Post by account_disabled on Dec 26, 2023 0:11:22 GMT -6
One of the risks if you make a mistake online is that the risk of amplification is very real. We move quite quickly from "one to one" to "one to many". LinkedIn is in this sense a fairly risky space since it is essentially where our Professional Branding is based . Here is a list of the main mistakes you can make on LinkedIn. 1) Spam LinkedIn remains a small world and one's professional reputation is at stake. The risk is too great of being poorly perceived and losing credibility that is so hard to obtain. I've seen LinkedIn members get kicked out of closed groups where they could have developed their business by behaving differently. Additionally, with SWAM, if you spam a group and are moderated, you will automatically be moderated in all groups you are a part of.
Post multiple times per day Once a day is enough. By posting 20 times per month, you reach Email Data around 60% of your audience. Be especially careful about the time you post. If you post when no one is online, no one will read you. The error probably comes from the way the job boards work. On job boards, it seems that you have to update your profile regularly to “bring it to the top of the pile”. On LinkedIn, there is no indication that this is useful. 3) Ask everyone for recommendations Since endorsements, recommendations have less importance in LinkedIn. Don't ask everyone and favor profiles at a higher hierarchical level than yours. 4) Criticize and comment negatively in groups Show your disagreement by defending your point of view.
In groups, only post content that interests you Think of others. Post for others, not for yourself. Provide value. 6) Send messages to several people by checking the “ Allow recipients to see each other’s names and email addresses ” option. It's a bit like sending an email to several recipients who don't know each other without putting them in blind copy. 7) Ask to Like your Facebook page It looks very amateurish, even desperate. 8) Ask people you don't know to "put you to sleep" Endorsements (skills endorsements) were launched by LinkedIn to add a touch of gamification and in some way to replace endorsements which were quite difficult to obtain. This is not a reason to ask everyone, especially those you don't know.
Post multiple times per day Once a day is enough. By posting 20 times per month, you reach Email Data around 60% of your audience. Be especially careful about the time you post. If you post when no one is online, no one will read you. The error probably comes from the way the job boards work. On job boards, it seems that you have to update your profile regularly to “bring it to the top of the pile”. On LinkedIn, there is no indication that this is useful. 3) Ask everyone for recommendations Since endorsements, recommendations have less importance in LinkedIn. Don't ask everyone and favor profiles at a higher hierarchical level than yours. 4) Criticize and comment negatively in groups Show your disagreement by defending your point of view.
In groups, only post content that interests you Think of others. Post for others, not for yourself. Provide value. 6) Send messages to several people by checking the “ Allow recipients to see each other’s names and email addresses ” option. It's a bit like sending an email to several recipients who don't know each other without putting them in blind copy. 7) Ask to Like your Facebook page It looks very amateurish, even desperate. 8) Ask people you don't know to "put you to sleep" Endorsements (skills endorsements) were launched by LinkedIn to add a touch of gamification and in some way to replace endorsements which were quite difficult to obtain. This is not a reason to ask everyone, especially those you don't know.