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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: linkedin, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 19 of 19
1. Former Animator Sells E-learning Website for $1.5 Billion

Who says animators can't be tech entrepreneurs?

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2. LinkedIn - The Underused Social Media Network

We all know that social media marketing is a must for at least five reasons: 1. Increased visibility 2. Increased traffic and rankings 3. Building authority 4. Making connections 5. Finding potential clients / customers (leads) The biggies in the social network channels are Facebook and Twitter, with Pinterest, Google+ and LinkedIn following behind. But, should this be the case? LinkedIn in

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3. LinkedIn Pro Tip from a Social Butterfly

Let someone you invite to your network know how you came to find them or be referred to them. It can be as simple as, “I’m long time friends with so and so and I found your contact through her and think our connection here may be mutually beneficial.” Anything less than that is just creepy like the stock messages I’ve been getting on LinkedIn, “Please join my network.” My knee-jerk thinking is, “What do you think this is? Twitter or something? I don’t know you! I only talk to complete strangers on that social network.

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4. Your LinkedIn Company Pages - Where to Share Your Products and Services

In a recent update notice, LinkedIn noted that it would be “removing the Products and Services tab from all Company Pages” on April 14th. The content there will still be okay, but you won’t be able to add new items. If you have a LinkedIn Company Page, you need to know how you can still promote your products and services through LinkedIn. Using Updates The first way is to use your Updates

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5. Social Media Sincerity (and Book Winner Announced)


Social Media Sincerity

 

Did you know there are well over three hundred social media websites? For writers, some sites have the potential to build a larger readership, grow their platform, and expand their business. However, it’s essential you weigh your social media sincerity for its value.

If not monitored, social media slowly slurps away your time. At the end of the day, many realize the productivity gauge is still on empty. They struggle trying to find a balance between networking and actually writing.Are the games, news, and videos the distractions? Decide what it is you want.



Be true to your calling first. Which do you want to do the most—circulate or create? Networking is important to the writer’s business, but what’s the point if the writer is never in the business of writing?
When you do socialize on Facebook, YouTube, and the like, stand firm in your Christian beliefs. Don’t fade into the background in fear or camouflage your heart in order to conform. Be courageous. Choose authenticity over popularity.
Another checkpoint of sincerity is endorsements. One popular practice among business professionals is reciprocal recommendations. One social media venue for this is LinkedIn. Professionals build contacts, promote their skills and businesses, and provide endorsements for other professionals. However, I question the authenticity of some of the endorsements.
Once, I had a gentleman endorse me for my poetry writing. That’s fantastic. Except I’ve never written poetry, so how can he endorse it? I removed the endorsement and sent the man a message thanking him, but explaining the situation. A cordial invitation to visit my blog followed so he could see what I do write. A few days later, I received a nice note apologizing for his hasty error. He added there should be a tab for endorsing integrity. Now, he reads my blog.
So many LinkedIn profiles sport the all-too-familiar photos under their endorsements that one questions their sincerity. Obviously, some people are just out to see how many endorsements they can give and receive. Their recommendations are untrustworthy.
If you see endorsements by me on LinkedIn, then you can trust I have actually experienced their work in some form. Even if a good friend lists cake baking as a skill—if I haven’t tasted one of her cakes, or know for a fact that she won a blue ribbon for one, I won’t endorse it. So, bring on the cakes!

Our words mean diddly to the majority of the world but they should stand for something.
“For the mouth speaks what the heart is full of.”  Luke 6:45 (NIV)   

Be sincere in whatever God is calling you to do—whether that is writing something excellent, engaging others in a conversation, or recommending a good book. Let your words not be empty but empower them by carrying the weight of truth.





We would love to hear feedback on this post!
Have you questioned the integrity of social media? In what ways do you practice sincerity when using it?
 
 




And now to announce our giveaway contest winner of Vanessa Fortenberry’s book, Mama, I Want to See God.
Using the integrity of Rafflecopter to make a random selection, our winner is Rosaura Maria Cluxton. Congratulations, Rosaura! I’ll be sending you an email requesting your address so I can mail your book.

 

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6. LinkedIn Now Offers Blog Post Publishing to Its Members

Think you don't have enough venues to post your content to? Well, LinkedIn added one more. The business oriented site allows ALL members to  to publish their content. According to a very interesting article at HubSpot.com: Once you publish, your post will appear on your profile and be shared with your network -- people who you're connected to and members who just follow your posts. You'll

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7. LinkedIn Collects Long-Form Posts About Big Ideas for 2013

LinkedIn published a collection of more than 50 essays about the big ideas that will shape 2013, including a number of authors and literary-focused pieces. We’ve collected links to our five favorites below.

