Networking: Whether you’re looking at companies as potential customers or for a job, you can search and find those people you are already connected with or should be connected with using LinkedIn.
Competitive Insight: Finding out what makes your competitor, customer, or customer’s competitors tick is easy with LinkedIn.
Business Development: Ideas for new products, new sources for ingredients or products, or just finding new customers are challenges for LinkedIn.
Finding Employees: Recruiting or getting the inside information on job seekers.
Promotion and Advertising: Keeping your company or even personal name out there for all to see is another excellent use for LinkedIn
Finding a Job: LinkedIn is one of the easiest ways to do a job search, and likewise, it is a way to better understand the strength of your resume and learn what needs to be changed to better fit your ideal job.
Research: Researching new career options, lead generation, content marketing, gaining competitive insight and finding new supply sources
The difference between a LinkedIn Profile and a Resume is important →
Technology plays a significant role in job searches and career transitions. LinkedIn, a professional networking site, is a valuable resource for job seekers to connect with recruiters, potential employers, and industry peers. It provides crucial information and leads.
While a resume highlights your education, qualifications, and identity, your LinkedIn profile helps you find a job or allows employers to find you. The introductory statement on your resume should be tailored to the job posting and unique for each application. It showcases how well you fit the job description, and the closer your summary aligns with the posting, the higher your chances of securing an interview.
The primary purpose of a LinkedIn profile is to enable search algorithms to identify your skills and qualifications and find the best match for an employer's listing. The "About Statement" on LinkedIn is a more general summary of your work experience and classification, highlighting your abilities. This is an excellent opportunity to showcase your accomplishments and demonstrate why you're an ideal fit for the job.
Your experience section on the resume and profile should be similar, but you can elaborate more on the latter. On LinkedIn, the skills section allows you to list up to 50 skills, which is more than what's possible on a resume.
LinkedIn has a vast network of over 800 million professional profiles, providing unlimited networking opportunities and job openings. With more than 58 million companies listed and over 15 million open job listings, using LinkedIn is crucial to succeed in any industry.
Your profile and resume are essential tools for job seekers and employers alike. LinkedIn's algorithms match job postings with your profile, bringing job notifications directly to you. That's why LinkedIn is a vital technology tool for career growth.
Using Hashtags on LinkedIn and some comments about where and why →
Hashtags are used across social media platforms to categorize content, so we can search and find content that we are interested in and so businesses and brands can reach larger audiences of people who may be interested in their content.
This is a short list of suggestions and thoughts about this subject because there are so many good, well-written articles on this, and some of those connections are also listed.
Add the hashtag at the end of the article.
Identify what you want to stand out with the #. Who you are as the author, what the article focus is.
To determine how many people see that #, type the # into the LinkedIn search bar.
When you click the search bar hashtag for the words you are interested you will see how many people follow that hashtag, and then the feed below will be the recent article posted with that tag. The most current reports show how the word is trending to some degree.
LinkedIn’s advice is to use 3 hashtags per post. You can use more, but the algorithm likely rewards you when you follow LinkedIn’s advice.
Use broader # rather than niche ones. Also, you can check whether it is worth it to use them by typing them in the search bar first to see how many people are following them
20+ top LinkedIn hashtags for 2023
Popular hashtags change frequently, and most are industry-specific, but here are the top LinkedIn hashtags by follower count in 2022.
#India – 67.6 million
#Innovation – 38.8 million
#Management – 36 million
#HumanResources – 33.2 million
#DigitalMarketing – 27.4 million
#Technology – 26.4 million
#Creativity – 25.2 million
#Future – 24.6 million
#Futurism – 23.5 million
#Entrepreneurship – 22.7 million
#Careers – 22.5 million
#Markets – 22.2 million
#Startups – 21.2 million
#Marketing – 20.3 million
#SocialMedia – 19.7 million
#VentureCapital – 19.3 million
#SocialNetworking – 19 million
#LeanStartups – 19 million
#Economy – 18.7 million
#Economics – 18 million
Also, this YouTube Video by Joe Gannon, Everything you need to know about LinkedIn hashtags, is excellent.
https://youtu.be/1_i9wZUgOaQ
Should your job define you as a human being, and how can LinkedIn help? →
The best answer to that question is no, and the support for that point of view is that a person is a being that has specific capacities or attributes such as reason, morality, consciousness or self-consciousness, values, and part of a culturally established form of social relations such as families. All these areas overlap the work time, often subjugate work responsibilities, and make it far easier to function when employment values align with an employer’s goals.
