... some clear problems with LinkedIn.
1. You give people a "permission" channel, and they'll find a way to spam it.
Make it searchable and categories, they can target their spam.
Recruiters and other questionable interrupters have begun using this
service to bother people. A variation on the trick is to have the
bothering come from someone at the VP level at a major company. That
looks like potential business development when all it is is a search
for referrals for potential hires for qualified senior managerial
positions. (And a great way to save the fee you'd otherwise pay the
recruiting firm, but now I think you're spamming me directly instead of
blaming the evil headhunters.)
2. Corporate espionage. Who
you've just added to your list can tip off competitors about your
business development efforts, private deals, and secret strategies. A
friend had partnership talks with several large online properties. Her
direct competitor became aware of this right away simply by spying on
her LinkedIn profile. Maybe worse: sometimes you're not in talks with
anybody, or up to anything in particular, but because of the timing of
your new contacts being added, people jump to erroneous conclusions.
All
fretting aside, many people have spoken about doing a "cull" of their
LinkedIn list and eliminating people they don't seem to recognize or
know well. You do so at the risk of offending people, of course, but
think of the upside: now the relationships you do have become more
meaningful. I think probably the worst reason not to do a cull would be
that it looks like you have more friends or admirers if you leave more
contacts on your list (a la Orkut: you have 353 "stars" and 448
"hearts," and many Brazilian pals!). So maybe I'll set aside an
arbitrary number I hope to pare back to: 42.
The positives of
LinkedIn are still there. You get current profiles, current email
addresses, and lots more besides. It keeps a part of your life out of
email. But like email, the channel surely needs to be managed.
As
for linking into people at your own company... I think that completely
misses the point. Why do people do this? Go for lunch, or at least
coffee. If your company is really big, doesn't requesting to link in to
some distant superior just emphasize your lowly status? Better to
contact by conventional means, or to otherwise make yourself
conspicuous (through achievement, etc.).
Go to the entry.
Good job stealing this post from Andrew Goodman!
Posted by: Bubba | August 17, 2007 at 02:09 PM