quality standards, equipment, accreditations, capacity and supporting proof.
a company profile is not a document dump.
Many businesses make the mistake of putting every possible detail into their company profile. The result is a document that feels crowded, generic and difficult to read.
A stronger company profile is selective. It gives the reader enough information to understand your business, trust your capability and decide whether you are the right fit for the opportunity.
the same information can feel weak or credible depending on how it is presented.
A company profile should not only say the right things. It should organise those points in a way that feels professional, easy to scan and commercially useful.
what every company profile should include.
The exact structure depends on the business, but most professional company profiles need these core sections to create clarity and credibility.
cover page and brand introduction.
Include your logo, company name, visual direction and a short positioning line that gives the reader an immediate sense of what your business does.
company overview.
Explain who the business is, where it operates, what it does and what makes it relevant. Keep this clear and specific.
services or capabilities.
Present your services in logical groups. Avoid only listing services without explaining what they mean or who they are for.
experience and track record.
Add project examples, industries served, past work, client sectors or years of experience where available.
compliance and credentials.
Include registration details, accreditations, B-BBEE, CIDB, tax compliance, quality standards or sector-specific credentials where relevant.
contact details and next step.
End with clear contact information, website details, operating areas and a simple call to action.
the profile structure should match how the document will be used.
A small business profile and a tender-ready profile should not be built the same way. The more serious the use case, the more proof, structure and detail the profile needs.
simple, clear and credible.
- Cover page and introduction
- Short company overview
- Main services or packages
- Who the business serves
- Basic proof or experience
- Contact details and call to action
structured for procurement trust.
- Capability statement
- Compliance and registration details
- Project experience and references
- Resources, equipment or capacity
- Methodology, safety and quality control
- Sector-specific proof and supporting documents
different industries need different profile details.
The core profile structure stays similar, but the detail changes depending on the type of business. A construction profile, logistics profile and engineering profile should not read like the same document.
construction companies
Include projects, CIDB grading, site capability, trades, equipment, safety and quality control.
Construction company profile designlogistics companies
Include fleet, routes, cargo types, operating areas, turnaround times and transport capacity.
Logistics company profile designengineering companies
Include technical capabilities, disciplines, methodology, project experience and compliance.
Engineering company profile designtraining companies
Include accreditations, qualifications, delivery methods, facilitators and learner support.
Training company profile designsee how profile structure changes by industry.
The best company profiles are built around context. A consulting profile may need credibility and expertise. A logistics profile may need routes and fleet. A construction profile may need projects and tender proof.
what should not be included in a company profile?
A company profile becomes weaker when it is filled with generic wording, poor structure and irrelevant information. The profile should support trust, not overwhelm the reader.
generic mission statements.
Avoid long statements that sound impressive but do not explain the practical value of the business.
unstructured service lists.
Services should be grouped and explained. A long list without context does not help the reader understand capability.
irrelevant information.
Do not include details that do not support credibility, understanding, procurement or sales conversations.
weak visual presentation.
Poor spacing, inconsistent fonts, low-quality images or old branding can make a capable business look unprepared.
how Circle Media structures a company profile.
We look at what the profile needs to achieve, what information you already have and what still needs to be written, clarified or visually organised.
understand the purpose
We clarify whether the profile is for general marketing, proposals, tenders, supplier onboarding or corporate introductions.
organise the content
We group your services, capabilities, proof, compliance and supporting details into a logical structure.
write and refine
We improve the wording so the profile sounds clear, credible and useful rather than generic.
design the profile
We turn the content into a professional PDF with clear hierarchy, strong layout and brand-aligned presentation.
a company profile should help people decide whether to trust you.
A profile is often sent before a meeting, attached to a tender, used in a proposal or shared with a potential client who does not know your business yet.
That means the document needs to do more than look nice. It needs to create understanding, show capability and reduce uncertainty. The right sections help the reader see your business as organised, credible and ready for the opportunity.
company profile structure FAQ.
need a company profile that is properly structured?
Send us your business information, old profile, service list or tender requirements. We will help you decide what needs to be included and how the profile should be structured.