Earlier this year, LinkedIn enabled a number of “thought leaders” to create longer posts on the social network, building a collection of short essays from writers and industry leaders.  Here’s more from the post:

We decided to harness that wisdom by polling the thought leaders, and the results were impressive. Industry heavyweights in finance, medicine, education, non-profit, media and more replied enthusiastically to this challenge: What one issue, innovation or event will change the world in 2013? What’s the “big idea” you’ll be betting on?  Over the next year, we’ll ask thought leaders to use LinkedIn to weigh in on a number of other timely and relevant topics, so stay tuned for more online cocktail parties like this one. Let us know in the comments here and in each post, What’s your big idea?

continued…

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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8. Whether a Forum or a Listing

Writers use forums and listings nearly every day for one purpose or another. There are community forums for those in the arts, those unique to writers and critiquing, editing and polishing, and discussions on every aspect of the writing business. Listings come in almost as many flavors and scopes as forums.

Freelancers make the rounds of both communication forms to stay tuned, toned, and in demand. Today I made forays into two separate freelance jobs listings; one within a LinkedIn group of which I’m a member, and another on Elance. I was successful in finding enticing possible job contracts.

If you’ve been around this blog often, you know that I have large projects lined up for the next several months. After the previous paragraph you’re going to ask me why I would be looking for another job of any kind. That’s fair.

I could have my eye on a lovely little boat to use during the summer on our gorgeous Flathead Lake. Or, I could want to travel in Europe next year and want to have plenty in savings to play. Then again, I could simply want a better financial cushion than I have now.

Working on only one large spec project can easily keep me occupied. Having half a dozen doesn’t give me much time to spare, though I still find time for a bit of social networking. Adding a job to the mix right now would be mental suicide, I agree.

Keeping abreast of the market, opportunities, and competition within the freelance writing world, however, is necessary. A plum could present itself at just the right moment to pave the way for bigger success and greater financial security and without stopping by such job sites on a regular basis, the writer can lose out.

Call this activity checking the pulse of the industry. Writers are entrepreneurs. They need to know what’s happening. The market can shift quietly and sneakily as smoke, leaving a writer out of the loop and as adrift as sulfur vapor puffs from a starter’s pistol.

Who could have anticipated the fiction industry shift when Stephanie Meyer’s first Twilight book, or Rowling’s Harry Potter? Those two series set the tone for a major change in the MG and YA children’s book market. Hindsight tells us that vampires come into the light every few decades, their popularity undiminished with time.

Magic and all that it entails has been around since ancient Greece. Fantasy series have been big genre business for decades. The primary component of fantasies is MAGIC. Rowling presented the concept in a slightly different manner and caught the brass ring.

Reading through job listings for writers indicates where the market is moving. Three quarters of what I found on Elance this morning were content writer contracts. The Internet is vacuuming up writers for information dis

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9. Bring it on: musings of a slow adopter

I am what the savvy might term a slow adopter. I tend to like things as they are.  My movies on the big screen.  My books between their covers.  My conversations in person, face to face.

That is not this world.

And if I am less than knowledgeable about Facebook (I am, perhaps, one of its least organized and aware members), have failed to take on Twitter, am not inclined toward Google +, only just yesterday did justice to my LinkedIn profile (how shabby my former presence was), and make more mistakes in typing Blackberry texts than any living writer, I am coming around to the way the world works.

I have an iPad 2 and I use it to read the New York Times (except the Times magazine, which I still prefer to hold), to catch up with the Inquirer, to read the occasional Kindle or iBook.  (The New Yorker and Food and Wine and Vanity Fair still come, old style, to my house.)  My email friends are legion.  I'm an old-time blogger (holding my ground here, refusing to vanish).  And lately I've been thinking about (not dreading, but embracing) the new ways in which the publishing industry works.  Why not an Amazon single, for example, if the audience is already primed for it?  And why not a book with multi-media illustrations—something web friendly, something e-alive?

It's the middle of August.  The days have been long.  I prefer autumn to summer.  I look toward the new season with hope for my October 25 release, You Are My Only, with eagerness to connect with some of you at a variety of talks, and with the high suspicion that I'm about to change the way I go about making of (some) books.  

2 Comments on Bring it on: musings of a slow adopter, last added: 8/16/2011
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10. TGIF Book Marketing Tips: Everything You Do Online Reflects on Your Book

Everything You Do Online Reflects on Your Book: Make Sure That Reflection Is Professional
Guest Expert: Phyllis Zimbler Miller

This month’s guest post is a natural extension of last month’s guest post “Do Your Offline and Online Book Promotion Activities Support Each Other?

