Thursday, May 14, 2020
How to Get the Best LinkedIn Recommendations - Executive Career Brandâ¢
How to Get the Best Recommendations Why are recommendations so important? The true measure of your executive brand and promise of value to future employers is reflected in what those who know your work the best â" co-workers, peers, top management, team members, customers, etc. â" have to say about you. Executive recruiters and hiring authorities routinely source talent through search. Theyâre attracted to candidates who have quality recommendations on their profiles. If you have no recommendations, they may question the value you offer and skip over you. And, at least 3 recommendations are required (among other criteria) before considers your profile 100% complete, giving your profile a much better chance of landing high in searches. Best tip to get the best recommendations? Write good recommendations to get good recommendations. Two bonuses when you use this strategy: 1. Your recommendations of others include a link to your profile, extending your footprint on . Hiring authorities checking out the person you recommended will click over to your profile if you are someone of interest to them. 2. Recommendations that you write and the ones written for you show up in network updates for you and for the people you recommended, keeping your brand top of mind with both networks. A few cautions: Only ask for recommendations from people who will give you a good recommendation. Dont strive for quantity over quality. Only give recommendations to people you can honestly praise. Social media authority Chris Brogan noted in his recent post on Recommendation Tips: Iâll say this once: if you recommend someone and canât really vouch for their work, youâre just setting your own reputation up for a blow. Donât do it . . . Iâll never recommend someone whose work I donât know enough about. Avoid obviously contrived recommendations, ones that look like they were written just for the sake of reciprocating (Ill write one for you, if you write one for me.). They will probably backfire. Recruiters are good at sniffing these out, and they can harm you and diminish your value. Dont demand a reciprocal recommendation. Give the same kinds of recommendations you hope to receive. When writing recommendations Brogan suggests: Lead with the strongest thing you can say about the person. Gerry is a clutch player in the world of project management. If you canât say anything particularly strong, you might reconsider whether youâd recommend them. What are the best recommendations? Assuming you have clarity on what jobs, industry, and audience youâre targeting, and your profile reflects this, you should seek recommendations that will hit home with your target audience and align with the qualifications and qualities theyâre seeking. Itâs okay to help people write a recommendation for you, if theyâre willing, by letting them know what kind of information youâre looking for. Asking them questions such as these should help them compose a paragraph or two: 1. What do you feel are my top strengths and skills that have most benefitted the company? 2. In what ways did I add value to the team and to the company? 3. What things did you know you could always rely on me to deliver? 4. In what ways have I helped you do your job? Better yet, you may want to provide them with suggested verbiage and an actual example of the kind of recommendation youâre looking for. This would give them a foundation to work from and improve upon. Related posts: Executive Personal Branding and Your Profile FREE e-Book : Best Tactic for Undercover Executive Job Search Power Your Executive Personal Brand with Groups Stalled Executive Job Search? Get Busy on and Twitter 00 0
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