Apart from work, a human being’s life has some critical areas of focus, but even so, the reality is that time can be an obstacle to this definition. One week has 168 hours. Suppose a person sleeps an average of 8 hours a day; that takes 56 hours out of this total, leaving 112 hours. If a person works 50 hours a week working and commuting, then this leaves 62 hours or 8 hours a day to devote to your family, eating, hobbies, church, reading, study, and social relations.
The financial support from working 50 hours a week often is needed to support everything about the 168-hour week. Usually, it takes two adults to support a family, but full-time work leaves little time for reinvesting in oneself.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average worker currently holds ten different jobs before age forty, and this number is projected to grow. Forrester Research predicts that today's youngest workers will have twelve to fifteen jobs in their lifetime.
If you probably have job changes ahead within your projected career, what can be done to create an upward trajectory in a career? One answer comes in understanding the skills critical to holding your current job in place and the logical following skills that should be added. Working until you are burnt out and want nothing to do with your past career focus can be a very costly career mistake.
The LinkedIn profile is a template for all the experiences and qualifications that came together to get you your current job. With that template in place, you can ask yourself where you go next when a job change happens. An easy answer can be to use LinkedIn to find out what skills your supervisor or that person’s manager has and identify what skills you lack for that job. You can look at competitors' profiles and find their employees’ skills and what is something that would help you. Another approach is looking at similar industries and finding job profiles based on the same or similar skill set.
You may have asked yourself if you could fit into the business and culture of competitors, suppliers, and customers from your own business experiences. Linkedin can show you the people who run those businesses and departments, and that can open the door to call and ask for 30 minutes in an informational interview to ask some questions.
The LinkedIn profile can point to the future as well as be a road map of where you have been, and that tool can prove invaluable for you. As we have seen, a working person's week isn’t much time open.
This article is posted on my LinkedIn newsletter https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/should-your-job-define-you-human-being-how-can-linkedin-jones
Why post this LinkedIn information on this website? →
Why does this site offer a LinkedIn page? Because LinkedIn is an opportunity for everyone. The LinkedIn site has 800 million+ members and allows professionals to manage their professional identity, build and engage a professional network, and access knowledge, insights, and opportunities. It also has some fantastic ways to find out the best way to use their site on their site.
The reason it is included on this site isn’t that this is the best and most complete information source, but it is because it just focuses on what you need to know to get started from the point of view of a person who just lost their job and is in a hurry to use the tools. This insight came from working one on one with over 800 job seekers.
Some of what you need to know will be “intuitive” based on what your resume and job history say about you and finding the best way to sum those experiences up in the About Statement and job titles you chose to put under your headline. Freelancer, Self-Employed, looking for a job and leaving those things behind? Those can require some intuitive focus. LinkedIn, of course, can identify the many parts of the process, but the posts on this site take those approaches adding where experience has shown people trying to be intuitive find roadblocks and need help
What about the LinkedIn “About Statement” Section? →
The “About Section” can be presented in various ways, and just one way is not necessarily the right way. You could use the About Section Space to:
Describe who you are and what makes you tick. Explain your present or last job, leave titles out, and describe your past career path and successes. You could include your passions and show your outside interests. These traditional approaches are found in writings on LinkedIn in this section.
The approach presented here has made a difference to those many candidates I have coached on this over the last few years. In most cases, it attempts to create a “general job title” that sometimes crosses over to more than one job focus and then states what the candidate can do with that title or label. Examples of this would be:
Enterprise Performance Manager, Software Engineer, and Development Specialist: able to establish market differentiation, enhance customer experience and improve product quality and safety.
Strong Engineering Professional skilled in Business Process, Requirements Analysis, Enterprise Software, Enterprise Architecture, Agile Methodologies, and Functional Safety: able to create efficiency and enhance the performance of……….
These statements show how the experience within the general title it begins with can lead to accomplishing the things found in job postings for those jobs.
If your past job experience has been in multiple areas, you could summarize them in a title. For example, you could say you were an
“Experienced Business Operations & HR Professional”: with a strong focus……
This general title allows you to claim credit as not just an HR person but as able to fit available management positions.