In that post I talked about how your book author website should present consistent information about your offline and online book promotion activities.

In addition, all your online book promotion activities should present you as a professional book author, regardless of whether your book was traditionally published or self-published.

Recently a book marketing consulting client asked me why he could not build a website himself for his nonfiction book the same as he had built for his business. I asked if he wanted my honest response.

When he said yes, I told him that his business site did not look professional. (And he agreed.) Then I added, as everything related to a book reflects on that book, he should have a book site that does appear professional.

And this advice about professionalism extends to everything you do online to promote your book.

For example, I’ve noticed typos in the Twitter profile bios of many people. Now this bio has a maximum of 160 characters. Do take the brief time to make sure you have spelled all the words in the bio correctly.

I always proofread my tweets and the comments I leave on blog posts before hitting “submit.” Now I know I may still occasionally miss an error, but I do try to ensure that whatever I write online is professional.

And this same advice goes for tweetchats or forum discussions or whatever.

Why is this so important?

You do not want to appear unprofessional and risk this reflecting negatively on your book.

And as you have spent a great deal of time writing your book, you should take the time to make sure you are not hindering your own book promotion efforts.

Bonus tip for customizing your Facebook and LinkedIn URLs rather than having those long URLs:

Facebook: Sign into your account. Then go to www.facebook.com/username and get your customized URL for your Facebook personal profile.

(Note that this profile must be in your own name and NOT your business name or you are in violation of Facebook terms. See my blog post )

Also, if you have a Facebook Page for business – formerly called a Fan Page – Facebook currently requires that you have at least 25 people who have “liked” your page before you can go to www.facebook.com/username and get a customized URL for your Facebook Page. But when you have at least 25 people, also get a customized URL for this page.

LinkedIn: Sign into your account. Then click on PROFILE (in navigation bar) and click on EDIT PROFILE.

On the right-hand side of the next screen click on CHANGE PUBLIC PROFILE SETTINGS.

Then you’ll see at the top of the next screen YOUR PUBLIC PROFILE URL and click on EDIT.

And, yes, having a customized URL instead of a long, awkward URL can reflect positively on yo

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11. TGIF Book Marketing Tips: Four Stages of Effectively Using Social Media to Promote Your Book

Guest Expert: Phyllis Zimbler Miller

It helps to have a roadmap to follow when promoting a book, whether it is your first book or your 15th. And if you want to use social media effectively to promote your book, you need to go through some foundation stages before you even get to using social media:

Stage 1: Identifying Your Brand

Now before you say that’s easy – it’s the title of your book, let’s think this through a moment. The title of a book is usually not the brand of an author – even if that author ever only writes one book.

Your brand is what makes you as an author – and by extension the books that you write – stand out from the crowd. Here’s an example of what I mean:

Years ago a mystery bookstore owner told me that people would come into her store and ask for the next book in the alphabet mysteries series. What I at first found incredible is that fans of this series neither remembered the name of the author – Sue Grafton – or the very distinctive book titles, such as “A Is for Alibi,” “B Is for Burglar,” “C Is for Corpse.”

Sue Grafton has a very distinctive brand – alphabet mysteries. What’s your distinctive brand?

Stage 2: Your Book Author Website

Your book author website is your home base for all your book activities regardless of whether your publisher also gives you a page on the publisher’s website.

It’s important that you have a site that you completely control. This way you can make changes at a moment’s notice (for example, when you get a last-minute invite to do a radio interview or book signing). I recommend a self-hosted WordPress.org site for this (which can include a blog) (note that this is not the same as a hosted WordPress.com site).

Whether you have an existing site or are planning a new one, be sure that the site is up-to-date. In other words, do not have any outmoded web design elements such as a slow-loading Flash introductory page.

People today want their information instantaneously. When they land on your website, they want to know what is this book (or books) about, fiction, nonfiction, who’s the author?

You want also to be sure to have such elements as an email optin system that will enable you to keep in touch with your book fans.

Stage 3: Your Social Media Activities

Now you are ready to have an effective and active social media presence in order to connect with prospective fans. I recommend starting with one of these sites and then adding in the others:

• Facebook personal profile
• Facebook (business) page about your book or books
• LinkedIn profile
• Twitter account

And as you are a book author, you will also want to take advantage of the book promotion opportunities on BookBuzzr.

Be sure to use the same good headshot across all these sites to help in recognition. And you’ll want to learn as much as your time allows on how to effectively participate on each of these sites.

