LinkedIn Guide v8
LinkedIn Guide v8
LinkedIn Guide v8
com
GordonBDM
Founded in July 2009, Gordon BDMs team works with B2B clients across the UK and internationally to help them win new customers, using unique, modern techniques.
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
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Preliminaries LinkedIn is for collaboration and networking. So it says. We say you might choose to use LinkedIn to win customers, get headhunted, hire people, seek and share best practice, research companies or people, demonstrate your expertise, find suppliers or just keep on top of the hot topics in your line. LinkedIns a movement, a culture and a way of working. LinkedIn is not a social network exactly. Jeff Weiner, LinkedIns CEO doesnt allow that term to describe LinkedIn and we dont use it either. It looks and functions quite like Facebook but dont be tempted to use it like Facebook. Keep it professional. Whos on it? Its not just for early career professionals. Barack Obamas on there. As is Bill Gates. In fact, there are very few well-known figures who arent there. LinkedIns a market full of budget-holders, line-managers and decisionmakers ready to be influenced to make good buying decisions. The worlds changing fast as we progressively more embrace and embed LinkedIn into our working lives. Concepts Nothing avails but Perfection may be spelt shorter: Paralysis. Winston Churchill (This is for lawyers in particular) Too many professionals either dont sign up to LinkedIn or take membership and do nothing because they are procrastinating about what not to do. Take some advice from Nike and just do it... If you dont, your competitors will. And theyll be talking to your customers...
TRUST
LIKE
ACKNOWLEDGE
Everyone on LinkedIn has something to offer. Everyone hasGordonBDM experience that is interesting to other LinkedIn members. When you give people that something, for nothing, you develop associated goodwill. People warm to you, trust your word, your authenticity and you set yourself up as the goto person for your subject.
WinningWork.com
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
Design: www.FONDA.co.uk
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You can give something for nothing through your status updates, on LinkedIn Groups discussion boards, via LinkedIn Q&A, through LinkedIn Events and using other inbuilt tools. Between May and August 2010, I handed out over 1,600 copies of this LinkedIn miniguide to people who requested it after I made it available on 4 LinkedIn Groups. I didnt previously know hardly any of these 1,600 people. Unfortunately a lot of them know me as Gordon now (rather than Adam which is actually my name!) but at least they know me.
This screenshot shows 200 people had commented on my offer on one LinkedIn Group alone. This kept me very much in peoples minds as a specialist. Because of the activity I created from one post on the McKinsey Quarterly Group I was ranked as top influencer.
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
Design: www.FONDA.co.uk
WinningWork.com
GordonBDM
Think carefully about what you can offer. What do you know about that people will find both interesting and useful? Now take it to your audience on LinkedIn. Be curious Use LinkedIn to find out other peoples opinions. Post questions and discussions on LinkedIn Groups. Find out how people do things and what they think best practice looks like. Send messages directly to people who may have answers. Research people, customers, intermediaries and competitors. The people who get the most out of LinkedIn have a natural curiosity OR learn to have such. People have egos... Flattery gets you somewhere (sometimes) People are much more likely to react positively if you tell them you would value their opinion. They will take more notice if you say their LinkedIn profile looks interesting. Incorrect approach: Please meet me next Tuesday so I can tell you how good I am at my job and you will want to use my services. Correct approach: I see from your profile that you have some fantastic international experience. It would be great to hear your views about the latest Sarbox issues. Let me know if you have half an hour for a coffee at some point next week.
LinkedIns not just for the most senior executives. An organisation would do very well to engender an entire firm approach to business development. If your most senior people connect on LinkedIn with your clients and targets most senior executives, your mid-ranking client teams connect with their peers and your early career professionals link to their upwardly mobile counterparts, you will have created a true man-marking approach. That way, you will get a true and full picture of your markets and be in a position to enhance client relations not just now but also for the future.
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
Design: www.FONDA.co.uk
WinningWork.com
GordonBDM
Yes, look at your contacts contacts. This will be very useful in helping you map your world. Subliminally youll take a lot of this information in and it will come to your conscious when you need it. However, dont make assumptions about people and their LinkedIn contacts.
Because everyone has a different personality and a different LinkedIn approach, some people connect with a wide network and others only with trusted contacts. Just because someone is connected to an individual you want to know, it doesnt automatically mean they are close enough to refer you or even pass on information for you.
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
Design: www.FONDA.co.uk
WinningWork.com
GordonBDM
Your Profile - Our Rules - Make sure you add a photo. People are less likely to want to interact with a mysterious, faceless internet page. If people are searching for an expert, find your profile which has no photo and the profile of someone with comparable skills and a photo, your competitor is much more likely to receive contact before you. It doesnt matter what you look like. Unless your head has been chopped off, theres no valid excuse. - Ensure your job title is understandable to people outwith your organisation or sector. If it contains uncommon acronyms, spell them out. If your job title contains jargon, change it. (But check your boss is OK with you doing so). - Add information to your Status update section regularly - at least once a week. The purpose here is to attempt to capture your connections attention. Perhaps talk about a project youre working on, an expert view or even some recent thought-leadership relevant to your job and industry. If you have a work-related blog, you can alert your contacts to new posts using this section too. - Clearly, you should list your current job but remember to list any non-executive or official advisory positions too. People will respect this breadth of activity. - If you have a number of job titles or there are multiple ways of explaining your role, add these all - this contributes significantly to your listing at the top of searches. If your official job title is Finance Director, add Chief Financial Officer also. If your official job title is Sales Director, you might want to add Business Development Director also.
