LinkedIn for College Students, Professional Careers and Unemployment

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Sarah Manley constructs the basics of a LinkedIn Profile and gives the tips on what needs to be done when learning how to connect on this social media platform.

Transcript of LinkedIn for College Students, Professional Careers and Unemployment

LinkedIn for College, Professional Career &

Unemployment

Leadership and Management Management 382

St. Thomas UniversitySarah M. Manley, MA

Sarah M. Manley, MA:

15+ years professional marketer – manufacturing, health care & technology

Manages more than 10 social accounts for Fortune 17 organization

National Blogger/Speaker Established & implemented 100+ marketing

programs/initiatives for Fortune 500 and SMB clients Grew SMB from $2 Million sales to $10 Million sales

within 3 years.

Social Networks: Twitter Instagram Pinterest Facebook

LinkedIn?

By the Numbers:

277 million professionals (2/14) 2 new profiles created/seconds (2/14) Available in 20 Languages (10/13) 41% Mobile Visitors (6/13) 40% of users check LinkedIn DAILY/spending

17 minutes/session (11/12) 2.1 Million Groups (3/13)

By the Numbers:

48% of Recruiters ONLY use LI for social outreach (1/14)

Only 13% of millenials use LI (9/13) Recruiters have on average 616 connections

(1/14) 600K (users who have been hired by

company they interned for).

Profile: Create a profile – If you already have one, click

on Profile and then on “Improve Your Profile” – LinkedIn will walk you through it.

Professional Image/Headshot; only you, no significant others, no inappropriate attire

If you are unemployed, write a headline that gives people an idea of who you are & what you can do.

Profile:

Be Visible – Edit Profile & Manage Public Profile settings.

Use action words & avoid jargon. You are not a vanguard, maven, guru or ninja!

Complete volunteer/skills information

Brand yourself! Personalize your LinkedIn Profile URL

Profile:

ProfessionalImage

Headline

Edit

PersonalizedURL

Privacy:

Edit, Profile and Customize Visibility under Privacy Controls

Contacts:

LinkedIn Contact Requests MUST be personalized. Do NOT use the default connection text.Current & Former co-workersParents (their friends & associates) & Relatives NeighborsTeachers & advisorsVolunteer organizationsStudent leadership positionsStudent groups, classmates

Contacts:

Explain how you know them and why you are connecting. Explain you will follow up with the connection.

Recommendations & Endorsements:

After profile is complete: Write recommendations for your connections – state something that explains skills and cite examples.Give endorsements to you establish your network contribution.

Recommendations:

Give recommendations to receive recommendations; people may look at that statistic.

Endorsements:

LinkedIn will ask if your connections have skills – a simple click will “endorse” them. Rearrange your skills to be ranked the way you want them.

Presentations:

LinkedIn has partnered with Slide Share; upload presentations to give your profile a boost. Great way to keep your network in the loop on career presentations.

Groups:

Join groups – start small and consider: High School Alumni College AlumniCollege Professional Associations Groups or organizations you aspire to be a part of.Review annually and eliminate groups w/little engagement

Groups:

Tip: The number in the upper right corner indicates an active thread – Join the conversation

Following:

Follow industry organizations where you may want to be employed

Follow schools Follow business and industry thought leaders: Sheryl

Sandberg, Richard Branson, Bill Gates Follow professors who have inspired you, in your

major or even in your general studies. Follow professional associations

Jobs:

2 Places: Jobs Tab and within Groups

The Pulse:

Get news; tailored by groups, interests, industry and contacts

Your Assignment:

Complete Profile Upload your final project to your LinkedIn Profile Spend 2 hours on LinkedIn every week. If

Unemployed, spend 5 hours. Connect with graduating classmates by June 1 Write 1 recommendation/week through summer Connect with Professors by June 1 Join at least 10 groups by June 15 Follow business leaders by July 1