Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Surprised LinkedIn is still a thing. Everyone now calls it BoomerIn.
I'm Gen-X. Gen-Xers' pre-professional kids are joining. It's been fun watching all the freshmen come online. They mainly prefer Insta but LinkedIn for "work".
I saw a truly rich kid who's starting in Stanford this fall has already created a profile indicating that he's enrolled at Stanford. His grandpa is a hundreds of millionaire who was a Republican ambassador in the Dubya administration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn't make sense. Why do you want to delete them?
Because I don’t want them reading my content. I want my work persona to be separate from my LinkedIn persona. There are times I want to share opinions and perspectives on LinkedIn that I would not want to share with my current co-workers.
Anonymous wrote:It's so tricky looking for a job and some employers are like "why don't you have a lot of activity on your LinkedIn? we're looking for well-connected thought leaders" and others are like "why are you wasting so much time on social networking rather than doing real work?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one is going to notice they aren’t seeing your BS, oops “content”
I think you’re overestimating the value of LI and your voice
If you say something controversial, you can't assume it won't get to your employer.
Anonymous wrote:It's so tricky looking for a job and some employers are like "why don't you have a lot of activity on your LinkedIn? we're looking for well-connected thought leaders" and others are like "why are you wasting so much time on social networking rather than doing real work?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Surprised LinkedIn is still a thing. Everyone now calls it BoomerIn.
I'm Gen-X. Gen-Xers' pre-professional kids are joining. It's been fun watching all the freshmen come online. They mainly prefer Insta but LinkedIn for "work".
I saw a truly rich kid who's starting in Stanford this fall has already created a profile indicating that he's enrolled at Stanford. His grandpa is a hundreds of millionaire who was a Republican ambassador in the Dubya administration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn't make sense. Why do you want to delete them?
Because I don’t want them reading my content. I want my work persona to be separate from my LinkedIn persona. There are times I want to share opinions and perspectives on LinkedIn that I would not want to share with my current co-workers.
Anonymous wrote:The people who are very active on LinkedIn are questionable. They seem to be the people who talk and brag a lot, but don’t accomplish much. I don’t want to be associated with the very active LinkedIn users.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m starting to become more active on LinkedIn. I enjoy thought leadership. Before I started being active I added some of my current co-workers. Now that I’m finding my voice I’d prefer not to be connected to current co-workers. Is it the end of the world if I remove my co-worker connections?
What does this mean, exactly?