Anonymous wrote:I hate LinkedIn. It's a waste of time.
Anonymous wrote:LinkedIn is for losers who love to talk in work jargon but don’t actually do much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is a senior in college searching for a job. She and all of her friends and classmates use mainly Handshake and Linked In to find internships and jobs these days (well - besides the nepotism jobs). Several of them search for recent alumns from their universities who work in the field or company that they are interested in, and they contact them to see if they would like to chat or meet for a coffee. We have one friend who got a job that way.
The young folks find it very useful for networking.
That’s how my kid got her job. A carefully crafted LI profile. She then intentionally connected to women alumni from her school who were 1-2 years older. Connected, requested a mock interview as interested in company. It worked.
To be brutally honest. I interview a guy same age as me yesterday with no real LI. He had one no picture, contact info, no posts and maybe 30-50 connections.
Mind you same age as me. But he shows up gray hair, little heavy, crooked yellow teeth, a suit from the 1990s. He used dated terms. I think he was fearful of age discrimination so no social media presence.
However, I am his exact age. I have zero gray hair, perfect teeth (should be for the cost) in shape, I make sure my clothes are modern and I know all the layers buzz words.
Jennifer Anniston, George Clooney, Tom Cruise aa we age perhaps get ahead of it.
I know I am not hiring a model but I at least want Men in Black meaning they are not noticeable.
Also this guy could have used a ton of interview tips and mock interviews.
If I was him first I would have got tips my LI connections.
Here is why LI is PRICELESS I had a guy I never met contact me last month about interviewing at my former job. I ended up talking to him on phone and I realized I still had list of interview questions with expected answers and HR sheet for that job. I sent it to him along with messaging a reference.
It is a powerful tool beyond belief. Your personal network is BS. I got a $200 an hour consulting job on it from a Luxembourg company and so many jobs over last 20 years.
Indeed or applying on line is a black hole.
Anonymous wrote:You have our resumes, what other info do you need? Why is LI ‘required’ by so many HR people, and why is it a ‘red flag’ if you don’t have a profile? LI is now extraordinarily invasive. There is too much info that needs to be put out there that makes it easy for scammers to steal your identity or try to phish/social engineer you or your bank. It’s also crazy how many permissions LI now asks for. Can we get rid of this platform already? It’s probably worse than Facebook and ruins everyone’s privacy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is a senior in college searching for a job. She and all of her friends and classmates use mainly Handshake and Linked In to find internships and jobs these days (well - besides the nepotism jobs). Several of them search for recent alumns from their universities who work in the field or company that they are interested in, and they contact them to see if they would like to chat or meet for a coffee. We have one friend who got a job that way.
The young folks find it very useful for networking.
That’s how my kid got her job. A carefully crafted LI profile. She then intentionally connected to women alumni from her school who were 1-2 years older. Connected, requested a mock interview as interested in company. It worked.
To be brutally honest. I interview a guy same age as me yesterday with no real LI. He had one no picture, contact info, no posts and maybe 30-50 connections.
Mind you same age as me. But he shows up gray hair, little heavy, crooked yellow teeth, a suit from the 1990s. He used dated terms. I think he was fearful of age discrimination so no social media presence.
However, I am his exact age. I have zero gray hair, perfect teeth (should be for the cost) in shape, I make sure my clothes are modern and I know all the layers buzz words.
Jennifer Anniston, George Clooney, Tom Cruise aa we age perhaps get ahead of it.
I know I am not hiring a model but I at least want Men in Black meaning they are not noticeable.
Also this guy could have used a ton of interview tips and mock interviews.
If I was him first I would have got tips my LI connections.
Here is why LI is PRICELESS I had a guy I never met contact me last month about interviewing at my former job. I ended up talking to him on phone and I realized I still had list of interview questions with expected answers and HR sheet for that job. I sent it to him along with messaging a reference.
It is a powerful tool beyond belief. Your personal network is BS. I got a $200 an hour consulting job on it from a Luxembourg company and so many jobs over last 20 years.
Indeed or applying on line is a black hole.
Anonymous wrote:Old boomers wanna use paper resumes and rotary phones instead of LinkedIn
Anonymous wrote:I am the only person with my name (first/last) in the country. I stayed off LinkedIn for sometime but do occassionaly Google myself.
One day, one of the results was a LinkedIn profile with my name, hometown and profession; beyond those details, it was empty of content.
I created a "real" profle soon after, set to as private as LinkedIn allows, with the elements of my job history that are public. No information other than job title and my employment dates for career-relevant positions.
At the very least, for those with uncommon names, I would encourage claiming a profile.
Anonymous wrote:I value applicants who do not have LI. They resist social media, reveal confidence in who they are, and can maintain privacy. Not having LI is special!