Friday, May 15, 2020

How to Use the New LinkedIn for Executive Personal Branding - Part 1 - Executive Career Brandâ„¢

How to Use the New for Executive Personal Branding - Part 1 This 3-part series on , personal branding and executive job search includes: Part 1 Why All Executives Need to be on Getting Your Personal Brand Into Your Profile Customizing Your Profile URL for Better SEO Part 2 Why You Really Need to Include a Photo Taking Advantage of the Skills Expertise Section Expanding Your Network with Quality Connections Benefitting from ’s Company Follow Updating Your Network Part 3 Getting and Giving Great Recommendations Getting Busy With Groups Tapping into ’s Jobs Pages and Confidential Job Search Why All Executives Need to be on Whether or not youre willing to accept and embrace them, the digital age and social media will impact your job search. Taking advantage of the Internet does not mean pushing hard with job boards, and applying and sending your resume to ANY posting that remotely looks like a good fit. Even used well, the job boards typically yield a dismal  estimated  3-5% success rate. Your time is much better spent on , taking advantage of the value it offers for passive job search, when youre actively networking for jobs and for overall career management. Did you know that many surveys indicate that hiring authorities turn to first when they search online for candidates â€" before heading to Google, other search engines and other social networks? Recruiters have embraced as their #1 tool for referrals, candidate research and sourcing, and for publishing job openings. They have special applications to search for people like you. In fact, NOT having a profile can actually be detrimental to your job search. Besides being invisible to the very people you need  to find you, youre showing that youre out of date with the digital age and the latest career management strategies. Many savvy executives competing for the jobs you want have already embraced all that has to offer. Even if you don’t use all of ’s features, you should have a great profile there, just to keep pace with your competition. And your profile provides social proof corroborating the claims youve made about yourself in your other career materials (resume, biography, cover letter, other online profiles and web pages). Be aware that discrepancies between the documents you provide employers and what they find in your profile (or anywhere online) can red-flag your candidacy. Like other social networks and social media, periodically tweaks its appearance, existing features and functionality, and updates the site with new features, while eliminating others. Over the past year or so, they’ve rolled out quite a few changes. Unfortunately, no longer supports Answers, Applications and the ability to upload your career documents onto your profile, allowing people  to easily click to open, view, print and save them. Ive included below the most important existing features, that I believe (and hope) will always be there, but you may find that some of them mentioned here are no longer available. Consult with the Help Center to fully utilize all that has to offer. has also recently changed the way profiles look and work, but the changes may not yet have been rolled out to all members. Instructions I include here reflect the way my own profile is functioning at this writing. You may need to hunt around a little to find everything, but then that will help familiarize you with all that’s going on at . Getting Your Personal Brand Into Your Profile Repurpose the content of your branded executive resume, especially the summary section at the top, to create a branded, magnetic profile. Dont just copy and paste in your resume content. Change it up somewhat. Make sure that, once people land on your profile, it will immediately capture and hold their attention, and brand your potential value to them. To improve your profile’s search engine optimization (SEO), pushing your profile higher in search results, make sure your profile is 100% complete and you have at least 100 connections. Get in your most important keywords above the fold, especially in your professional headline at the top, and also the Summary section. As with any search engine, the search engine more readily recognizes and indexes the keywords in content that sits higher up on the web page. More in my post How to Make Your Profile Professional Headline SEO-Friendly. Investigate and fill out every profile section that applies to you. Especially important are the Professional Headline, Summary, Experience, Education, Skills Expertise and Recommendations sections. The amount of content you can include in each section is limited, but you should try to use as much of it as possible. Avoid using vague, overused, and anemic phrases that waste precious real estate and do nothing to support the unique value you offer. More content = more relevant keywords = greater likelihood that people sourcing candidates like you will land on your profile. Whenever you’re about to make changes to your profile, first turn off your Activity Broadcasts (this is different from your Activity Feed, which is described in Part 2 of this series), so your connections won’t be notified that you’ve made a change and possibly be alerted that you’re prepping your profile for a job search. The benefit to turning off Activity Broadcasts when you update your Headline, Summary or any other content in your profile is twofold: Youll avoid annoying your connections with a deluge of update tweaks. If youre in a confidential job search, youll avoid notifying your connections that you’re prepping your profile for a job search. To change your Activity Broadcast, go to Settings, then Turn on/off your activity broadcasts. Choose Off and remember to turn it back On (Let people know when you change your profile, make recommendations, or follow companies), once youre all finished making changes. Each of the sections in your profile can be clicked and dragged to another position, whenever you choose. I suggest that, since your Summary section is an introduction to the value you offer, and is loaded with your relevant keywords, you place it high up on your profile. Monitor your profile views regularly. Keep an eye on who is viewing your profile and consider adjusting it if it’s not getting many views. Control your privacy settings. Change the defaults if they’re not right for you. For instance, if you don’t want people to know that you’re viewing their profiles, change this setting to Anonymous. Customizing Your Profile URL for Better SEO Often overlooked, customizing your profile URL can help elevate your search rankings. Instead of this kind of URL: www..com/in/john-smith/5/224a/123/ See if this one is available: www..com/in/yourname Better yet, try adding an appropriate short keyword phrase: www..com/in/johnsmithbiotechexecutive For instructions to personalize and optimize your URL, see my post, Best Kept Secret to Optimize Your Profile. Related posts: Online Presence and Personal Brand Management: 5 Things to Remember Social Recruiting and Your Executive Job Search ’s Free Executive Job Search Resources 00 0

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