Ever lost the opportunity to get a job because of your online presence?
The events of the past week has highlighted the importance of presenting yourself effectively online - with the integrity of a head on an independent enquiry called into question over her LinkedIn endorsements.Even Winston Peter’s is talking about it!.
The appointment of Dr. Pauline Kingi to head the independent inquiry into Wally Haumaha as deputy police commissioner, after Dr. Kingi is believed to have endorsed him on LinkedIn has raised highlighted once again about being smart about how you promote and present online.
So here are three top fails I see often on LinkedIn around endorsements and how to overcome them
Fail #1: Endorsing people you don’t know and endorsing them for everything
Top Tip: Who you endorse does matter and can be seen as a recommendation. It is probably obvious but ONLY endorse those you know. It is public….. so think before you push the button.
Question: I am curious though - how much do you pay attention to endorsements? Other than of course the opposition or people keen to check the credibility of a persons
Fail #2: Setting up lots of endorsements (e.g. 23) and not selecting the ones that are most relevant to you
Most people don’t know how to use LinkedIn and often get annoyed with all the invites from random people. Used effectively it can be an amazing way to connect with people, become a thought leader and positively position oneself in the marketplace.
Top Tip: choose on LinkedIn what you want to be endorsed in. Pick the ones that are most relevant to you and your profession. Even think about keywords. Google loves keywords so why not use them in all areas of LinkedIn.
Question: How many people know how to use endorsements on LinkedIn? Or get annoyed at all the prompting?
Fail #3: only relying on endorsements and having a half completed profile.
Top Tip: Get recommendations on LinkedIn. It is quite straightforward and you can ask people who you have worked with in the past to write one. Also, make sure your profile is complete - packaging you up with how you want to be seen in the marketplace.
Most employers (and Kiwis) want to speak to a real person to get a reference which why including written referee statements in a CV doesn’t work. On LinkedIn however, you can have recommendations (for roles) and also endorsements. For some reason endorsements are just above recommendations (didn’t used to be this way) but in my opinion – recommendations are more important than endorsements. I would rather someone took the time to write a great recommendation are rather than see 90 people endorsed me for coaching. Maybe it's just me.
Dear Winston – could you please ensure all Kiwis get LinkedIn training for a professional coach so they don’t end up with egg on their face like you are having to talk about.
If you are keen to learn how to overcome some of the LinkedIn fails, get confident in using it and effectively market yourself to the internet world – email me grant@sparked.co.nz and let's get you the opportunities you deserve online.