Tuesday, April 14, 2020
What Your LinkedIn Profile Should Look Like in 2018
What Your LinkedIn Profile Should Look Like in 2018 Hate to break it to you, but if youâre treating LinkedIn like an old-fashioned Rolodex, youâre doing it wrong. Nearly every industry uses LinkedIn to find and vet job candidates, and over 90% of recruiters rely on the site, according to data from the Society of Human Resource Management. So your profile canât just be a storage unit for career contacts â" it needs to be a living, breathing record of your professional life. We rounded up the best LinkedIn profile tips to catch an employerâs eye, and shape how they feel about your candidacy. âPeople need to be told who you are and what you do,â says Donna Serdula, owner of LinkedIn-Makeover.com. âThis is your online reputation. Take control of it.â Headshot: Leland Bobble - Getty images 1. Know what to include (and leave off) There are a few things that belong on every profile, according to LinkedIn career expert Blair Decembrele. Users who list their education appear in searches up to 17 times more often than those who donât. Location is another important detail: filling out this field with where you want to work will make you appear in up to 23 times more searches, she says. A professional-looking picture is another must-have. Profiles with a photo get up to 21 times more views and up to 36 times more messages, according to Decembrele. And a summary statement, an âelevator pitchâ with at least 40 words that speak to your skills, motivation, and interests, will also help grab a recruiterâs eye. Your LinkedIn headline also deserves some attention. If youâre actively looking for a new gig, think about how you can use this space to grab a recruiterâs attention. There are a million âMarketing Directorâ profiles; something like âMaster of Digital Pharmaceutical Marketingâ will get way more eyeballs. 2. Itâs a social network. So be social LinkedIn can be a powerful networking tool â" if you let it. Instead of just saving the connections youâve met throughout your professional life, actively engage with contacts by liking, sharing, and commenting on their activity. Itâs fine to connect with someone youâve never met, Serdula says. But make sure you send a customized message in your invitation. She suggests something along the lines of: âHey, Steve! We donât know each other, but we both work in sales, and Iâm really impressed with what youâre doing. Iâd love to connect.â If itâs hard to engage with LinkedIn during the work day, so Serdula suggests downloading the siteâs mobile app and scrolling through it in your downtime. âA lot of my clients say, âI wasnât using LinkedIn until it was on my phone,â she says. âNow they network in their pajamas.â 3. Nail the voice Your LinkedIn profile is a chance to add some personality to your professional story, so donât make the mistake of copying your resume verbatim. Serdula says the best profiles are usually written in first person (âIâm a PR whiz, trusted by the biggest names in Silicon Valleyâ), but other styles can work too. If youâre in sales or marketing, second person (âIf you want to know how we can affect change, visit my brand website,â) can help engage potential clients. And executive-level professionals, or anyone with a long list of accomplishments, may feel more comfortable to writing about their success in the third person (âJohn Smith is an award-winning authorâ). Take a minute to think about your target audience. Is it a potential employer? New clients? Tailor your voice accordingly, and try not to be too dry. âWrite it as if thereâs a real person behind it, not âa dynamic professional with 30 years of upward experienceâ,â Serdula says. Make sure the work experience youâre highlighting is up to date, and pertinent to your career. Itâs cool to include volunteer work where you flexed skills that would be attractive to an employer, but the summer you spent as your kidâs soccer coach, or the string of restaurant jobs you held in college, wonât do you much good. âRelevance is key,â Decembrele says. âAdd the experience that relates to your future professional goals.â 4. Keep your profile alive If you want your profile to stand out, youâll need to update it often with examples of your work output. Papers youâve written, projects youâve completed, and presentations youâve nailed are all good options. You donât have to have a traditional desk job, or a creative portfolio, to make this work. Just find something youâre proud of and make it visual, like pictures of an event you planned, or a video of a panel discussion you took part in. The driving idea, Serdula says, is to get your audience to engage with you in real life. âA really successful profile makes a person want to do something â" pick up the phone and call you, click a link to a website, download a white paper,â she says. 5. Hack the LinkedIn job search There are more than 11 million active job listings on LinkedIn, according to Decembrele. Spend some time scrolling through the gigs youâre interested in, and jot down the specific skills they ask for. Often, recruiters will search LinkedIn for keywords of the job description theyâre trying to fill. Peppering some of these words into your skills section, summary, and work experience will make them come to you. âIncluding at least five relevant skills will help you connect with the right opportunities,â Decembrele says.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.