Wednesday, May 28, 2014

10 Little Known LinkedIn Features That Can Make A Big Difference

Thanks Wayne for the help!
Ev

10 Little Known LinkedIn Features That Can Make A Big Difference
by Wayne

Since we are in the middle of a holiday weekend here
in the U.S., I thought I would give you a vacation from deep strategic thinking and share with you a quick checklist of ten great LinkedIn features that you may not have discovered just yet.

1. Reorder your profile sections
Anytime you are in Edit Profile and you see the up-down arrow, it means you can move that section. This will help you emphasize the most important aspects of your profile.

2. Download a list of your entire 1st degree network
You can download into a spreadsheet (in either .CSV or .VCF format) a full list of your connections, including their name, current title, current company name, and email address. There are two ways to access this. If you have upgraded to LinkedIn Contacts (it’s free and I highly recommend it), go into your settings (top right) and click Export LinkedIn Connections. If you have not upgraded yet, go to your Contacts and on the bottom right click Export Contacts.


3. Delete Skills & Expertise entries
In Edit Profile, just click Edit in the Skills & Expertise section. You will then be able to eliminate all the inapplicable or downright silly terms that have suddenly appeared on your profile and have nothing to do with your skills, expertise, or products and services you sell or represent. Just click the X next to the skill you want to remove.

4. Find other people with similar outside interests or organizations
If you click a single word (Interest Section) or name of an organization (Organizations Section), you will then be sent to an Advanced People Search page showing you all the folks on LinkedIn who have that same interest or organization on their profile. You can further narrow your search by using any or all of the advanced searching filters.

5. Display media files on your profile
It’s referred to as your Professional Gallery and it’s a way to display your best video, audio, documents, slideshows, etc. on your profile in the Summary, Job Experience or Education sections. Just click the Add Media icon and either upload the file or add a link to a web address where it is already saved. When you are in Edit Profile, the media icon is between the pencil and the up-down arrow.

6. Reorder your recommendations
Because only two
recommendations for each job or education entry are shown in the main part of your profile, you want to make sure they are your very best.
In Edit Profile, go down to the Recommendation section and click the pencil. You’ll then see the up-down arrow that enables you to move the recommendations. You can only move them within that specific job section. You can’t move them to a different job section.

7. Find specific details about alumni
Dig into the LinkedIn alumni database for any school (not just the ones you attended), and find out the following information:
•Where they live
•Where they work
•What they do
•What they studied
•What their skills are
•How you are connected to them
.You can also use keywords to dig deeper into the list.
Access this database by either clicking the name of a school on anyone’s profile or by clicking Interests>Education>Alumni on your top toolbar and entering the name of the school you want to search.

8. Reduce or eliminate the number of emails you get from your groups
The default is daily. If you want to change this, go to Privacy & Settings>Groups, Companies & Applications. Under Set the frequency of group digest emails, choose either weekly or no email. You can adjust all of your groups from this single page.

9. Send a single message to up to 50 of your 1st degree connections at the same time
This one should come with a caution warning because if not used carefully, you may cause a person to drop you as a connection or label you a spammer.
To access this, click the little envelope on your top toolbar. Then click the Compose Message button. Enter the connections you want to email or use the filter button to refine your list. The filter button is the small LinkedIn logo next to the box you enter people’s names in.

10. Review details of and search into a 1st degree connection’s network
You can review the breakdown of a person’s network by the following criteria: company, school, location, industry, and skills. Click any of the circles to view a list of all the people in that category.
You can also search someone’s network with keywords and all other advanced search filters by clicking the magnifying glass located in the Connections section of his/her profile and entering the keywords you want to search for.
You can then click Advanced Search and further refine your search.
Both of these techniques are available for any of your connections that have not chosen to turn off the viewablity of their connections.
I hope you found a couple new features on this list that will help you increase your effectiveness on LinkedIn.

Monday, May 26, 2014

Honor Memorial Day


While you are out enjoying this Memorial Day. Take a minute to say thanks to those that fell to allow us to enjoy our freedoms.
Thanks Dad and all the other members of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team!
Ev

442nd RCIT History
"All of us can't stay in the [internment] camps until the end of the war. Some of us have to go to the front. Our record on the battlefield will determine when you will return and how you will be treated. I don't know if I'll make it back."
Technical Sergeant Abraham Ohama, Company "F", 442nd RCT, Killed in Action 10/20/1944

"They were superb! That word correctly describes it: superb!
They took terrific casualties. They showed rare courage and tremendous fighting spirit. Not too much can be said of the performance of those battalions in Europe and everybody wanted them...."
General George C. Marshall

"...I had the honor to command the men of the 442nd Combat Team. You fought magnificently in the field of battle and wrote brilliant chapters in the military history of our country. They demonstrated conclusively the loyalty and valor of our American citizens of Japanese ancestry in combat."
General Mark W. Clark

"...I cannot say, however, that their "Go For Broke" service has ever been adequately honored, but I do know that any objective appraisal of the record of this unit will place it high up in the annals of our military history...
Whether in France, Italy or elsewhere, I know of no units in the American Army that fought and persevered more gallantly than did those Nisei companies and battalions."
John J. McCloy, Assistant Secretary of War

"The Nisei troops are among the best in the United States Army and the respect and the appreciation due honorable, loyal, and courageous soldiers should be their's rather than the scorn and ridicule they have been receiving from some thoughtless and uninformed citizens and veterans."
Major General E.M. Almond

"The members of the Combat Team have made a magnificent record of which they and all Americans should be proud. This record, without a doubt, is the most important single factor in creating in this country a more understanding attitude toward the people of Japanese descent."
Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior