LinkedIn: Getting Started and
        then some…
     Gina Mintzer, CMP, MHA
      ACCVB DOS Meeting
       November 13, 2012
You’re On LinkedIn – Now What?
LinkedIn – You’re here to
 get found, connect and
        prospect?
7 Benefits of LinkedIn
1) Make smart, right connections. Only the serious apply here. This is where
   the professional community engages, interacts, connects and refers. Start
   your process on LinkedIn if you want to get a company or person to notice
   you. Develop your profile, put up a professional head shot, link your blog, and
   post good content as often as you can and respond to other people’s posts.

2) Who do you want to meet? Make a target list of who you want to meet-
   companies and people. Make LinkedIn a prospecting, research and
   engagement tool. Use the information you gather to send thoughtful, smart
   messages.

3) Who do you want to meet you? This is where “mutual magnetism” works
   both ways. There are people we all want to meet for the value they bring to us,
   but there is value in what you bring to others too. Use your connections,
   wisdom, experience and personality to both meet people and initiate people
   meeting you. Develop your profile and keep it up to date!
4) Link up on LinkedIn: Identify people in your sphere and community that
would be great to meet each other and make introductions. When you want
to be connected, those connections you made can come in very handy!

5) The Rules of Engagement: There is an etiquette on all the social
platforms, but especially LinkedIn. Just because we connect doesn’t give
anyone permission to start sending frequent, non-permission based sales
emails. Spend some time interacting with people, supporting their content,
causes and company before launching into salesy stuff.

6) Use brand power — your brand, your company brand, your industry
brand: LinkedIn is the perfect environment to leverage ‘brand power’.
Remember there’s your brand, your company brand and your industry brand.
Promote and connect all three and watch relationships grow.

7) You + new media = smart connections: Your strategic, consistent and
value driven communications used in a thoughtful way on LinkedIn can and
will open doors. LinkedIn is a great place to start, it makes it easy to add
Twitter, your blog and other sites that all work together to professionally
present you in a single page snapshot.
Overcome LinkedIn Challenges
  What do I do? Where do I start?
  I don’t know how to write a bio.
  I have experienced a loss of job security and am looking for
opportunities online
  I’m having a hard time finding customers online.
  I don’t understand how LinkedIn can specifically help me or my
business.
  This takes too much time!
  I can’t do this all by myself
Get Found!
Get Found!
         Create Your Headline (120 characters or less)   AFTER
BEFORE
Create Your Headline (120 Characters or Less)
 Business Owners: Your LinkedIn headline should be clear yet compelling
 marketing statement about your unique experience, something that sets you
 apart from your competitors.




Career Builders: Your headline will automatically be displayed as your current job
or the last job you’ve had, unless you change it manually. Here is a great place
to brand you. Think Different: instead of saying “Marketing Director of Acme
Parts” you might say “Social Media and Internet Expert for Fortune 500
company.” Remember to position YOU for future potential work while honoring
you current job within your LinkedIn profiles.
Another way to think of yourself
  Example: Sharon Smith is a secret agent-ninja known for her ability
  to infiltrate organizations, gain access to valuable date and make
  targets into un-persons. Sharon is passionate about ridding the
  world of crime, one double-agent at a time and has worked with
  prestigious firms including Toys R Us, Pottery Barn and Denny’s-
  frequent criminal hideouts.

(Your name) is a _________________________________________
Known For: ______________________________________________
And is passionate about: ____________________________________
And has worked with:_______________________________________

  Use parts of your defining statement to create your headline and
  sprinkle it through your summary.
Before   After
To Really Supercharge your profile, use bullets
or special characters via your computer’s
character map! Here’s how you find bullets:




Windows: Point to Start > Programs > Accessories > System
Tools > Character Map
Mac: Apple > System Preferences > Search > “Character
Pallete”
Part 1: Insert Defining Statement.


Part 2: List projects/ areas of expertise as bullet points
with brief descriptions.


