In grade 12 I was taught that my resume had to be
factual and concise. Brief and easy to read. My achievements and employability skills
were to be the main focus. Basically, my resume was meant to stand out for when
my potential employer went through a dozen or plus of resumes. I had the power to create an invaluable marketing
tool. However, whether my resume was worth a second look, my employer had all
the power. In saying that, only that potential future employer would see my
resume.
Then came the age of the internet. I mean the resume
still must follow the same format. However, social media is fast becoming the
first meeting between prospective employers and employees. LinkedIn –a platform
for professional connections. I joined LinkedIn about 2 years ago for one main
reason, my google account would not stop recommending it. I had been looking
for summer jobs, and google said LinkedIn would be the right place to connect with
potential employers. I gave in. I created an account but never used it till
now.
LinkedIn allows you to create and edit your profile. If
you write about your accomplishments, education, your skills… etc on Facebook you
may be regarded as a show off or sharing to much by your friends. However, LinkedIn
provides you with a space where you can you can promote yourself. In fact, it
is expected as a way of attracting potential employers or like-minded people. Just
like a resume, you hold the power to create a profile that helps you find the
right connections. One thing: follow the resume format. In addition, LinkedIn
allows you to read articles, share news or events. Send congratulatory and
birthday messages. You can join and take part in groups where again you can
promote yourself or your business. The groups perhaps create a sense of
identity when you find like-minded people??? What I did find interesting is that your connections
can endorse you for particular skills. I guess it works as someone recommending
you or acknowledging your talents. Tuan states that space is freedom. LinkedIn
does indeed create that sense of freedom. Go crazy and toot your horn.
image retrieved: https://goo.gl/images/x9APmn
All seems good till the downfalls. Unlike your resume
that is only seen by those you have given it too; your LinkedIn profile can be viewed
by whoever and whenever. Sometimes it tells you who has viewed it, but at times
you just get a notification saying someone viewed your account with no name. In
other words, LinkedIn makes it easier for people to be stalked “I viewed your profile because I may be interested
in you working for me’’…stalked! Your profile is open to all users. If
Furthermore, if your profile is not interesting, you miss connecting with
others. Your profile is what makes the LinkedIn user on the other side decide
on connecting with you. People are researching you. Juan Enriquez speaks on Ted about the online life and how that becomes permanent. LinkedIn give you the power and
freedom to network with people who might just help with your career goals. However,
freedom does not mean lying because it will become an electronic tattoo. In conclusion,
LinkedIn profile should not be like a Facebook profile, rather an online resume
that makes future employer or business partners say, ‘we want you!”
References
Enriquez,
J. (2013) retrieved https://www.ted.com/talks/juan_enriquez_how_to_think_about_digital_tattoos
Kuttainen, V. (2017). BA1002: Our space: Networks,
narratives and the making of place, lecture week 2: Power. [PowerPoint slides].
Tuan, Y. F. (1977). Space and place: The
perspective of experience. U of Minnesota Press.
I really enjoyed reading your post Michelle. The title is quite catchy I thought :)
ReplyDeleteThank you Nikita.
ReplyDeleteI just wasn't sure if I was doing the correct thing