7 Ways To Market Yourself On LinkedIn

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LinkedIn is one of the most powerful resources online in order to market yourself.  I would even argue that it is the number one social networking site in the world to help you market yourself.

Marketing Yourself On LinkedIn

Since there are a number of goal and objectives individuals have in marketing themselves, I’m going to explain a wide variety of ways everyone can use LinkedIn.  It doesn’t matter if you are looking to become known as an influential person in your industry or niche, if you want to sell more products, get more leads, drive traffic to your website, find a killer job, get more clients, build your brand, sell tickets to an event, receive funding, venture capital, or sponsorship dollars,  there here are seven steps you should take advantage of while marketing yourself on LinkedIn.

1.  Give

This is important to do on any social networking site, not just LinkedIn, but it’s particularly important to do on LinkedIn when so many people are focused on wanting to receive something for themselves or their business.

The best way to give to others would be to make recommendations.  I see a lot of people asking for recommendations from people all the time, when they haven’t written any for others first.  The more you recommend others without asking for one in return, it will give them a refreshing feeling about you and they’ll want to be helpful in return.

Making introductions is also a great way to give.  If you are trying to make a name for yourself then connecting two people together who you think could help each other build their business and achieve their goals will give you two people willing to help you in return, as opposed to one.

2.  Complete It 100%

Your profile.  It needs to be completed 100% in order to properly market yourself.

Most people do background checks on others whenever we want to buy something from them, bring them in to speak, or do anything with them.  We Google people to do our research.

LinkedIn is usually one of the top five search results that pops up for anyone’s name.  First impressions leave lasting perceptions about people, and you don’t want someone to come to your profile and realize that you make spelling mistakes, you don’t have a picture, no one has recommended you, there is no personal story in your summary, and so on.  You need to make sure you complete it 100% and have your profile make you look like a rock star.  Doing so will ensure your maximizing your marketing opportunities.

3.  Connect With Everyone

It pains me to see when people only have less than 100 connections and they think that having a “small trusted network” is the way to go.  That’s a joke, and those with that mindset are going to be asking themselves why their message isn’t spreading to the world and why they haven’t achieved their marketing goals.

Connect with everyone on LinkedIn.

You never know where an opportunity, or big breakthrough can come from.  If you only share ideas with those you know and don’t branch out to connect with new people, then you will only know about a limited amount of opportunities, and the same people that you talk to on a daily basis will be helping you connect with the same limited network.  It’s a never ending circle of limitations, and it’s time you break through that mindset if you haven’t already.

The best way to start connecting with everyone is to import your entire contact list and ask them all to connect with you, start adding your personal LinkedIn link to your email signature, on other social networking sites, on your business cards, and anywhere else you think would help inspire others to connect with you.  Once you start receiving 10-20 inbound invitations to connect on a daily basis, then you know your doing a good job marketing yourself.

4.  Make It Personal

In general, people love human interaction.  We don’t want to connect with a business, we want to have relationships with others who we know, like, and trust.

Every time you send an invitation to connect with someone, make it personal.  Take out anything generic and make it as personal as possible.

Your profile should also include a personal element.  Instead of making it look like a boring resume with a bunch of bullet point achievements, share your personal voice.  Tell people who you are, who you help, and how you help them throughout your headline, summary and the rest of your profile.  Adding this will make others want to connect with you instead of put them to sleep with your boring resume.

5.  Start Your Own Community

I like to make things easy, don’t you?  Wouldn’t it be fun if you could lead a community of the exact people you wanted to market yourself to?  That would be pretty sweet, huh?

That’s what I did a while back when I wanted to market myself and my sports business blog.  To achieve accelerated marketing success I started the “Sports Industry Network” group on LinkedIn.  When people join the group they see my name as the creator of the group, and my website as the primary website.