For example, it’s important to remember that Twitter is NOT about selling your book. Twitter is about sharing information and occasionally mentioning your book.

Of course, if you have a blog, which is definitely a good idea if you are a writer, then you can post the links to your new posts on all of the above sites.

(F

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12. Portfolio Presentation on LinkedIn Profile

While searching around LinkedIn the other day, I came upon a presentation on an art director's profile showing the books she had art directed. There was a link to the application she used called SlideShare. I immediately signed up and started creating my own with PowerPoint. You can view it here. I think it's a great idea for illustrators! When you're trying to connect with potential clients, they can easily check out your work. You can have up to 3 presentations uploaded. I plan to create another one for licensing. Remember to save your images under "save for web…" before you place them in PowerPoint to keep your presentation small. I didn't the first time around which made it huge! Good luck!

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13. Tutorial of the Week – Using LinkedIn to Find New Contacts


It’s been a while since I’ve focused on social networking for the Tutorial of the Week series, but a recent post by Jason Moriber on the Dripbook blog got my attention.

If you’ve ever wanted to contact someone in a certain position at a company, such as an Art Director, then you might find this unique tutorial to be particularly useful, because it allows you to find out who is actually currently working in that position.

It’s called Using LinkedIn to Find New Contacts Using the Search Function, and it shares an effective way to seek out Art Directors and other professionals via their company profiles on LinkedIn.

If you’re looking to dig a little deeper into social networking, you’re not alone.  More and more professionals are finding new ways of connecting with each other and doing business using the internet.  This tutorial will help you to find more use in a site like LinkedIn, which can be a bit mystifying for new users.

Do you use LinkedIn?  Be sure to join the Escape From Illustration Island LindedIn Group for regular updates on Illustration and Business resources.

What’s your experience with LinkedIn?  Please share your thoughts in the comments.

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14. Ypulse Best And Worst 2009: Social Media

Today we continue our Year In Review coverage with Youth Advisory Board members Raymond Braun and Libby Issendorf who teamed up to take a look at hits and misses in the youth-targeted social media space this past year. Look for more of the Best and... Read the rest of this post

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15. Ypulse Youth Website Profile: Brazen Careerist

The latest installment in our Ypulse Youth Website Profile series is a review of the much-buzzed about professional social network recently recently launched by Brazen Careerist. What is it… a professional social network seeking to connect Gen... Read the rest of this post

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16. Social Networking Rocks!

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Well, Monday has arrived! What are you doing? I am gearing up to finish the paperwork for taxes so I can do royalties.

I started my morning with some Web 2.0 updates. Doesn't that sound like I have a clue. I love social networking. Well, thanks to Nikki Leigh, I do know what I am doing. My questions is, do you follow me, are we friends, and so forth? What? No? Oh Pulleeeze, I don't do this for my health. For those of you who DIGG this, here is my list of places you can connect with me. Pick one, pick them all, your choice.

TWITTER: http://twitter.com/echelonpress
DIGG: http://digg.com/users/echelonpress
PLURK: http://plurk.com/EchelonPress/invite
FACEBOOK: http://profile.to/echelonpress/
MYSPACE: http://myspace.com/karensyed
LINKEDIN: http://www.linkedin.com/in/karensyed
READER'S STATION: http://readersstation.ning.com/profile/EchelonPress
BEBO: http://www.bebo.com/EchelonPress
FRIENDFEED: http://friendfeed.com/echelonpress
GOODREADS: http://www.goodreads.com/user/show/982587
YOUTUBE: http://www.youtube.com/user/echelonpress
JACKETFLAP: http://www.jacketflap.com/profile.asp?member=QuakeMe


So, there you go. And don't forget to follow this Blog. You never know what you might read!

Happy Reading.



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17. LinkedIn..networking made easy

If you are a freelance artist or creative person, check out LinkedIn. The possibilities for connections and jobs and networking are endless there.

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18. More Employers Using Social Networking Profiles To Screen Candidates

Tuesday night a received an email via Facebook from a friend from college notifying me that I was tagged in a photo. As many of you on Facebook know, once you have been friended by a college or high school alum, you begin getting more requests from... Read the rest of this post

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19. Showing the Love: Milton Glaser's logo turns 30




Milton Glaser's I Love NY logo just turned 30 years old. It has become one of the world's most recognizable, enduring and ubiquitous brandings, Milton Glazer's design (which he made as a gift to the city bro bono) Check out an old interview with Chip Kidd. Cheers, Mr. Glaser. Art is Work is available in hardcover and will be released in paperback in March 2008.

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