---
title: "Link Page + Form Cubbies for Creators"
slug: link-page-form-cubbies-creators
description: "Combine your link-in-bio page with embedded forms and cubbies to capture leads, collect bookings, and run surveys — all from one link in your Instagram bio."
publishedAt: "2026-03-10"
author: "Instaform Team"
tags: ["cubbies", "link-page", "creators", "link-in-bio", "lead-capture"]
locale: en
---

Every creator has the same bottleneck: one link in their Instagram bio, and that link goes to a page of buttons that send visitors somewhere else. Linktree, Beacons, Stan Store — they all work the same way. A vertical list of links. Click to go to your website. Click to go to your YouTube. Click to go to your booking page. Every click is an exit.

Meanwhile, the two things creators actually need from their bio link — lead capture and bookings — require separate tools. A Typeform or Google Form for inquiries, a Calendly for scheduling, a Mailchimp for email lists. The bio link page becomes a switchboard, routing traffic to four different tools, each with its own login, its own subscription, and its own data silo.

Instaform's link page changes this by embedding forms directly into your bio link page. Visitors don't leave to fill out a form — they do it inline. And when they submit, the response flows into a cubby workspace where you can actually manage it. No export, no copy-paste, no third-party integrations.

This article explains how creators can combine link pages with different cubby types to build a complete lead capture and management system from a single link.

## The Link Page Cubby

Every Instaform link page comes with a Link Page cubby. This is the free cubby type available on all plans, including the Free tier.

The Link Page cubby captures data about visitors who interact with your link page. When someone fills out an embedded form on your page, their submission appears in the cubby with context: which page they visited, when they visited, and what they submitted. The cubby gives you table, analytics, and calendar views.

Think of the Link Page cubby as the foundation. It captures everything that happens on your link page. But the real power comes from combining it with forms that use other cubby types.

## The Combination

Here's the key idea: your link page is the surface, and forms with different cubby types are the engines underneath.

You can embed multiple forms on a single link page. Each form has its own cubby type. A booking inquiry form with a CRM cubby. A feedback form with a Survey cubby. A workshop registration form with a Registration cubby. They all live on one page, and each routes submissions to the right workspace.

### Example: A Fitness Creator

A personal trainer's link page might include:

- **Hero section** with their name, photo, and tagline
- **Links** to their YouTube channel, Instagram, and blog
- **Booking inquiry form** (CRM cubby) — "Interested in 1-on-1 training? Fill out this form." Fields: name, email, fitness goals, experience level, preferred schedule, budget range.
- **Class registration form** (Registration cubby) — "Sign up for Saturday group classes." Fields: name, email, class date, experience level.
- **Feedback form** (Survey cubby) — "Already a client? Rate your last session." Fields: satisfaction rating, NPS, what went well, what to improve.

One link page. Three forms. Three cubbies. The booking inquiry goes to a Kanban pipeline where the trainer tracks prospects through consultation, trial session, and signed client. The class registration goes to a calendar view showing how many spots are filled per class. The feedback goes to an analytics dashboard with satisfaction trends.

The trainer's Instagram bio has one link. Behind it is an entire business operating system.

### Example: A Freelance Photographer

A photographer's link page might include:

- **Portfolio section** with embedded images or links to galleries
- **Booking inquiry form** (CRM cubby) — "Tell me about your shoot." Fields: name, email, event type (wedding, portrait, commercial), date, location, budget range, how they found you.
- **Client feedback form** (Survey cubby) — "How was your session?" Fields: overall rating, NPS, what they loved, what could improve.

Inquiries become deals on a Kanban board. The photographer drags prospects through stages: inquiry, consultation call, quote sent, booked, shoot complete, delivered. Feedback responses build a live satisfaction dashboard. When the photographer's NPS stays above 70 and satisfaction averages 4.8/5, those numbers become marketing ammunition.

### Example: A Content Creator / Coach

A coach's link page might include:

- **About section** with bio and credentials
- **Links** to podcast, free resources, and social profiles
- **Discovery call booking form** (CRM cubby) — "Apply for 1-on-1 coaching." Fields: name, email, what they're looking for help with, budget, timeline, biggest challenge.
- **Workshop registration form** (Registration cubby) — "Join the next live workshop." Fields: name, email, workshop date, experience level.
- **Contact form** (standard cubby) — "General questions or partnership inquiries." Fields: name, email, message.

The coaching applicants flow into a CRM pipeline. The coach reviews each application, reaches out to qualified leads, and tracks them through discovery call, proposal, and enrolled. Workshop registrations appear on a calendar with headcounts. General inquiries go to a simple table.

## Building Your Link Page

Instaform's link page builder gives you building blocks that you arrange on a single page.

**Link buttons.** The basics: styled buttons that link to your website, social profiles, podcast, or any URL. These work like Linktree links.

**Social icons.** Compact icons for Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, Twitter/X, LinkedIn, and more. They don't need to be full buttons — a row of icons saves space.

**Headings and text.** Section titles and description text to organize your page and provide context.

**Images and media.** Embed photos, logos, or YouTube videos directly on the page.

**Embedded forms.** This is the differentiator. Drag a form block onto your page and select which form to embed. The form appears inline — visitors fill it out without leaving your page. No redirect, no separate tab, no "click here to fill out a form" button that sends them elsewhere.

**Scheduling links.** Add a Calendly or Cal.com button so visitors can book time with you directly.

**Chat buttons.** WhatsApp, Telegram, or other messaging links for direct contact.

You style everything with your brand colors, fonts, and layout preferences. The page is responsive and works on mobile — which matters because most bio link traffic comes from Instagram on phones.

## Why Inline Forms Beat External Links

The standard link-in-bio approach for lead capture is: bio link page -> click "Contact Me" button -> redirect to Typeform -> fill out form -> submit -> land on Typeform's thank you page. Four steps, two tools, two different visual experiences, and the visitor has left your page.

With Instaform's embedded forms: bio link page -> scroll to form -> fill out form -> see confirmation on the same page. Two steps, one tool, one continuous experience.

The difference matters because every redirect is a drop-off point. Data from link-in-bio tools consistently shows that only 30-40% of visitors who click a link complete the action on the destination page. Inline forms eliminate the redirect entirely. The visitor stays on your page, sees your branding, and submits without friction.

For creators, this is the difference between a bio link that sends traffic away and a bio link that captures it.

## The Free Tier

Instaform's Free plan includes one link page with the Link Page cubby type. You can embed forms and collect up to 100 submissions per month. This is enough for creators who are just starting out or want to test the concept.

The Starter plan at $19/month unlocks all cubby types (CRM, Support, Survey, Registration), unlimited forms, and 5,000 submissions per month. This is where the combination of link pages and cubbies becomes truly powerful — each embedded form can route to a different cubby workspace.

The Pro plan at $29/month removes all limits: unlimited forms, submissions, and cubbies.

## Getting Started

Build your link page. Add your links, social icons, and branding. Then embed one or more forms with the cubby types that match your workflow. Share the link in your Instagram bio, TikTok bio, Twitter bio, or anywhere you have a single link slot.

Your bio link goes from a list of outbound buttons to an inbound capture system. Visitors don't leave your page — they engage with it. And every engagement flows into a cubby where you can manage it.

For more on how cubbies work, read [Why We Built Cubbies](/blog/why-we-built-cubbies). To see how cubbies can streamline your weekly workflows, check out [5 Cubby Workflows That Save Hours Weekly](/blog/cubby-workflows-save-hours).