Part 3: Why is (your name) on LinkedIn? (Answer)
Optional


Part 4: (Your Name) Believes- this is a great place to put
your core beliefs and that of your company. (Optional)
Specialties: (List Keywords)



Experience
When listing current and past experience on LinkedIn, only
  post those positions that are in alignment with your
  future goals.
Get Connected!
All About Groups
Power Posting - What to Post?
Show your expertise! Below are items to post.

•   Blogs
•   Events
•   Links to books, articles, and slideshares
•   Needs
•   Quotes
•   Travel
Ideas To Post To Groups
Results = Engagement
Recommendations
Here are some tips on how to write a great
           LinkedIn recommendation
• Write recommendations that are genuine, earnest, detailed and
  descriptive.
• Be very specific and tell us why the person is outstanding.
• If possible, support a person’s personal brand.
• Tell us what they do: what makes them different and better than the
  rest.
• Throw in a call to action if possible.
• Mention any transferable skills. For instance, everyone wants to
  work with leaders who have strong problem solving skills, great work
  habits, and continues to learn!
• 60-100 words
• Follow the rule of threes - Choose three adjectives and make them
  interesting, not just nice!
Prospecting/
  Search
What I learned: Searched 1-2-3 LinkedIn contacts from groups, now I
will compare to our CRM and reach out to them with a prospecting
message …
LinkedIn – Get found, connect,
        prospect and PROSPER!
1.    LinkedIn is a place to brag.
2.    LinkedIn is reputation management.
3.    Use Keywords to get found. Be interesting.
4.    Connect, Communicate, Convert!
EXTRAS
1. Do you have a Social Media strategy?
2. Make a plan to be consistent across all
   your Social Media outlets
3. Create Social Media calendar
4. Google yourself and check your profiles
   everywhere
5. Here’s what I found – Gina Mintzer has
   many different profiles, different photos,
   make the time to update all and/or
   delete some
Google Yourself
Notes & Extras
Contact Gina Mintzer, CMP, MHA,
    ACCVB Director of Sales
     gmintzer@albany.org
      518-434-1217 X301

