LinkedIn

LinkedIn – the modern day Rolodex

Hey there lovely readers, in need of a personal branding boost? Checked in and updated your LinkedIn profile of late? What? You don’t have a LinkedIn profile? As a career management specialist, I’m oft surprised when my candidates oppose the idea of having a profile. ‘I’ve never been in the job market and haven’t needed one’,I don’t want people invading my privacy‘; ‘stealing my personal information‘; ‘my ex stalking me‘; ‘people pestering me to connect‘; ‘no one I’d want to connect with‘; ‘I just see a pile of endless information’; ‘I’m shy, I don’t like to put myself out there; I don’t have Facebook or Twitter – why would I want LinkedIn?

People will steal my personal information!

Common and valid (if obsolete) objections for let’s face it, who doesn’t baulk at memories of James Murdoch arguing ignorance over News International’s phone tapping scandal, Julien Assange sharing hacked top secret dialogue, countless celebrities finding her private photos splashed across the net? Of course, we’re wary about our privacy. 

The thing is, security protocols on sites such as LinkedIn are well managed for the site’s reputation rides on its commitment to protecting its members; and the privacy settings within are readily accessible and in our own hands. 

What’s more, our private lives are not on show here, we’re talking about the professional version of ourselves being visible – to clients, potential customers, long lost friends, colleagues; and for those who are in the job market – recruiters and head-hunters.  

But I have business cards!

Sure, people can contact you via your business or v-card provided they have one, your company’s website may even showcase your Biography, and yes, your colleagues already know where to find you. But what if your position suddenly became redundant? Would you want your ‘Personal Brand’ at the mercy of an obsolete business card or out of date Bio? Your specific knowledge and expertise subjected to a former client, customer or colleagues’ vague recollections? Look on LinkedIn as your business card, the modern day Rolodex.

I don’t want people pestering me to connect!


Given 98% of people Google you before they meet you for the first time, 98% recruiters and headhunters use Social Media in general to find suitable talent, 97.3% use LinkedIn and 65% rely exclusively on the site alone* to find talent, you will want these people to find you. Preferably your well executed professional LinkedIn Profile showcasing said expertise. Not wanting people pestering you to connect? How will you ever build your network if you don’t?

You calling me a Social media dinosaur?

With 580 million users globally, 8.5 million plus in Australia alone, 2 new members joining every second, those without a profile are already being viewed with suspicion. Technically disadvantaged? Something to hide? Don’t be ‘that’ social media dinosaur your younger colleagues scoff at. 

Think of LinkedIn as your mini ‘Personal Brand’ marketing website. And it’s free! And once you’ve established your profile you’ll be pleasantly surprised at the number of people who will want to reach out, connect; even head hunt or job offer you. Dig into the many additional offerings LinkedIn provides including the opportunity to follow what the best of the best business leaders have to share and you will soon be wondering just what all that fuss was about!

Still need convincing? Check this out: Socialnomics

Stay tuned for my hints and tips for building a profile that will stand out and set you apart from the masses. Once done we’ll then take your fresh new profile from the driveway to the freeway! Oh! Already on LinkedIn, have we connected? Please do.


* Bullhorn Reach Social Recruiting Activity Report

Posted in AT WORK, Earn | Comments Off on LinkedIn – the modern day Rolodex

Got a minute?

Well hello there lovely readers…I’m oft surprised by the number of work force professionals challenged by the thought of online personal branding…’I don’t like to talk about myself’, ‘I’m a private person’, ‘I’ve more important things to do’. The future is digital folk and it’s time we embraced it.

But why? What does this digital business involve?

It involves dedicated webpages replacing traditional resumes; LinkedIn membership volume and currency replacing Rolodexes; WhatsApp and other messaging apps replacing phone pickup; Google+ and Google Apps replacing megabyte file sharing email congestion; global file access via Cloud storage replacing frantic midnight calls to irritated home based PA’s; MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses) a veritable smorgasbord of educational opportunity developed by esteemed Universities, now accessible via our digital fingertips. The list is endless…and all tethered with the smart technology in our pockets.

Given this, we need to understand, climb on board and embrace – for how better to be found, to be seen, to promote our capability and expertise, to connect, to maintain continuous learning? LinkedIn for instance – what better platform to garner headhunter attention, job offers, new clients, fresh contract opportunities, broader networks, or tap into the vast networks of group and thought leader knowledge sharing?

But how do you find time to maintain all this stuff?

Building an online presence can sound like a whole lot of work and no matter how important we know it is, who wants to spend several hours a day tweaking their profiles, finding interesting stuff to share, considering group conversations to weigh in on, carefully narrowing a Tweet message to just 140 characters?

‘Ain’t nobody got time for dat!’

It’s a question of making time. And I do. Average 10 minutes over my morning coffee. Seriously, I’ve often queued longer for that coffee! Substantiating my claim, LinkedIn recently asked personal branding guru William Arruda how much time we should dedicate to putting ourselves out there every day. A spot of research later and he declared that nine was the magic number.

Nine. Nine minutes. Just nine minutes!! I like this man.

Devoting just nine minutes to your career and professional goals a day and your less likely to get overwhelmed by the sheer magnitude of online brand management. Easy to get sidetracked when you’re aiming to spend an hour, or even 30 minutes promoting yourself, less so when you select just one task to boost your career every day. The more attainable the goal, the increased likelihood of actually doing it.

Here are nine ‘quickies’ to get you started: (more…)

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