Sunday, June 14, 2020
Quick Fixes to Improve Your LinkedIn Profile
Quick Fixes to Improve Your LinkedIn Profile When you first joined LinkedIn, it made sense to fill minimal facts to get your Profile up and running, allowing you to begin connecting with others. However, if itâs been a few months and you still have a bare-bones Profile, it probably wont generate any results for your job search. Even if it does attract visitors, theyâll quickly leave to find someone more interesting. The reality about LinkedIn is this: itâs an amazing job search tool that brings you new leads, impresses your network, and entices recruiters to callâ"but only if you use it in a way that promotes your professional image. Look at these types of problems to see if you recognize yours â" and take action to improve your LinkedIn Profile before it brings your job search to a halt: Problem #1: The Minimal-Effort Profile. Here it isâ"your name, college education, and current job. Wait â" whereâs the rest? If you havenât added specifics (such as your full work history for the last 10 years, certifications, or skills), your hit rate among competing candidates will drop substantially. This is because your Profile, just like a website, is findable based on the keywords sprinkled throughout the text. Employers and recruiters scouring LinkedIn for talent also look for context that demonstrates your ability to perform at a particular career level. To satisfy them, youâll need to add competencies, success stories, and metrics, with detail that resembles (but doesnât replace) your full resume. Even in the tight space allowed on the site, readers will then be able to identify your likely next career target and suitability for promotion â" which not only improves your LinkedIn Profile, but encourages others to network with you. Problem #2: The Default Headline. LinkedIn has many shortcuts that allow you to quickly fill in crucial data. Most of these are helpful in presenting a polished, professional look to other site usersâ"but the default Headline feature isnât one of them! When you specify the details of your current job, LinkedIn will ever-so-subtly include a checkbox that is already set to Update My Headline to (your job title). If you leave this information as is, site users will see Bob Jones, Vice President Finance at ABC Company throughout all your activity. However, if you uncheck the box and then edit the Headline available when changing your Name field, youâll have the chance to advertise your career level and competencies with Bob Jones | VP Finance, Controller, CFO | Growth, Capital, Funding, Technology Strategies. The key in altering your Headline is to use terms that will trigger your hit rate for both your job target and current position (and potentially your industry). Inject a brand message related to your success, as in these examples: Martin Forester, IT Director. SAP, Infrastructure-Building, User Responsiveness. Manufacturing Medical Devices Claire Wilson | Enterprise Account Executive Accelerating Channel Sales to $40+ Million in Managed Services Markets Problem #3: The No-Networking-Wanted Approach. If youâve been paying attention to how LinkedIn works, youâll make it easy for someone else to contact you. However, this doesnât just happen unless you take steps to be findable and reachable. First of all, join Groups (a lot of them!) that represent your career goals. The benefit of Group membership isnât just the forums; itâs the fact that LinkedIn allows free contact from other users who share the Group with you. Recruiters, who often use paid memberships to access choice candidates, appreciate this effort, and it can result in additional contact requests from employers via your Groups. Next, ensure that youâve left the âSelect the types of messages youâre willing to receiveâ option under Settings to fully open, ensuring youâll receive both Introductions and InMail (LinkedInâs internal email). Look at the Contact information. Yes, itâs buried all the way down at the bottom of your Profile, but itâs important. Did you add a phone number, email address, or both? If not, get going. You can also add this information in the Summary section as needed. Thereâs no need to make others wonder if youâre open to networking with them; otherwise, why use LinkedIn at all? The bottom-line message: making yourself a viable candidate on LinkedIn takes some time and ingenuity. Setting out to improve your LinkedIn Profile (bringing it from nearly anonymous to welcoming) is a crucial first step in your search.
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