The Insatiable Solopreneur™

Succeeding and Surviving as a Solopreneur

Archive for the tag “Linkedin”

LinkedIn Tip for Solopreneurs: Go Light on your “Skills & Expertise”

More isn’t always better – especially when posting your “Skills & Expertise” on LinkedIn.Scale

LinkedIn recently introduced a “Skills & Expertise” feature to enable us to enhance our profiles by adding single words or phrases that represent our specific talents, organizational and interpersonal skills, software aptitude, sales and marketing prowess, technical abilities, industry knowledge, etc. It’s nice in that it adds keywords to your profile to help others find you via the Skills & Expertise page of the LinkedIn site. But resist the urge to splurge!

LinkedIn lets you add up to 50 skills and areas of expertise to your profile. Fantastic, right? Great in theory, because it seems logical that the more you have, the more impressive you’ll appear to prospects. Unfortunately, that can backfire as your connections seek to help you by endorsing your specific capabilities.

I discovered quickly, that if you have too many options listed under “Skills & Expertise,” people might very well endorse those that really aren’t what you want front and center on your profile. Not that any particular skills or areas of expertise are bad (unless bank robbery or money-laundering happen to be among them!), but they could pull attention away from the talents that truly matter to prospects. If your connections endorse your “lesser” or “in the past” skills more prolifically than those that are pertinent to your current status as a solopreneur, potential clients might not feel as confident about your ability to meet their needs.

How can you ensure that your top traits get the spotlight?

Keep these things in mind as you set up or review your LinkedIn “Skills & Expertise” list…

  • 50 is overkill. I have 22 on my list and need to whittle it down even further.
    1. Check your own list to see if you duplicated any skills.For example, if you’ve listed “Marketing,” “Marketing Strategy,” “Product Marketing,” and “Marketing Management,” you might eliminate one or two of them so only those that you’d like emphasized on your profile remain.
    2. Remove skills that are implied in other skills.I axed “Microsoft Word” from my list. As a freelance writer, I believe people will correctly assume that I have proficiency in using Word or some equivalent word processing software. If a skill naturally “goes with the territory,” you probably don’t need to list it.
  • LinkedIn prioritizes and puts your skills and areas of expertise with the most endorsements at the top of your list.
    If you have any that you would rather not highlight, remove them so your connections don’t have the option to endorse them.
  • Don’t feel obliged to keep endorsed skills and expertise in your profile.
    Even if others endorsed you on them, pull the plug if they are diluting your professional focus.

Of course, there is the double-edged sword effect of not being found if someone searches on the LinkedIn Skills & Expertise page for a capability that you removed from your profile. However, if you’ve got a comparable skill there instead, users will see it among the list of “Related Skills” provided. And if they’re seriously looking for professionals with your specific abilities, they’ll continue their research to view profiles (yours included) that have the related skill. No guarantees, of course, so the choice is yours! My preference is to work toward a profile that displays a meaningful Skills and Expertise list with appropriate endorsements, rather than bulk load for the sake of search. Your thoughts?

 

Image courtesy of John Kawasa / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Using Linkedin for Local, Face-to-Face Connections Leads to More Business

Linkedin is what I consider the unsung hero of social media. I’ve met business owners who push it aside becauseLinkedin Logo  Linkedin users don’t appear to engage with one another as actively as folks on other social networks. There’s less tolerance for “noise” (i.e. status update after status update). There are less “likes”, comments and shares. I suspect that’s why so many people don’t put forth the effort to complete their Linkedin profiles; they don’t think anyone really notices or cares.

But don’t underestimate the potential of your Linkedin presence. Just because other people aren’t putting any time or energy into the network (Please don’t tell me you’ve still got the shadowy silhouette as your profile pic!), doesn’t mean you shouldn’t. You won’t realize any benefits if you ignore it. The only way to reap rewards from being there is to acknowledge and interact with other professionals on Linkedin.

Fortunately, most Linkedin users don’t expect – or appreciate – status updates at  the  frequency or pace anticipated on Facebook or Twitter. That means you can use the network effectively under far less performance pressure.

What’s been working really well for me is simple and not at all time-consuming.  Whenever I receive or send an invitation to connect with someone on Linkedin, I take an extra step that most people don’t. After I review a new connection’s profile, I send the person a personal message to say “thank you”  for connecting, and I reference something interesting about his/her profile or things that we have in common. When connections are local to me and there’s some synergy between our industries or professional positions, I invite them to meet me for coffee to learn more about each other’s businesses and capabilities.

That little extra step (which takes an entire 5 – 10 minutes of my time) has more often than not led to face-to-face meetings – some of which have turned into business opportunities right there on the spot! Even when the potential for a signed proposal doesn’t materialize immediately, the approach has led to business down the road with those connections – or through referrals that they’ve sent my way. Sure, sometimes nothing comes from the effort, but overall it’s been well worth my time. I wouldn’t continue to do it if it wasn’t!

It seems the intent to embrace the opportunity to get to know other professionals and their businesses one-on-one is the magic bullet when it comes to starting and building business relationships via Linkedin. Don’t make the mistake that so many others are making by dismissing the powerful potential of the professional network.

How attentive are you to your Linkedin presence? Please share your success stories and best practices with the network! Connect with me on LinkedIn!


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