There is a built in discussion forum, job opportunity section, and you can send a message to all of the members of the group once a week.  My group currently has over 30,000 of the top sports professionals from every major sports company in the world.  It’s the largest sports related group on LinkedIn and on any other major social networking site.  This gives me a platform to market myself and share valuable content with the network.  Creating a LinkedIn group may be one of the best ways to get your message out there and the most powerful way to leverage LinkedIn for a number of reasons.

6.  Create A Call To Action

People need to be lead in the right direction.  You can’t just expect people to come to your LinkedIn profile, learn about some of things you do and how you help people without telling them what to do next.  If you don’t create a call to action, then you are guaranteed to get less than what you desire.

You can create a call to action by customizing your website links.  LinkedIn lets you post three links, and instead of having them say “my blog”, make it say “Contact Me Here” or “ Download My Free Report”.  The more direct you can be the better.

Also, in your summary, after you tell people who you are, who you help, and how you can help them, tell them how they can and should get in touch with you or what they should do next.  If you want more leads and sales then tell people to email you, or call your personal number.  Whatever you desire, just tell them to contact you or do something in a way that best meets your needs.

7.  Use Advanced Applications

The advanced applications are designed to help you market yourself better.  You an author?  If so, there is an Amazon app that you can put on your profile and showcase a picture of your own book.  When people click on the book, it’s takes them to Amazon where they can buy it.

Simple as that.

Do you have a blog?  If so, the wordpress or blog app allows you to showcase your most recent article on your profile to help you drive traffic back to your site.  There are other applications to help you showcase your creative design work, your slide show presentations, white papers, Tweets, and you can even have a video of yourself auto play when someone lands on your profile using the slideshare or google document application.

If you are looking to promote an event, then use the events application to help you spread your event in a viral way throughout the entire LinkedIn community.  There are a number of applications you can use to help you market yourself, just start trying them out and see what fits your needs best.

LinkedIn Marketing Tips

I’m only scratching the surface here with these seven points on how to market yourself on LinkedIn.  Once you start to maximize each point, you will start to realize how powerful LinkedIn really is and how big your personal brand will take off once you use it aggressively.  It was the launchpad for me to build a large network and get my message out there to the world, and if you follow my steps the right way it could be yours as well.

How else do you personal use LinkedIn to market yourself?  I’d love to hear your tips in the comments section below.  Also, are we connected on LinkedIn yet?  If not, feel free to send me a personal invitation here.

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This post is featured on Hubspot.com as they recently launched a new ebook on LinkedIn.  Download the free copy here.

Image Credit: tychay

Image Credit: brianjmatis

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MaryStock 5 pts

Lewis, I just formed a group called "Internet Entrepreneurs in Health and Wellness." I invited 2 people from the directory whom I do not know. (I don't have any contacts in health and wellness entrepreneurs.) Neither one accepted so far and no one else joined. I read your article and am going to write in a Call to Action, as you mentioned in your article. How did you get strangers to come to your group of sports people?

learnit2earnit 399 pts

It is simple as that Lewis as long as business owners, entrepreneurs and professionals take the time to set up their Linkedin profile properly. As you say, stay away from making it look like a business resume. Instead, use your personality, keywords and always provide benefits for your visitors. Otherwise, your profile will be all about you and folks will click away, because they are looking for 'whats in it for them or how you are going to solve their problem". Always enjoy your information Lewis and BTW... just so you know, I found this article while searching on my MarketMeSuite platform. Much continued success to you!

AlanRobertJones 7 pts

What a helpful article! Thank you!!

eaclos 6 pts

And how do you do when you're in a market like Latin America? where LinkedIn is still yet to be exploited very well unlike the facebook, where there are not many groups of interest, because this can be local, and so on.

GoodPeopleJapan 5 pts

Single best tip, assuming your Profile is professional and presents the way you like & to support it, is building a Group (&/or moderating/admin of a very large existing group - many need moderators to lift quality... badly!) specific to your niche.

