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http://www.LinkedInForMarketing.com
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LivingInSuccessMedia
2/13/2009 8:33 PM UTC
Jorge.. congratulations on the launch of your radio show!
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2/12/2009 11:05 PM UTC
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Learn to use LinkedIn for Marketing, sales and self promotions from Jorge Olson. You will learn how to use social networking and social media to generate leads, add 10,000 new visitors to your blog or website and hundreds on new leads using LinkedIn.
Original Air Date: 3/26/2009 10:00 PM UTC
Original Air Date: 3/12/2009 10:00 PM UTC
Date / Time: 3/11/2009 10:04 PM UTC
LinkedIn is one of the best places online or offline to find a new job. You just need to navigate this professional network so you don’t waste your time.
LinkedIn is full of Hiring Managers and Head Hunters. What is the problem? Most of them don’t post jobs in the job section of LinkedIn. You have to find them and their jobs.
Fill out your profile completely including -Photo -Job History -Education -Ask for Recommendations
Join Groups -Join Local Groups -Join HR Groups where headhunters are -Join Industry Groups by Industry and Position –Industry like Construction, or Retail –Position like Architects, or Programmers, or Financial Analysts –Your can apply directly from LinkedIn
Be an open networker -Put “open networker’ on your profile -This will allow hiring managers and recruiters to contact you
Use the Job section to find jobs in your area -Search by location or position -Contact the hiring manager -Contact other people in your network in that company
Look for job postings in Groups -Enter groups and click on Discussions and Jobs -Contact the job poster directly
Contact Recruiters in your network -Look at your connections -Look at your groups -Look for jobs in their profile
Original Air Date: 3/5/2009 11:00 PM UTC
Original Air Date: 2/26/2009 11:00 PM UTC
Date / Time: 2/25/2009 8:19 PM UTC
LinkedIn is the social network for professionals and executives. It has more than 30 million members and hosts every HR, hiring manager and recruiter in the country. With so many people and so many recruiters you are sure to find a job; if you can navigate around LinkedIn correctly.
LinkedIn has a new feature on the Group section, it is a job board. This is a great idea as many people are using the Group Discussion as a job board and many group administrators don't like it. Many administrators even posted a dedicated discussion thread for jobs, many times entitled "Post Your Jobs Here".
As of today, you can't see the job board inside groups by simply looking at a list of groups; this is probably a bug. You actually have to click something within the groups such as news, discussion, or any other link. After you click any link you will see Jobs as part of the main menu within the post.
This new feature will complement the general Job feature that you see at the top of LinkedIn as one of their main menu items together with People, Answers, and Companies. The difference is that the Group Jobs are free to post, so you'll see many more jobs there than in the general job posting.
What to do if you are looking for a job? Join all the groups that you can, LinkedIn allows you to join 50. Join the groups that relate to your industry or job expertise and also join any groups of HR or Recruiting professional so you can network with them. Finally, join groups in your city or area. For example, I live in San Diego, California and there are more than 10 groups dedicated to San Diegans.
Once you join all the groups go to the job posting part of the groups and start scanning for jobs. Contact the person that posted the job directly and strike a conversation or relationship. Don't just send resumes to everyone, otherwise you are missing the point of networking. Remember, the power of LinkedIn lies in the people, the relationships you can establish and how you use these relationships.
If you have not already, make sure you profile is complete with photo, job history, education, skills, etc. This way the recruiters of HR managers can check you out before giving you a call.
Date / Time: 2/14/2009 6:32 AM UTC
Like many people, I was not quick to join LinkedIn. As a matter of fact one of my friends invited me and it took me 2 months to accept his invitation and join. I was thinking: “Not another time wasting social network”.When I finally joined the network I added people from my outlook and found that several of them where already on the network, a total of 30. I thought, “Cool, I know some people here” so I added them to my network on LinkedIn. After that I joined 4 different groups that where of interest to me including one on venture capital, one on marketing, another for book authors and the last one on keynote speaking. Now I was on LinkedIn and had my 30 connections, my 4 groups and I thought I was done. Then I asked myself: “What next?” I already know the 30 people I added to the network I don’t need them to contact them. So what’s the value of this? What’s the difference between this and Facebook, or MySpace, or Hi5? What’s the buzz on LinkedIn? For months I did nothing, thinking this was a place to socialize with people you already know. One day I was looking on Google the keywords “Venture Capital” as I was advising one of my customers get some funding. I then visited LinkedIn and logged in. Then I did a search on Venture Capital once more. Wow, 50,000 + came up. Quickly I noticed that these where not just company names, I was getting the name and many times email and phone number of actual people, with photo, title, interests, hobbies, all what you would wish for. The downside of my Venture Capital search is that none of them where connected to me directly so I could not contact them as in LinkedIn it is considered Spam. Nevertheless I started to understand the value of this network. Imagine if of these 50,000 I could have a few hundred connected to me directly. I could call them and ask for advice. I could email them and see if they are interested in my project or ask them to point me in the right direction. Now the task was connecting to them. I did have some connections at a 3rd level. This means that I know someone that knows someone that knew lot’s of people in Venture Capital. This one person was my friend Gustavo. Gustavo is a programmer and one of his customers is a Venture Capitalists. That one person connected me with 300 people at a third level. If I really wanted to speak with one of those 300 people I could ask Gustavo for an introduction through his customer; but that was not my idea, I did not want just one connection, I wanted hundreds, or thousands. I played more with the software and did more targeted searches by clicking on “Advanced Search”. I searched by zip code to see the closest contacts to me and therefore the ones I could contact in person. I also searched for keywords like “beverage” and “consumer goods” as the company I was working with was a beverage company. For every search I got great contacts. I thought this could turn out to be my very own private rolodex.
Read more on the blog www.LinkedInForMarketing.com
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