Foreign Policy Blogs

Treat your LinkedIn profile as your workplace

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Photo Credit: Nan Palmero

LinkedIn is a wonderful tool for showing the professional that you are and bringing forth your body of work for employers, recruiters and colleagues to see. It is one of today’s most important social network tools of the work place. But remember this:  It is not Facebook.  Be careful of inappropriate pictures and an incomplete work profile. Anywhere you would post your professional experience or resume should be treated like your workplace and/or mirror you as a mature professional.

The majority of people will view your LinkedIn profile are bosses, potential employers, recruiters, employees and colleagues, so be sure to show your profile in the best light possible to snag that next interview or job.

Here are some tips to keep your LinkedIn profile in top professional shape – and make sure that you don’t end up in the “reject” pile.

Have a complete profile and review it frequently: Many job candidates ask recruiters to check their LinkedIn Profiles in lieu of sending a CV/resume, fully expecting it to show they meet all qualifications required for the job.  LinkedIn profiles are usually inadequate as a substitute for a resume because the profiles are so summarized; it amounts to a sound bite compared to a CV/resume.  If you are to use it this way, you should make sure it shows a chronology of your work including major assignments.  At minimum, it should carefully show length of time worked, title, employer, donor, project name or type, and country where you were assigned.

Have a good LinkedIn profile picture:  A photo is necessary on LinkedIn, and we recommend having a good professional looking headshot of you.  This doesn’t mean going out and spending money on a professional photo shoot but using a headshot photo that reflects what you look like in your daily work life.  Please don’t have cleavage showing, or use an obvious vacation photo, or post a selfie of you and your friends at a party.  Have someone take a photo of just you, in front of a plain or non-descript background, sitting at your desk is fine and a work related close-up works.

 Have good profile contact info:  If you are on the job market or interested in hearing about opportunities, you should make it easy for potential employers/recruiters to contact you.  I recommend listing your email address in the “Contact Info” area, and make sure it’s something professional (like [email protected]).  It should be a personal email that follows you from job to job and not your work email.  You can also add your email to your profile near the bottom in the “Advice for Contacting… your name” area so that anyone visiting your profile can see it without needing to be formally accepted in your network. There is also a spot for you to link websites, Twitter handles, Facebook pages, etc.  This does not mean adding every little piece of the Internet you have a profile on (n.b., online dating profiles or personal pages are a “NO!”)  and Facebook pages that are used for family/friends connectivity are not a good link to display in this profile.   A good rule of thumb is to not list any site or profile that you don’t want your (potential) boss to see.

You can bet that anyone looking at your profile will click on your links, so make sure they are current and show you in the best light.  If you have broken links or links to inactive profiles, blogs, websites – take them down!  Good links include:  Your current company’s website; your portfolio/blog/personal webpage (e.g., about.me); Twitter, etc. — any that are professionally oriented.

Another great point to remember: If you say you’re into social media/blogging and you’ve got a site/profile that hasn’t been updated in months or even years, leave it off and perhaps turn it off.

Watch your LinkedIn Activity Feed or manage for fewer automatic feeds. We are in the age of super-connectivity and increasingly active social media.  You can link your Facebook, Twitter updates or blog posts to your Activity Feed in LinkedIn, but it may not always be the best idea to have your personal sites/profiles feed into it automatically. We are all guilty of posting a ridiculous status update or items that you wouldn’t put front and center on your resume!  Or you can’t control what readers may innocently respond after seeing your announcements.  My best advice is to stick to physically posting things to LinkedIn so you don’t run into any issues with the content.  You could have your Twitter account hacked and have to deal with the embarrassment of having porn phishing updates get posted on your LinkedIn profile!

As more of us are now working virtually and have no need for physical offices, it is important to pay attention to our Virtual Offices.  Our offices are represented by social or media sites such as our website, LinkedIn profiles, About.me, or other profiles. These sites must be kept in tip-top shape to provide the best professional message and represent and build your brand.

 

Author

Linda Aines

Linda Aines is Owner/Principal Recruiter at Aines International based in St Petersburg, Florida. Aines International's clientele includes many of the international development organizations that are contractors to large Donor organizations or government entities and that develop and implement International Development and foreign projects. .… they sub-contract with her to find the experts or program managers needed to manage their projects. She is well known for knowledge of International Development sector and for her networks which now stretch across the globe. She has also served as intermittent consultant in business and marketing for projects in Afghanistan, Africa, Bosnia, the Caucasus, Central American and the Caribbean. She is an Associate Professor Emerita at the University of Vermont, after a 19 years career as Community Resource Development specialist and International business specialist at UVM and 5 years at the University of Hartford. She holds an MBA from the Ohio State University.

You can follow her on Twitter: @lindaaines1 or read her individual blog: www.internationalink.net