Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Capitalize on LinkedIn Endorsements - Melissa Llarena

Capitalize on LinkedIn Endorsements Capitalize on LinkedIn Endorsements Your career is no place for crowdsourcing. However, through LinkedIn Endorsements your connections are now able to weigh in on your skills. The more endorsements a skill receives the more credible that one skill is because your contacts agree. Yet, it takes zero effort which makes LinkedIn Endorsements a great engagement strategy, however there are doubts that they add value to the site’s 175M+ users.If lengthy recommendations are additive rather than evaluative, as Forbes suggests, then how seriously can we take someone endorsing a skill with the click of a button? Today, there is a frenzy around its use, from expressing appreciation for one another’s skills to playing around with a new digital toy.  You should not rely on endorsements to get you hired, but you should capitalize on its momentum. It’ll only take a second.Think ahead when trying to derive value out of LinkedIn endorsements. Recruiters will start seeking candidates with the mo st endorsements relevant to a skill set. Start by curating the best menu of skills expertise possible, aim to rank highest in that one skill you want to be known for, ask for endorsements and provide them as a way to revive old connections. Here’s how to prepare:1- Curate your “skills expertise”  You can add up to 50 skills to your LinkedIn profile, however you can’t be an expert in all 50. Instead, direct people to the 10 skills you want to be known for because that is how many skills LinkedIn generally features on your profile. Your 40 other skills are deprioritized. Include skills, within the 10, that you want to use going forward. I imagine that once this functionality gathers a sizable amount of data,   recruiters will utilize endorsements to quickly rank candidates to contact. For instance, when they are seeking a kick-butt project manager they will be filtering for the person with the most endorsements on their PM skills. This is why you curate.2-Aim to rank highest in that one skill you want to be known forYour skills expertise are now ranked amongst one another. Based on the number of endorsements that each skill garners, your number one expertise has been crowdsourced. Again, your career is no place for crowdsourcing. You need to own your profile by identifying the most critical skills in light of your next opportunity. Solicit endorsements on the top three skills that you want to be known for. (e.g. if you want to move into sourcing and procurement then highlight your negotiation skills)3-Ask for endorsementsThe same rules apply when it comes to seeking credible recommendations as I wrote in my Three Pillars to Successful Recommendations blog. E-mail the best connections you have, who are well-known in your desired industry, and request their endorsement on your preferred skills. Recommendations take time to write. They can’t use that as an excuse when you request an endorsement.4- Endorse others to revive your network   it’ll only t ake a second Here is your excuse to forego a note to reignite or strengthen relationships. Anyone with a network of more than 500+ connections has folks who they haven’t spoken with in years. Endorse old professional connections and use LinkedIn Endorsements novelty as your excuse to reconnect. When you compliment publicly, you will stroke their ego, which may be useful and this is always a great thing if you need to talk with them later about an opportunity.Recruiters, how do you interpret LinkedIn Endorsements? Job seekers, why are you endorsing folks? Comment below or email me I’d love to hear how you intend to leverage this tool.PS: If LinkedIn strategy is not one of your top 10 skills, contact me. I offer a free-15 minute consultation and I get paid to do this for a living.

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