WesTowers 5 pts

Although we can maintain a delicate balance between personal and professional in LinkedIn if we choose to, I agree with you, Lewis, that because we are in this site, we should also be open to reaching out to people we do not know. This might be risky, but then again, everything we do to market our businesses have their own share of risks, so why not face these risks in LinkedIn?

DanSchwartz 5 pts

One point to be careful of in uploading your address book, if you have a large address list because of your marketing efforts and some are older contacts who you may not have been in contact with recently you are running the risk of some saying they Do Not Know you, when you hit 5 of those on LinkedIn it makes it much harder to add colleagues and all as LinkedIn then makes you put in their email addresses.

WendyBoyce 7 pts

I agree 99% - As far as connection with everyone - I would say "most" people yes. Connecting with anyone and everyone opens you up to spam, but being open to connecting with most of the general population and not refusing to connect because you don't know someone can limit your reach. As you say, you never know where the next big opportunity will come from. I've had some great success via my LinkedIn Profile, both in being recruited for employment, and in generating customer prospects for my company.

I recently created a SlideShare deck on how to optimized your profile on LinkedIn - a nice supplement to your post:

http://slidesha.re/a0lAt5

Enjoy!

SigurdFelix 5 pts

I really don't agree to connecting to everybody. LinkedIn isn't Twitter. How can you make use of your network if you don know anyone? -> I wasn't talking about linking twitter to LinkedIn. My point is, if LinkedIn was made for connecting to everybody, why do you have to acknowledge your connection and identify your mutual relationship. Hence, LinkediIn is meant for digitalizing your actual network. And ofcourse you can use it to meet new people (via inmails, discussions etc.) but you don't have to connect to everybody for that.
Twitter however lets you follow people without approval. You can use twitter for private social stuff, but it can also be an excelent reading list/discussion board or group list. Therefore I encourage linking Twitter to Linkedin (with #in, not a direct link)

LewisHowes 54 pts

SigurdFelix you said it "And ofcourse you can use it to meet new people"... if you only use LinkedIn to connect with ONLY the people you know, then you are missing out on expanding your network and creating new opportunities for your business.

JayPhilips 5 pts

I do not agree that you should connect your Twitter feed to your LinkedIn account. Your LinkedIn account should be professional, your Twitter account is more socialable and your tweets will just overwhelm your LinkedIn connections.

thenakedredhead 15 pts

JayPhilips You can set your LinkedIn Twitter feed to only post the tweets that you hashtag with #in. I'd also argue that we're quickly approaching a world where the line between "professional" and "sociable/personal" will be more and more blurred. I think companies are starting to lean more toward hiring real people who can be professional...not simply a suit and tie. I'm not saying you should drop the f-bomb on your LinkedIn page, but I do think the old rules of "professionalism" are dying.

LewisHowes 54 pts

thenakedredhead JayPhilips I'd have to agree with thenakedredhead here as I connect my twitter account to linkedIn and see sometimes that I get more comments on the same tweet that is on LinkedIn then I do on twitter. It depends what you do for business, but for me I believe people want to connect on a personal and real level... not just a stuffy professional way, and thats why I do it.

TyrellMara 11 pts

LewisHowes thenakedredhead JayPhilips I would also agree with Lewis. I have received positive feedback from posting selected Twitter updates to my LinkedIN account. Using TweetDeck makes it easy to choose the platform that you post too. When I have a tweet that may be relevant to my LinkedIN network, I will send it there as well!

As much as LinkedIN is a professional network in comparison to Twitter, I think that selectively tweeting to your LinkedIN followers can help you develop your personal brand and stand out among others...

JayPhilips 5 pts

TyrellMara LewisHowes thenakedredhead Posting selected tweets I agree with, posting "all" tweets is what I don't agree with.

WendyBoyce 7 pts

JayPhilips I am a firm believer in selective tweets on LinkedIn also - but from a personal - vs- professional standpoint, I treat my profiles all with a delicate balance of personal AND professional. Someone is more like to do business with me if they have a sense of who I am - rather than just being another profile in a see of search results. You can combine the two - they need not be mutually exclusive.

