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       LinkedIn will never rent or sell your personally identifiable information to third parties for marketing purposes.

       LinkedIn will never share your contact information with another user without your consent.

       Any sensitive information that you provide will be secured with all industry standard protocols and technology.

Snapshot of theLinkedIn profile page.

      FIGURE 2-16: Continue to work on your profile.

Snapshot of the LinkedIn page where you can add connections to your network.

      FIGURE 2-17: Add connections to your network.

      Completing Your Profile

      IN THIS CHAPTER

      

Crafting your summary information

      

Updating your contact settings

      

Adding a position to your profile

      

Including your education information

      

Customizing your public profile settings

      After you register with LinkedIn and work to build your network by looking outward, it’s time to look inward by focusing on your profile. Think of your LinkedIn profile as your personal home page to the professional world: This profile exists to give anyone a complete picture of your background, qualifications, and skills as well as paint a picture of who you are beyond the numbers and bullet points.

      In this chapter, I walk you through all the different sections of your profile and explain how to update them and add the right information in a concise and appealing manner. I take you through adding information at each stage so you can update your profile now or down the road (say, when you finish that amazing project or get that spiffy promotion you’ve been working toward).

      

You can access your LinkedIn profile at any time to view or make changes. Simply go to www.linkedin.com, click the Me icon in the top navigation bar, and then click the View Profile link.

      Each summary is as individual as the person writing it, but there are right ways and wrong ways to prepare and update your summary. Always keep in mind your professional or career goals, and what kind of image, or brand, you want to portray in support of those goals. Those goals should give you direction on how to write your summary.

      

Your summary is your best chance of explaining to future employers what you can offer them as a new employee. Specifically, you should describe not only what you can do, but what can you do for them (with them being the new company). Knowing Microsoft Excel is great, but using Microsoft Excel to automate processes and bring down costs 12 percent while speeding up product development time by 15 percent is a statement that allows employers and recruiters the chance to see why you matter as a job candidate.

      To keep your summary easy to read so it can be digested quickly, you could divide the Summary section into two distinct parts:

       Your professional experience and goals: This part contains a one-paragraph summary of your current and past accomplishments and future goals. See the later section, “Writing your summary first,” for more on how to construct the right paragraph for this part.

       Your specialties in your industry of expertise: This part is a list of specific skills and talents. Include specific job skills (for example, contract negotiation or writing HTML software code) as opposed to your daily responsibilities or accomplishments, which you list in the professional experience and goals paragraph. This part not only gives readers a precise understanding of your skill set but also gives search engines a keyword-rich list to associate with you, and it’s at the top of your profile.

      Other core elements of your LinkedIn profile are stored in the Basic Information section. Be sure to polish these elements so they reflect well on you:

       Your name: Believe it or not, defining your name properly can positively or negatively affect your LinkedIn activity. Because people are searching for you to connect to you, it’s important that LinkedIn knows variations, nicknames, maiden names, or former names that you may have held, so be sure you correctly fill in your First, Last, and Former/Maiden name fields. Also, LinkedIn allows you to choose a display name of your first name and last initial, in case you want to keep your name private from the larger LinkedIn community outside of your connections. (For details on limiting the display of your name, see Chapter 11.) You can also include your middle name in the First Name field. I highly recommended you do so if you have a common name (for example, John Smith); in this way, people can find the “right you” when searching.

       Your professional headline: Think of this as your value proposition, or “why am I different

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