If you know what job you want, then you will need to show in this type of “About Statement” that you know what the functions and challenges of the job are, and then state how you can accomplish those things using relevant vital words trade jargon.
The LinkedIn Headline under your name at the top usually carries your current job title. Some like to add a passionate statement about something in that place. Still, since my focus here is to view this as someone trying to help people find the best job, the most effective approach is to list the job titles you qualify for and would like to get in the headline under the name.
Enterprise Performance Manager | Software Engineer | Development Specialist | Director of IT | VP Technology
This approach reinforces the opening line of the About Statement. The headline and the About Statement opening line should generally point to the job titles you are applying for, and,n the About Statement, you follow the title labels“able to do” statements showing in more detail your abilities.
About LinkedIn Headlines for the Job Seeker →
Your LinkedIn Headline
Whatever you choose to put under your name at the top of your LinkedIn profile is the “Headline.” The way to approach the decision of what to put there depends on your employment status and goals. Some people use it to express their overall passion in life or perhaps in work. While employed, it is usually the title of your current job. You can use it to list titles for jobs you would like to have, bringing a stronger focus to those areas for those viewing the headline.
A headline while your job search: The headline can be your skills and experience or what value you bring to the job but what I have seen work best over a few years is using this section to list the job titles you would like be considered for. This can open doors and present relevant keywords that might not have any other place to be seen. Since this approach offers several options for your job search, an excellent way to do this is by using the | (pipe) key. Example: Director of Marketing | VP of Sales | New Business Development Specialist |
For independent, self-employed, freelance, or on contract, this is an excellent area to list the focus areas. In addition to the titles under the name, services can also be listed in that area through the “Providing Services” tool, which will lead to a “Request for Proposal” link.
Examples:
JD Smith Animation | Illustration | Video Animation | Visual Design | Graphic Design
Brent M. Jones Author | Writer | Speaker | Career Development Coach | Consultant | Experienced Business Executive
3. LinkedIn, by default, creates your headline based on your current job title and company. This can be overwritten, but if you’re a passive job seeker, changing this title could alert your company that you’re looking? The good news is that the algorithms find matches even when the candidate shows being employed.
4. Other options usually attempt to attract attention. A professional name or title and desired job target or the number of years of experience in the specific field can be used. (algorithms, as well as anyone who reads the background, will, of course, see the number of years of experience) Statements of passion could be considered for this area. Resumes and LinkedIn profiles seem to emphasize different places, and often it is hard to get the same viewpoint from your coach or mentor if you ask, but my experience over several years suggests #1 above is best.
LinkedIn can help you Identify the right Job Titles in your Job Search →
A trip to the hospital for a body scan taught me how easy it could be to find new job titles and reminded me of the practical use of LinkedIn.
While waiting to get ready for the body scan, I met several people, all focused on preparing me for the scan. I asked each of them what their title was; in every case, it was a title that I had not heard of before. My interest in job titles resulted from years of working with people on their LinkedIn profiles and observing how many unexpected titles you see.
Learning more title options for jobs is something that LinkedIn can be a help for while researching the company. Using the LinkedIn Jobs Tab on the Dashboard, job openings are fou. , When a company of interest is identified, clicking on that company will lead to the y job posting. The next step where the job post is shown is clicking the company logo in the upper left-hand corner, which takes you to the companies page. This page has its dashboard with these categories: Home About, Posts, Jobs, People, Events, and Videos. Clicking the Jobs option, the company employees can be found, and you can see connections you have in common and their profiles that will show you their title, experience, and skills. You might also find the Director of Human Resources in the location you want to apply for, and connect with that person by adding a note that you are applying for a particular job.
This section can also be used to learn more about people you have an interview coming up with or who you have already interviewed with. Since this section has LinkedIn links for these people, it is easy to use this approach to send a “request to connect” or “thank you for the time today” message.
You can see the career path of the people you might work for and their prior position. If that person is your potential boss, then the last job they had might be one you would qualify for, and it may also reveal a new title for you to consider. The label on the potential supervisor's last job might offer a new direction since you often will see it as something you're qualified to do. The title will usually be one you had not thought of, but searches by that title can help your ongoing job search.
An important and unique feature of LinkedIn is that it gives you important feedback →
LinkedIn is the world's largest professional network with 760+ million users in more than 200 countries and territories worldwide. The US has 167 million users. These figures are as of 2020.