Just my $.02

shanemacsays 7 pts

LewisHowes thenakedredhead JayPhilips I hope the future doesn't matter what platform we are on. I believe that soon we will have one persona which will blend personal/professional and many people will probably freak out but for the many who are as Lewis says "Real" they will be just fine.

The lines are already blurring rather quickly and it will only become more blurred in the future.

Cheers,
Shane Mac

SigurdFelix 5 pts

I really don't agree to connecting to everybody. LinkedIn isn't Twitter. How can you make use of your network if you don know anyone? Sorry crappy keyboard!

Ari Herzog 157 pts

SigurdFelix Huh? Do you only talk to people every day that you know? You never go to events for the purpose of meeting new people? That's LinkedIn.

LewisHowes 54 pts

SigurdFelix in order to build your biz you would want to connect with more people... not just the people you already know as you would be limiting yourslef to new connections and new opportunities.

SigurdFelix 5 pts

I really don't agree to connecting to everybody. LinkedIn isn Twitter. How can you make use of your network if you don kno anyoe?

GoodPeopleJapan 5 pts

SigurdFelix Some clarification on what I believe 'Connecting' on LinkedIn means and how it can be done:

Don't send out random invites to people you don't know, do connect with people on LinkedIn who have interesting profiles after establishing contact, from engagement in LinkedIn groups, having met them or any way online - seek them out on LinkedIn, close your connections for Browsing (start a small group for active closed group if you value that feel) and Accept Connections from everyone who asks with a 'real' LinkedIn profile, and reply with 'Why'd you connect, what do you do, how can I help you & your connections, how can you help me & mine? Let them know how they can help you with a few key words. I have developed a number of strong connections both locally and worldwide this way.

Like Lewis mentioned, I also believe LinkedIn and Social Media for Business is is like a large ongoing Business Networking Party - except you can lean in & listen before you jump into the conversation & make a connection...

RyanGeist 14 pts

LinkedIn Groups are incredibly powerful. I haven't been too active in them myself, but I know a number of people who have had HUGE success in growing their business through groups. The key was to pay it forward - to answer other people's questions, provide intros and generally be a resource for everyone else. Eventually, people will start to ask you how they can help. And that's your opportunity to generate leads and meet new people.

KevKaye 5 pts

LinkedIn is a platform I've been spending a lot more time on lately. Do you have any strategies for building a group? It seems the best strategy would be reach out and connect with as many relevant people as possible and present the opportunity to join a valuable group.

LewisHowes 54 pts

KevKaye I wrote a post on this and linked to it in the this article, but you'd want to create a compelling name for the group for search engines, then promote it on your blog, to your list, on other social networking sites, and to your LinkedIn contacts... that will get the ball rolling in building your group.

thenakedredhead 15 pts

The only other thing I'd add--and I don't know why I didn't think of this before, especially since it's advice I'd give to anyone doing an actual resume or cover letter--is to build your LinkedIn profile to get the job you want (your dream job, if you will).
Seriously, I had to *facepalm* myself on this one, because I thought I had to be "professional" and, like you said, I had a million bullet points and no heart. I've since been working on my profile to reflect the personality of the NOW-and-FUTURE me. It's a work in progress, but it's a damn sight better than before. Great article... thanks! :)

Ari Herzog 157 pts

How do you respond to the company that has employees with LinkedIn profiles, even HR employees, but their corporate job listings are everywhere but LI?

Conversation from Facebook

Danika Smedley
Danika Smedley

Love it! Thanks Lewis

Jim Minardi
Jim Minardi

I do now, thanks Lewis!

Christina Haftman
Christina Haftman

Post this in our Facebook group - LinkedIn for Business

Karin Bennett
Karin Bennett

yes .. for almost 4 years now.

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