Post by account_disabled on Dec 26, 2023 4:20:35 GMT
Are starting out: put in your internships. – You are experienced: create an entry per position occupied. 3) I am self-taught / I have no training. Put your high school. Indicate professional training received from your employer. 4) I am too old and my photo will show my age. A photo is better than no photo at all. Without a photo, we naturally move on to the next profile. So no photo can mean you have something to hide. In any case, with the year of your training, your number of years of professional experience or your position level, we can roughly know your age. Ultimately use to slightly retouch your photo (it's partly free).
I only really know around thirty people well, how can I get to 50 contacts? Between your Email Data friends, your family, your current or past colleagues, your classmates... you should be able to reach 50. In any case, LinkedIn is neither an address book nor a list of people we recommend. It is a social network and a social network is enriched by the contacts that we can create. I notice in each intervention that I make around LinkedIn (5 to 10 per week for 5 years) that the notion of an open or closed network is not at all clear to the majority of LinkedIn subscribers. According to my latest readings (see image above), 65% of LinkedIn subscribers leave their networks open. 23% are not sure.
As this is an adjustment to be made on your LinkedIn account, I think we can consider that these 23% also have their networks open. This setting is managed in the "Preferences and confidentiality" (access by clicking on your photo at the top right): LinkedIn Preferences & Privacy Then, you have to go to the option: “select who can see your relationships”. LinkedIn who can see your connections The choice is then made between “you” and “your relationships”. LinkedIn who can see your connections choices In LinkedIn language, your connections are your level 1 contacts (direct contacts). The choice is therefore left to you whether or not to open our address book to our direct contacts.
I only really know around thirty people well, how can I get to 50 contacts? Between your Email Data friends, your family, your current or past colleagues, your classmates... you should be able to reach 50. In any case, LinkedIn is neither an address book nor a list of people we recommend. It is a social network and a social network is enriched by the contacts that we can create. I notice in each intervention that I make around LinkedIn (5 to 10 per week for 5 years) that the notion of an open or closed network is not at all clear to the majority of LinkedIn subscribers. According to my latest readings (see image above), 65% of LinkedIn subscribers leave their networks open. 23% are not sure.
As this is an adjustment to be made on your LinkedIn account, I think we can consider that these 23% also have their networks open. This setting is managed in the "Preferences and confidentiality" (access by clicking on your photo at the top right): LinkedIn Preferences & Privacy Then, you have to go to the option: “select who can see your relationships”. LinkedIn who can see your connections The choice is then made between “you” and “your relationships”. LinkedIn who can see your connections choices In LinkedIn language, your connections are your level 1 contacts (direct contacts). The choice is therefore left to you whether or not to open our address book to our direct contacts.