Friday, May 29, 2020

LinkedIn Connections Are Not The End Goal

LinkedIn Connections Are Not The End Goal I have gotten thousands of invitations to connect over the years.  Mainly this is because I have a pretty public persona, from starting JibberJobber, and then writing the book on LinkedIn. I have spoken across the US and have done many webinars to global audiences.  So people send me invitations which I dont have a problem with. What I do have a problem with is the idea that getting a connection on LinkedIn seems to be the end goal. In my LinkedIn trainings Ive suggested that once you start a relationship with someone, you DO NOT ask them to connect with you on LinkedIn yet.  Why?  Because connecting on LinkedIn, many times, means were done communicating.  Its the end.  I have reached my goal, I have won. Think about it how many times have you connected with someone on LinkedIn, and then you never hear from them again?  How many times have you had a good conversation with someone, then invited them to LinkedIn, and then stopped communicating with them? Ive seen this too many times.  So my suggestion is to build the relationship more, and eventually connect but make it clear that you are interested in the relationship a lot more than a somewhat meaningless connection on social media. Go back to Fridays post, about getting beyond superficial.  If you have a superficial relationship, and you connect, you havent really moved beyond superficial. too many times, this end goal is a dead end. LinkedIn Connections Are Not The End Goal I have gotten thousands of invitations to connect over the years.  Mainly this is because I have a pretty public persona, from starting JibberJobber, and then writing the book on LinkedIn. I have spoken across the US and have done many webinars to global audiences.  So people send me invitations which I dont have a problem with. What I do have a problem with is the idea that getting a connection on LinkedIn seems to be the end goal. In my LinkedIn trainings Ive suggested that once you start a relationship with someone, you DO NOT ask them to connect with you on LinkedIn yet.  Why?  Because connecting on LinkedIn, many times, means were done communicating.  Its the end.  I have reached my goal, I have won. Think about it how many times have you connected with someone on LinkedIn, and then you never hear from them again?  How many times have you had a good conversation with someone, then invited them to LinkedIn, and then stopped communicating with them? Ive seen this too many times.  So my suggestion is to build the relationship more, and eventually connect but make it clear that you are interested in the relationship a lot more than a somewhat meaningless connection on social media. Go back to Fridays post, about getting beyond superficial.  If you have a superficial relationship, and you connect, you havent really moved beyond superficial. too many times, this end goal is a dead end. LinkedIn Connections Are Not The End Goal I have gotten thousands of invitations to connect over the years.  Mainly this is because I have a pretty public persona, from starting JibberJobber, and then writing the book on LinkedIn. I have spoken across the US and have done many webinars to global audiences.  So people send me invitations which I dont have a problem with. What I do have a problem with is the idea that getting a connection on LinkedIn seems to be the end goal. In my LinkedIn trainings Ive suggested that once you start a relationship with someone, you DO NOT ask them to connect with you on LinkedIn yet.  Why?  Because connecting on LinkedIn, many times, means were done communicating.  Its the end.  I have reached my goal, I have won. Think about it how many times have you connected with someone on LinkedIn, and then you never hear from them again?  How many times have you had a good conversation with someone, then invited them to LinkedIn, and then stopped communicating with them? Ive seen this too many times.  So my suggestion is to build the relationship more, and eventually connect but make it clear that you are interested in the relationship a lot more than a somewhat meaningless connection on social media. Go back to Fridays post, about getting beyond superficial.  If you have a superficial relationship, and you connect, you havent really moved beyond superficial. too many times, this end goal is a dead end.

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