LinkedIn getting started

  • 1.
    LinkedIn: Getting Startedand then some… Gina Mintzer, CMP, MHA ACCVB DOS Meeting November 13, 2012
  • 2.
    You’re On LinkedIn– Now What?
  • 3.
    LinkedIn – You’rehere to get found, connect and prospect?
  • 4.
    7 Benefits ofLinkedIn 1) Make smart, right connections. Only the serious apply here. This is where the professional community engages, interacts, connects and refers. Start your process on LinkedIn if you want to get a company or person to notice you. Develop your profile, put up a professional head shot, link your blog, and post good content as often as you can and respond to other people’s posts. 2) Who do you want to meet? Make a target list of who you want to meet- companies and people. Make LinkedIn a prospecting, research and engagement tool. Use the information you gather to send thoughtful, smart messages. 3) Who do you want to meet you? This is where “mutual magnetism” works both ways. There are people we all want to meet for the value they bring to us, but there is value in what you bring to others too. Use your connections, wisdom, experience and personality to both meet people and initiate people meeting you. Develop your profile and keep it up to date!
  • 5.
    4) Link upon LinkedIn: Identify people in your sphere and community that would be great to meet each other and make introductions. When you want to be connected, those connections you made can come in very handy! 5) The Rules of Engagement: There is an etiquette on all the social platforms, but especially LinkedIn. Just because we connect doesn’t give anyone permission to start sending frequent, non-permission based sales emails. Spend some time interacting with people, supporting their content, causes and company before launching into salesy stuff. 6) Use brand power — your brand, your company brand, your industry brand: LinkedIn is the perfect environment to leverage ‘brand power’. Remember there’s your brand, your company brand and your industry brand. Promote and connect all three and watch relationships grow. 7) You + new media = smart connections: Your strategic, consistent and value driven communications used in a thoughtful way on LinkedIn can and will open doors. LinkedIn is a great place to start, it makes it easy to add Twitter, your blog and other sites that all work together to professionally present you in a single page snapshot.
  • 6.
    Overcome LinkedIn Challenges What do I do? Where do I start? I don’t know how to write a bio. I have experienced a loss of job security and am looking for opportunities online I’m having a hard time finding customers online. I don’t understand how LinkedIn can specifically help me or my business. This takes too much time! I can’t do this all by myself
  • 7.
  • 8.
    Get Found! Create Your Headline (120 characters or less) AFTER BEFORE
  • 9.
    Create Your Headline(120 Characters or Less) Business Owners: Your LinkedIn headline should be clear yet compelling marketing statement about your unique experience, something that sets you apart from your competitors. Career Builders: Your headline will automatically be displayed as your current job or the last job you’ve had, unless you change it manually. Here is a great place to brand you. Think Different: instead of saying “Marketing Director of Acme Parts” you might say “Social Media and Internet Expert for Fortune 500 company.” Remember to position YOU for future potential work while honoring you current job within your LinkedIn profiles.
  • 10.
    Another way tothink of yourself Example: Sharon Smith is a secret agent-ninja known for her ability to infiltrate organizations, gain access to valuable date and make targets into un-persons. Sharon is passionate about ridding the world of crime, one double-agent at a time and has worked with prestigious firms including Toys R Us, Pottery Barn and Denny’s- frequent criminal hideouts. (Your name) is a _________________________________________ Known For: ______________________________________________ And is passionate about: ____________________________________ And has worked with:_______________________________________ Use parts of your defining statement to create your headline and sprinkle it through your summary.
  • 11.
    Before After
  • 12.
    To Really Superchargeyour profile, use bullets or special characters via your computer’s character map! Here’s how you find bullets: Windows: Point to Start > Programs > Accessories > System Tools > Character Map Mac: Apple > System Preferences > Search > “Character Pallete”
  • 13.
    Part 1: InsertDefining Statement. Part 2: List projects/ areas of expertise as bullet points with brief descriptions. Part 3: Why is (your name) on LinkedIn? (Answer) Optional Part 4: (Your Name) Believes- this is a great place to put your core beliefs and that of your company. (Optional)
  • 14.
    Specialties: (List Keywords) Experience Whenlisting current and past experience on LinkedIn, only post those positions that are in alignment with your future goals.
  • 15.
  • 20.
  • 22.
    Power Posting -What to Post? Show your expertise! Below are items to post. • Blogs • Events • Links to books, articles, and slideshares • Needs • Quotes • Travel
  • 23.
    Ideas To PostTo Groups
  • 24.
  • 25.
  • 28.
    Here are sometips on how to write a great LinkedIn recommendation • Write recommendations that are genuine, earnest, detailed and descriptive. • Be very specific and tell us why the person is outstanding. • If possible, support a person’s personal brand. • Tell us what they do: what makes them different and better than the rest. • Throw in a call to action if possible. • Mention any transferable skills. For instance, everyone wants to work with leaders who have strong problem solving skills, great work habits, and continues to learn! • 60-100 words • Follow the rule of threes - Choose three adjectives and make them interesting, not just nice!
  • 29.
  • 31.
    What I learned:Searched 1-2-3 LinkedIn contacts from groups, now I will compare to our CRM and reach out to them with a prospecting message …
  • 32.
    LinkedIn – Getfound, connect, prospect and PROSPER! 1. LinkedIn is a place to brag. 2. LinkedIn is reputation management. 3. Use Keywords to get found. Be interesting. 4. Connect, Communicate, Convert!
  • 33.
    EXTRAS 1. Do youhave a Social Media strategy? 2. Make a plan to be consistent across all your Social Media outlets 3. Create Social Media calendar 4. Google yourself and check your profiles everywhere 5. Here’s what I found – Gina Mintzer has many different profiles, different photos, make the time to update all and/or delete some
  • 34.
  • 35.
    Notes & Extras ContactGina Mintzer, CMP, MHA, ACCVB Director of Sales gmintzer@albany.org 518-434-1217 X301