36 min

LinkedIn Etiquette Informed Podcast by Mark Williams. The podcast for LinkedIn™️ users

    • Marketing

Where were you last week?
Unexpected holiday?
Did I miss an episode?
Ooops…sorry about last week folks, this episode didn’t happen last week because, well to be perfectly frank…I had the podcasters equivalent of writers block!
But I’m back on it this week and this is a tricky subject that probably effects all of us at some time.
Interesting Stuff I Saw This Week I’ve scanned the internet for interesting articles about LinkedIn and there really is very little but this one instigated a rant from me…just a little one!
Dear LinkedIn, Did You Forget You’re a Business Site?
What a load of C*** or codswallop as some posh English people say!
Why do people feel the need to dictate how LinkedIn should be, based purely on their own preferences. LinkedIn should be inclusive to all people. Some people love emojis and others hate them…that’s fine but just because you hate them, that isn’t a reason to prevent others from using them. Some industries and some users of a certain age love using emojis. If you are sent one then just ignore it, give feedback to the sender or just simply block them.
This nicely leads me into the main subject of this weeks episode…….The etiquette of using LinkedIn.
LinkedIn Etiquette I was talking to a fellow LinkedIn Trainer last week and we were debating what we thought was acceptable or not when adding comments to a competitors post. This motivated me to publish the video below;

The comments thread on that post make very interesting reading.
It seems that a prominent view amongst many was that it’s OK to post a link provided it added value to the discussion and was not promotion….which sounds sensible but that doesn’t take into account the original poster (OP) – they have probably posted that content to encourage engagement and your link doesn’t help at all in that respect because it is taking people away from the thread.
No matter how well intentioned your actions, it’s not always clear to the OP that you are not promoting yourself – even if the link is to educational content that is highly relevant to the topic, you are still taking people from the thread to your website, which is still promotional! There is also a good chance it is actually detracting from the engagement thread so this could be considered bad manners.
The problem is that the right and wrong ‘line’ is different for everyone! This can all get very confusing for less experienced people who, understandably find it off-putting.
One person even suggested that hashtags and @mentions are inappropriate – I can’t subscribe to that though, they are mainly ways to bring people to the post which is doing the OP more of a favour.
The subject of course is much wider than post comments, other subjects that are relevant;
Tagging (@mentioning) people who you don’t know in your post. Personalising invitations Creating group messages or adding others into group messages Sending Emojis post connection ‘welcome’ messages  
It’s a bit of a minefield isn’t it?
What other examples can you think of?
Did you know? You can now add email addresses into posts and messages on LinkedIn and they become active, clickable links.
This is very useful. Unfortunately they still don’t convert to links in your profile which is where they would be most useful
Post of the Week You may recall Simon Bourne from episode 207
I recently saw two posts from Simon, the first shows how genuine and authentic he is, the second shows how, by building a great following through being authentic, he is able to generate business on Linkedin.

 
Check out the comments below….Kerchinnng!


This weeks question comes from Jason Holt.
Question: A while back, I was a bit lazy when reaching out to people with connection requests and didn’t customise the message. (I know!) In my defence its not super easy on mobile but anyway…I now have a list of contacts who didn’t respond. I don’t know these people

Where were you last week?
Unexpected holiday?
Did I miss an episode?
Ooops…sorry about last week folks, this episode didn’t happen last week because, well to be perfectly frank…I had the podcasters equivalent of writers block!
But I’m back on it this week and this is a tricky subject that probably effects all of us at some time.
Interesting Stuff I Saw This Week I’ve scanned the internet for interesting articles about LinkedIn and there really is very little but this one instigated a rant from me…just a little one!
Dear LinkedIn, Did You Forget You’re a Business Site?
What a load of C*** or codswallop as some posh English people say!
Why do people feel the need to dictate how LinkedIn should be, based purely on their own preferences. LinkedIn should be inclusive to all people. Some people love emojis and others hate them…that’s fine but just because you hate them, that isn’t a reason to prevent others from using them. Some industries and some users of a certain age love using emojis. If you are sent one then just ignore it, give feedback to the sender or just simply block them.
This nicely leads me into the main subject of this weeks episode…….The etiquette of using LinkedIn.
LinkedIn Etiquette I was talking to a fellow LinkedIn Trainer last week and we were debating what we thought was acceptable or not when adding comments to a competitors post. This motivated me to publish the video below;

The comments thread on that post make very interesting reading.
It seems that a prominent view amongst many was that it’s OK to post a link provided it added value to the discussion and was not promotion….which sounds sensible but that doesn’t take into account the original poster (OP) – they have probably posted that content to encourage engagement and your link doesn’t help at all in that respect because it is taking people away from the thread.
No matter how well intentioned your actions, it’s not always clear to the OP that you are not promoting yourself – even if the link is to educational content that is highly relevant to the topic, you are still taking people from the thread to your website, which is still promotional! There is also a good chance it is actually detracting from the engagement thread so this could be considered bad manners.
The problem is that the right and wrong ‘line’ is different for everyone! This can all get very confusing for less experienced people who, understandably find it off-putting.
One person even suggested that hashtags and @mentions are inappropriate – I can’t subscribe to that though, they are mainly ways to bring people to the post which is doing the OP more of a favour.
The subject of course is much wider than post comments, other subjects that are relevant;
Tagging (@mentioning) people who you don’t know in your post. Personalising invitations Creating group messages or adding others into group messages Sending Emojis post connection ‘welcome’ messages  
It’s a bit of a minefield isn’t it?
What other examples can you think of?
Did you know? You can now add email addresses into posts and messages on LinkedIn and they become active, clickable links.
This is very useful. Unfortunately they still don’t convert to links in your profile which is where they would be most useful
Post of the Week You may recall Simon Bourne from episode 207
I recently saw two posts from Simon, the first shows how genuine and authentic he is, the second shows how, by building a great following through being authentic, he is able to generate business on Linkedin.

 
Check out the comments below….Kerchinnng!


This weeks question comes from Jason Holt.
Question: A while back, I was a bit lazy when reaching out to people with connection requests and didn’t customise the message. (I know!) In my defence its not super easy on mobile but anyway…I now have a list of contacts who didn’t respond. I don’t know these people

36 min