Showing posts with label LinkedIn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LinkedIn. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Linkedin Thought Leaders


Over the past couple of months I've found myself intrigued by a new feature on LinkedIn  Content from Thought Leaders. What’s is actually more fascinating than reading the content has been watching how various Thought Leaders are using their new content channel on LinkedIn.

Thought Leaders are good promoters by nature, that’s how they got to be leaders of thought in their respective spheres. They promote their ideas and they brand themselves well. In creating the Thought Leader space, LinkedIn provided this group with a new marketing platform to expand their reach. The more aggressive participants took to this new channel and started figuring out how to use it to their advantage instantly.

Tony Robbins, for example, started off with some original content but then shifted management of the channel over to a marketing flunky and the channel spent a few weeks as just an ongoing sales pitch for Robbins products without providing any value to the reader. In the past month the content has changed to be more tailored to LinkedIn and it appears more thought is going into who comprises this new market and how to interest them.

Richard Branson is just having his marketing team port content over from his company blog (none of which appears to be written by him.) It’s good stuff but I think the self-promotion level is higher than it should be.

Guy Kawasaki wrote some original content for LinkedIn but quickly just turned his channel into another spigot for content he is posting across his entire social network. I think this is a mistake but I also know how tough it is to generate original content for specific channels (you see how often I manage to get a blog post out here!) Writing a lot of original content is hard, especially if you’re running a business, promoting a book, setting up your next project, etc.  One thing I keep reminding myself that as a leader, my job is to innovate and market.

 Blogging is marketing and needs to be treated as such.

So, I’m hoping to do a better job at creating original content in 2013. With a book and a web app to promote, it’s time for me to start getting on the ball with my own marketing and original content. Either that, or I need to invest in a bunch of cleverly branded lolcats.

Happy New Year!

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Don't Be a Jerk!


It is common wisdom that nobody wants to work with a jerk and social networking has made it easier to identify a jerk before you add one to your team.

While a lot of people have their Facebook pages set to private, things are a little different over at LinkedIn where all your activity is public and shared with your business network. I've been noticing that a lot of people on LinkedIn don’t take into account the persistence of their social contributions. I continue to be astonished at the number of people who forget that they are contributing/commenting under their real name, not an anonymous email account that doesn't tie back to their real identity.

I was watching the comments to an article posted by a LinkedIn “Thought Leader” the other day and my jaw dropped several times when people made flat out inappropriate comments under their business account. I suppose that these people are doing the rest of us a favor by clearly outing themselves as not ready for prime time, thus eliminating themselves as job competition. Yet it still seems like they should know better than to join a business network platform and proceed to be a jerk.

Nobody wants to work with a jerk. Nobody wants to hire a jerk. And, after watching what an election did to many people, a lot of people don’t want to be friends with a jerk, either.

One thing that’s really come around to me in the past couple of years is that the Web is a place of business for many of us. It takes very little for someone to tie email addresses together and match them to a real identity. Keeping this thought out in front has really changed the way I communicate, even when I think I’m doing so anonymously. Now, I approach everything as if it might come back to haunt me next week, next month, next year. I make I really want to own anything I put out there and I especially make sure that anything I do on LinkedIn dovetails with the personal brand that I've built there.

Social media is allowing us to see the real person behind the facades most of us erect in our day to day lives - we contribute spontaneously across our social networks and our internal editor goes silent more often. But it is critical that we keep that editor engaged when contributing socially, that old saying should guide appropriateness “the Internet is forever.” Once a comment, picture, or email hits the Internet, you can’t take it back. Control of it is lost to you forever.

That by itself should make anyone think twice before hitting the send/post button.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Small Business Branding with LinkedIn


A lot of small business owners are hesitant to jump into social business networking via LinkedIn and consequently they are missing a vital opportunity for branding and building their businesses.

Today we want to cover some basic concepts of using LinkedIn to brand your small business with a focus on creating your starting network. We are not going to go over details on the LinkedIn platform elements, as there are tons of great tutorials on this topic already.  

For purposes of this post, we are going to assume that you’ve created a LinkedIn account and are unsure of your next steps forward to start branding yourself and your business.  We are also going to assume you probably already have an existing network of clients, customers, and other professionals that you currently do business with via email. We want to turn this group of people into an audience for you to brand yourself to.



Create your starting network:

  •  Follow the LinkedIn directions for finding contacts. Export your email address book from Outlook or whatever mail program you are using (I found that LinkedIn seems to prefer .txt files over .csv files.)  Import your contact list into LinkedIn.
  •  LinkedIn will then match up your contact list with people who are already on LinkedIn and will offer to send out “Connect” invites.  You can select people individually or just go all-in and hit your entire email list with an invite.
  • Sit back and watch who connects with you and how fast.


Task:  Make a list of the people who responded to your invite in the first 48 hours.  Those people who responded within 48 hours are your active business network on LinkedIn. Those are the people who are truly paying attention to the LinkedIn platform and using it. They are the audience you are branding yourself to.

Most people who are in your active network are either logging in daily to glance at their news feed, accept invitations, send out invitations, etc.  Or they are at least following what’s going on in their network via the Weekly Digest email. This means that your name is going to be appearing in front of these people (your active network) on a regular basis. 

The way to use LinkedIn most effectively as a business owner is for branding. Associating your name with an idea or ideas.

True story. There’s a guy in my network named Mike. I somehow worked with him somewhere long ago, don’t really remember. Mike used to post these slideshow presentations on business topics as a self-promotion tactic. I thought it pretty smart what he was doing and made a mental note. Then he stopped posting those great presentations....Time passes and he drops off the radar. Until about a year ago, when he joined a LinkedIn group that talks about small airplane selling. Now, for the past year, every time I see Mike’s name in my LinkedIn news feed or on a Weekly Digest update, it is in relation to a post he made in a group on airplane sales.  So, in my mind…Mike is an airplane broker. I associate his name with airplane sales because that’s what I see his name most often in relation to.  If airplane sales are not his main revenue stream, then he’s totally botched his branding because that’s what I associate him with now. 

See what I mean?  You become what you share.

To borrow a concept from Guy Kawasaki: "You should post about what you want your followers to know you for." 

Your active network is going to see every move you make on LinkedIn. And you want them to, because you are branding yourself. Everything you do will be to associate your name with key words and key ideas.

You can put ideas out in front of an enormous range of professionals with elegance and subtlety. Instead of following the ideas around, you become someone who influences the ideas in your network.

But we are not going to go into influence and ideas just yet, baby steps. First you build up an audience to play to and get comfortable with the LinkedIn Platform. You want to make your “new guy” mistakes with 20 followers, not 500. You’ll aim for adding 10 new connections a week. You want your network to grow – the larger your network, the more people you are influencing.

We will talk about sharing engaging and relevant content that builds your brand in a future post, be sure to bookmark us or add us to your RSS feed so you don’t miss it!