LinkedInWorks


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LinkedIn Works


LinkedIn has many uses - commercial, networking, career, and personal. You must have realistic expectations to use it successfully. And even then, it's not for everyone or for every business. It aligns with certain businesses and sales processes much better than others. The "pay it forward" approach is a long, not short, term strategy.

 

A few definitions

 

See PayItForward.

 

Marketing is the process of building a story (or brand), creating awareness, and instigating interest to move external parties into the sales cycle. It can be integrated into your networking activities.

 

 

LinkedIn for business

LinkedIn does not sell leads. (Don't confuse a limited InMail with buying a real lead!) It is not designed for selling. It is not a contact manager. It is not a direct marketing platform that connect you to multiple people. It is (drumroll please, no snickering in the balcony) ... a networking service.

 

It's only the start of Business

 

While LinkedIn may be better than sliced bread, it is not a panacea for your business. LinkedIn is an excellent business contact search engine. With a database of 15+ million members, including many top executives, LinkedIn makes it easy to find key people. LinkedIn then provides a platform for a warm introduction to your targets. That's it. The rest is up to you. It's just the beginning of the sales process.

 

You have to write winning Introductions, just like you do inquiry letters or phone pitches. You have to build your network for the best referrals. You have to pray that the recipient is active, available, and interested. You have to use alternate means of contact if your initial LinkedIn Introduction is blocked or not received. If your message is accepted and you receive a contact email address or phone number, then LinkedIn is totally out of the loop.

 

LinkedIn is a limited tool in your hopefully much larger business toolkit. It's up to you to make personal contact, maintain communications, and manage your relationships. You must develop effective marketing programs, have the right pitch, create appropriate products, and shepherd and close the sale yourself.

 

 

LinkedIn is business ... for Business

 

LinkedIn works best where there is a natural fit with your business. You can reduce its value to two key features.

 

Does LinkedIn fit your business?

The key features above make LinkedIn a better fit for some businesses compared to others.

 

What isn't a good fit?

Here are a few examples of a bad fit, assuming the recipient is not in that business:

 

When the LinkedIn shoe doesn‘t fit

If your business is not a good fit, focus on networking and marketing use.

 

Networking

Go wide and deep with a Quantity-oriented approach.

 

While LinkedIn may not be direct one-to-one fit for your business, it likely will be a fit for some small percentage of your contacts. Build both a large network and personal relationships to maximize exposure to a lot of people and get to know them well enough to find people who will proactively help you.

 

Create interest

 

Creating demand is a fundamental part of marketing. One example is the use of Networking Products. Provide something that will engage fellow LinkedIn members and incent them to accept and even welcome contact. Such Networking Products include research, surveys, white papers, blogs, newsletters, videos, communities, LinkedIn groups, etc.

 

 

Market to your connections

 

There are two different types of messages - networking and commercial. Read ContactingConnections to be familiar with the difference between them and how they should be handled.

 

How do you get the most out of your networking messages? You do the same thing you're already doing with your commercial marketing. Remember, this is business, not fun. So get serious about it. Create a NetworkingCampaign.

 

MarcFreedman