Sunday, March 1, 2020
How to Bring Your Personality into Your LinkedIn Profile!
How to Bring Your Personality into Your LinkedIn Profile! I received the following note on LinkedInà ® this week from CEO and Creative Director Steve Klinetobe: I just finished reading your eBook. Thank you, thank you. Tonight Im going to read it to the kids. Never too young to start building your network! :) This was probably the first LinkedInà ® invitation Iââ¬â¢ve ever received that made me laugh, and I was jumping up and down in my seat. How great when people can express themselves in their professional communications! Humor is sorely missing from most peopleââ¬â¢s LinkedInà ® profiles, and to be honest, itââ¬â¢s not always appropriate. But inserting your personality into your profile sure is. One of my clients, sales superstar Anna Wang, wrote in her self-authored profile, When Iââ¬â¢m not bludgeoning quotas with a baseball bat, I can be found rocking out with my band, or parked at a poker table. Thatââ¬â¢s a woman I would want on my sales team! And Jess Hornyak, Marketing Director at KEVA Sports Center, crafted this paragraph as part of her LinkedInà ® Summary: When I was little, I wanted to drive a garbage truck. Then, I moved to Wisconsin and declared I would be the next Green Bay Packers QB once Brett Favre retired.?No one ever told me No (or that girls dont play in the NFL), but soon after I found art and writing, and hopes of being the next big name in football were passed along to Aaron Rodgers. Jessââ¬â¢s creativity shines through and would persuade me to consider her seriously for a sports marketing position. Of course humor is not the only way to express your humanity on LinkedInà ®. Take this example from one of The Essay Expertââ¬â¢s clients, a dedicated teacher with a background in HR, whose passion is teaching the whole child: When it comes down to it, children *are* our human resources, and it is imperative to support them to reach their full potential. To that end, educational policy and program development are intensely interesting to me. I believe strongly in differentiation in the classroom, and I believe that this is what we should offer to all of our children. If your career has taken an unconventional turn, revealing your personality might be particularly useful. Hereââ¬â¢s an example from Nick Dââ¬â¢Antonio, a law school graduate who decided to change paths (not that I would know anything about thatâ⬠¦) My career path veered off course when I realized I didnt want to become an attorney (please hold the How many attorneys jokes). Of course, I graduated during one of the tougher periods for the employment of early careerists; many like me did what was required to remain independent and hopefully make in-roads into a career. It wasnt until recently when introspection led to the conclusion that what Ive done all along has been to build a reputation for promoting customer satisfaction through exceptional service, and a steady flow of repeat business. Not multi-million dollar repeat business yet but garnering repeat business taught me the power of the personal business connection. Sowant to talk Sales and Marketing? If I were looking for someone with an upfront personality who has what it takes to make it through law school and take the risk of following his passion, I might want to talk sales and marketing with this guy. He does not apologize for his background and makes a good argument for himself. Whatââ¬â¢s your personality and your compelling story? Whatââ¬â¢s the best way to tell it? I encourage you to put as much of yourself forward on LinkedInà ® as you are comfortable sharing, as appropriate for your background and industry. Perhaps you too can create a tale thatââ¬â¢s worthy of reading to the kids at night.
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