Make sure you appear confident and impressive but not boastful.
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
Design: www.FONDA.co.uk
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GordonBDM
- Use the specialties section to add all the key-words relevant to your role. If youre an accountant for example, you might list your key-words as such management accounting, budgeting, forecasting, fixed assets, inventory control. There is no need to write in sentences here - comma-separated key-words are fine. - In additional information add a link to your websites homepage and potentially to the section of your website most relevant to you or your specialty. Probably dont add links to Facebook or other personal sites. This just isnt appropriate in most circumstances. Do add links to other information people will find interesting. If you have a Just Giving page, add a link to this. If you are on Twitter for professional purposes or maintain a blog, link to these here. - Under interests I would encourage you to give a little information about what you do out of work. People will find it interesting. Perhaps dont list your favourite football team or activities that some people might find objectionable but if youre an ice skater, twitcher or love baking, this could just start a conversation. Give people material to use to make contact. - Join Groups on LinkedIn by all means but if you join loads of them, make most of their logos invisible on your page - otherwise people will think you have nothing better to do than sit on LinkedIn all day (actually not a bad thing in our opinion but some might form other opinions!).
25% of LinkedIn users will never connect with you if they dont know you.
25% will connect with anyone from Mars to the Tora Bora mountains.
50% of people will accept your LinkedIn invitation if they feel they may benefit from making your acquaintance. These are the people you want to reach. They are discerning about their contacts but the door is open for you if your approach is just right...
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
Design: www.FONDA.co.uk
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GordonBDM
- You need to use the advanced people search facility (top right on your home page) to find all those people who are relevant to you. - The most useful search criteria include job title, location and industries. This will help you to find all those you dont yet know but want to. If you work for a B2B PR agency covering Norfolk for example, you might want to search for people with marketing in their job titles, 50 miles from NR1 and tick the appropriate sectors in the industries section (i.e. accounting, banking, business supplies...). - Once you have created your list, you will now need to select those people who you really do want to connect with. Bear in mind that just because you havent yet heard of a company, doesnt mean you should rule them out as relevant to you without some research. - Now you will invite your chosen prospective clients to connect with you on LinkedIn. - When you invite someone to connect with you on LinkedIn, the site asks you to identify how you know the other person. This is to prevent spam. You must NOT check the box that says colleague or friend if this is not the case. You will look disingenuous to the recipient as they will know what you have selected. - You must check the other box and then enter their email address. - Use your normal research procedures to find the prospective connections email address. Google will be invaluable in this process.
Many LinkedIn users read recommendations with great interest and respect the opinions of others.
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
Design: www.FONDA.co.uk
WinningWork.com
GordonBDM
LinkedIn Groups LinkedIn Groups are wonderful online meeting places for you to engage with new people and demonstrate your expertise. I would recommend joining Groups that are relevant to your expertise and also Groups where your clients are likely to be. This way, you can use Groups to maintain your knowledge and, in a tasteful way, show off a bit. There are many Groups on LinkedIn. If Groups youre a member of dont provide you with any benefit, leave them and find others that do. The process of finding the most valuable Groups for you involves trial and error. Once youre familiar with the format for LinkedIn Groups and you understand how to use language to post discussions that gain a positive reaction, you may wish to build your own LinkedIn Group(s). You can create LinkedIn Groups to suit an audience (your prospective clients) and demonstrate your expertise with ease. The key elements involved in the success of building your own LinkedIn Group are: - Make sure the title of the Group is compelling, authoritative or topical. It needs to contain a phrase that will make invitees believe the content and experience of membership will be of major interest and benefit to them. - Do NOT overtly brand your LinkedIn Group as your companys Group. This will put potential members off immediately as they feel the Group is simply a sales vehicle for your business.
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
Design: www.FONDA.co.uk
WinningWork.com
GordonBDM
Language should not appear to sell your business but should implicate your knowledge.
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
Design: www.FONDA.co.uk
WinningWork.com
GordonBDM
The personal approach through a professional networking website was the initiative which finally led to breakthrough.
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
Design: www.FONDA.co.uk
WinningWork.com
GordonBDM
Gordon BDM Founded July 2009 5 FTE (July 2010) Based in London & Glasgow, UK Acting for some of the worlds leading B2B organisations Adam Gordon, Director BDM pioneer BA Hons 1999, ACIM 2003 NLP Master Practitioner 2010 Ex-Euro RSCG and PwC Regular LinkedIn speaker NED
London 020 3326 8787 Glasgow 07870 268 288 www.winningwork.com adamgordon@winningwork.com
Design: www.FONDA.co.uk