With that said, I want to list one handy feature of LinkedIn. LinkedIn is unique in how its job search platform works. They have the traditional approach where you put in the job title you want to search for and where (City, State, or even zip code) brings up the jobs. Google does an excellent job of that too. Most job platforms approach the search task this way, remembering what you searched for, and sending you more ideas on-going. LinkedIn will do that on the traditional job search platform at the top of the Jobs page.
LinkedIn’s essential and unique feature doesn’t just remember what you searched for and continue to feed you other similar job matches, but it also uses algorithms to read your profile. It matches the shape of the job posts and finds the best matches based on the totality of your profile. This then brings notifications to you in the jobs section under “Based on your Profile and Search,” showing where your profile matched best. The algorithms find you; in reality, the best jobs also find you.
Working as a Career Coach, I sometimes have candidates tell me that the jobs they see as “best fits” on the lower part of the Jobs page are ones they have no interest in. I then usually tell them that one of two things are the reason for that? Either they are not qualified for what they want to do, or they didn’t fill out the profile correctly.
This is unique for a job search platform to see what job found you by the algorithm’s evaluation of your profile. What you see as jobs sent to you confirms your profile's strength, and you can, in many cases, know that you are not being clear enough on your profile to see the kind of jobs you want. Instead of searching for a particular job, the job that fits you best is searching for you. This is unique, and nowhere else in the other options for job search can you get this feedback.
“If you can’t find what you want in the job section, either you are not qualified for what you want, or your profile hasn’t been done correctly enough to reflect why you would fit the job you want.”
Your careers need LinkedIn more than ever making profile creation training very important →
At the beginning of 2024, about 950 million members are on LinkedIn, and 40% of those monthly active users used LinkedIn daily.
Microsoft paid 26.2 Billion dollars for LinkedIn in 2016. 43% of the users are women, and 57% are men. 27% of all Americans use LinkedIn. 70% of the users live outside the US. 30 Million companies are on LinkedIn.
Each week there are 9 billion content impressions in LinkedIn’s feed.
There are 87 million millennials on LinkedIn, making up 38 percent of the social network's user base.
With this big platform, is there a need for independent trainers? Is there room for interpretation on how best to fill out your profile? YES, training is needed, and some things are a matter of opinion on how best to do them.
As an experienced LinkedIn trainer, I will show you in a variety of training posts in the Career Development section of this website what can help. These few LinkedIn sections came together from working one-on-one with over 500 people trying to polish up or get put on the site over the last few years. When you are faced with being out of a job, the path to getting the LinkedIn site ready is critical, and the point of view these posts are written with reflects just that.
Don't add your “paper resume” to your LinkedIn profile →
LinkedIn is a great tool; it provides the algorithms with much data to match you with job posting, but the paper resume’s goal is to check you precisely with a job posting.
The statement about the job title you apply for should be specifically aimed at the posting and how you fit. Scanners toss you out when they don’t see that you match the posting.
Does LinkedIn provide the option of attaching a printed resume under your header to allow it to be downloaded? Yes, but please don’t do it because it won’t match the requirements of any job you are applying for.
Your printed resume should be drafted to focus on a particular job. The summary statement on that resume needs to show that you are qualified for the job posting you are applying for, and the information should reflect the job posting.
The skills must show that you have the ten skills they are asking for.
Your printed resume is drafted for the particular job, and the LinkedIn “about section” is a broader overview of who you are and what you can do.
About LinkedIn
Your LinkedIn listing is what potential employers will see when they google your name, and there is an 80% chance they will google your name before inviting you to an interview.
According to LinkedIn, of the 675 million monthly and 250 million active users, only 3 million share content weekly- just over 1% of monthly users.
One million LinkedIn users are senior-level influencers, and 40 million are in decision-making positions.
There are 10 million employers and 7.5 million monthly job postings on LinkedIn.
59% of managerscontactapplicantssbasedontheirr LinkedInnprofilese.
70% of people are hired at a company they have a connection with.
Be sure you do the following
Update everything on your profile regularly
Make sure you add good content if you post
Have a good reason to ask for a connection
Personalize your connection requests
Treat people with respect
If you must send a pitch to your connections, don’t do it as soon as you connect. Build a relationship first.