A few times a week I drop by my Linked In, Plaxo, and Facebook accounts and clean up my inboxes in each.
On LinkedIn, I approve those who request to join our groups, and on all of the above I answer the messages that come there and then decide what invitations I am going to accept and which I won't (at this time.)
I've always felt that LinkedIn was the home of my Professional Profile, Facebook was for fun, and Plaxo was just for keeping my multiple address books updated. Increasingly each of these seems to want to perform some of the functions of the other.
Most insidious has been that Plaxo wants to be LinkedIn. They've added professional profile information much like LinkedIn and they keep asking me to fill out my profile. I've ignored the request until today when the screens told me that my profile was 80% complete and I could be 100% complete by answering just a few questions. I fell for it! Telling Plaxo where I went to college and what city I live in made me 100% complete. Sadly, I don't feel any different.
When I was a kid, we created lists of questions in our tablets and then we'd pass the tablet around to friends to collect their answers. Our questions included What's your favorite sport? Who is your favorite singer? (male and female) What's your favorite color? We'd feel great when we had answers to all of these important questions from 25 other kids. No matter how dumb the questions, we'd fill them out with the earnestness that should only accompany an application for citizenship. We loved asking and getting the answers and relished the pages of tablet paper dedicated to this important sociological research.
Now every Professional Social Network has become an online analog of those tablets filled with not very useful information or they've become online dating services asking us these inane questions with the promise of creating meaningful connections with unknown parties.
What's worse is that once I've committed to any of these services, I feel compelled to answer all of the questions in my quest to feel 100% complete. Thanks for playing me Plaxo. I've got something else to talk to my therapist about.
I like red an awful lot.
Friday, August 01, 2008
Plaxo, LinkedIn, Facebook are passing tablets on the bus
Posted by Phil Yanov at 12:58 PM 0 comments Links to this post
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
LinkedIn raises $53 Million, is valued at $1 Billion
According to TechCrunch, and VentureBeat, LinkedIn has raised $53 million from Bain Capital Ventures, Sequoia Capital, Greylock Partners, and Bessemer Ventures with a company valuation of $1 Billion.
According to VentureBeat, LinkedIn plans to buy other companies that will help it extend its reach and then plans to IPO. The following video, supplied by LinkedIn, features several of the investors absolutely gushing about their recent purchase. What struck a chord with me is that they seem to believe, as I do, that LinkedIn really gets professional networking and the value that an extended professional network can bring to an individual and his organization. The plural of anecdote may not be data, but it does seem to be bring in dollars in this case.
I know people who got married to people they met online, I guess it should not be at all unexpected that people can create businesses after first "hooking up" on LinkedIn.
Of course, Phil Yanov is on LinkedIn
Posted by Phil Yanov at 9:11 PM 0 comments Links to this post
Labels: LinkedIn
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Avoiding perils while establishing your professional network online
This article first appeared in GSABusiness.
I have received numerous emails over the past few weeks for companies purporting to clean up my image online. I feel pretty sure that they have never actually looked at the information about me that’s online. These firms offer to survey my reputation, finding and eliminating anything that might harm my opportunity to do business with reputable companies. That must be a lost cause. Google, Yahoo, and their search engine brethren, along with the Internet Wayback machine make removing things from the internet nearly impossible. I don’t know what these companies really could do for me, but I think a better strategy might be to make sure that I am regularly generating helpful information about myself and posting that to the internet myself.
The good news is that there are several quality places you can post information to the internet about yourself. Not only can those places help to establish or enhance your reputation online, they can set the tone for conversations you might have in real life. Being a technology afficianado, I headed to these networks pretty early and have had a chance to field test them. Although not everyone uses the networks, I have been lucky with them. More than once, I’ve walked into a meeting with someone I had never met before and had them say “We haven’t met, but I’ve read about your work on the Internet…” It allowed us to get down to the business of our business much quicker. We bypassed the time normally spent establishing credentials. So, how can you get started in establishing an online reputation?
First, realize that there are a number of online networking websites to choose from. The ones you are most likely to have heard of are MySpace, Facebook, and LinkedIn. I have listed them in what I think are the order of their popularity. Let’s consider each in order.
MySpace may be the best known of all the social networking sites, especially since Rupert Murdoch spent $580 Million for it in 2005. The site boasts over 75 million users and is the darling of what appears to be a youth oriented demographic. Today’s front page says that over 75,000 videos have been uploaded today and that the most popular are of “a gas powered blender” and a “crazy dog climbing a ladder.” A quick visit to the front page on any given day will let you know that this may be a fun website to visit, but it is unlikely to enhance your career. Try this link at work ( www.MySpace.com) if the website is unreachable, you are not alone. MySpace is the leading social networking site most likely to be blocked by company based web filters. A report by Barracuda Networks says that 44% of their customers have identified the site as a time waster and blocked it from company desktops. Let’s keep looking.
Next up in order of popularity is Facebook. Launched in 2004 by a couple of Harvard students, Facebook is a relative newcomer to the social networking scene and most that time was aimed at college students. The requirement of a college issues email address in order to register an account has only recently been dropped. Some of Facebook’s early adopters have graduated, however, and the network has matured with them. The site now even allows third party application developers to write little programs that will live inside of Facebook web pages. The programs include network maps, games, and a whole lot of silliness, but there is a business component of facebook as well. Many professional organizations have groups inside of Facebook, and you can connect with peers there. Still Facebook is mostly about fun and pranks and may not feel like a work related activity. That leaves us with…
LinkedIn was built from the ground up as a Professional Network of working professionals. At this writing, over 15 million people have filled out a profile on LinkedIn. Once you have entered your profile on LinkedIn, you can then connect with other people you know and let them know what types of relationships you are interested in exploring professionally. Looking for new vendors, investors, or employees? Chances are you can make a connection with the people you are looking for on LinkedIn. We are inherently social animals, and modern travel and communications means each of us can interact on a regular basis with more people than our forefathers were likely to meet in a lifetime. We use PDAs, Blackberries, Outlook, and other electornic means just to keep track of the people we “know.” LinkedIn takes the electronic version of that Rolodex and allows you to compare and connect with other people you know. Next time, I’ll talk about how to build a killer profile on LinkedIn and how to use it to make the business connections you need.
Posted by Phil Yanov at 7:41 AM 0 comments Links to this post
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
What extraordinary results have you achieved with LinkedIn?
LinkedIn is a powerful business tool for business networking. I know that I personally have used it to reinforce relationships, expand my professional network and make connections with people across the continent for the purposes of expanding my business. LinkedIn can help you find a job, get a well-connected employee, establish b2b connections or perhaps even pull together a team to build an entirely new organization either for profit or community service.
While it seems the possibilities for personal advancement using LinkedIn might be endless, I can't believe I am doing a good job of imagining all that people have achieved using LinkedIn. It seems that it would be better for all to simply ask the question here:
What you have done with LinkedIn that others might find inspiring or surprising?
Put your answer here: LinkedIn Answers
ps: If this is all new to you, you may want to visit Phil Yanov's LinkedIn Profile to get a sense of that kind of information you might find on LinkedIn.
Posted by Phil Yanov at 1:51 PM 0 comments Links to this post
Labels: LinkedIn