I am an obvious early adopter. My first blog was around before blog tools actually existed. If you don't try it, live it, use it, you can't begin to understand how to sell anything. Or how it will affect you.
It is fun to watch so called professional networks grow with unemployment. Particularly as this economic climate hits middle management hard. The ways people react differ. There are still some who believe that they should steer clear of it all and stick to true interpersonal contact. It may be the best tactic in fact as long as you have enough friends in high enough places. In which case they wouldn't be unemployed! Keeping a current copy of your CV is probably a good way to handle them succesfully. Do anything more and you will make mistakes. I know I did! If you care at all about a traditional corporate development path, don't mess with professional or social networks.
This is why LinkedIn seems to be doing better overall. It targetted the masses. Unlike Xing (Germany) and Viadeo (France) which remained pretty local. A little bit of marketing chasing up alumni and such and then let social networking magic work its way.
The creators of these websites underestimate how important the tools they give actually are. Contact import for example is still highly problematic in most of them. What they should be doing is encouraging people to use their companies customer databases to establish their networks. But then these tools come to their second problem: much like Facebook if you lump too many different people together you are stuck with nothing to tell them all. A competitor, a professional recruiter, ex employees and people from all walks of life I met at a trade show, a seminar or somewhere in my varied travels around the world. Have they got anything in common?
A Greek user for example is also confused about the right language to use. If I update my status in English most of my contacts will get it. Luckily for me 95% of the 1200 contacts I currently have on LinkedIn are foreigners and most of my Greek contacts are English literate. But this is not the case for most Greek users. The website could solve this by forcing users to enter the languages they are literate in. So if I write something in Greek it doesn't appear on English only speakers.
Spam type abuse is luckily relatively low. Some websites are better at containing it than others. Plaxo is terrible in allowing anyone to connect to anyone without any check. It is almost Facebook like in its luck of controls. People linking their Twitter accounts with such networks are also catastrophic to actually getting any work done. Much like Facebook introduced a filtered type of status update, these networks have to provide better filtering. The enormous variety of people using these pro networks, their different levels of expertise and expectations are the biggest issue. Someone with just a few contacts has little reason to use them unless they provide easy ways to grow your network. Obviously a Greek uses it very differently to a Callifornian, it is simply a level of maturity of the market.
One of the best success stories I can tell in using these networks was a trip I was to make to Macedonia (FYROM to any Greek fanatics about the name issue!) in order to establish a reseller network. I knew absolutely nobody in the market. But with LinkedIn within thirty minutes I had found ten good leads and made contact. Our common contacts made them feel at ease enough (either that or I am just universally adorable) to in fact give me more contacts. In less than three days I had meetings with the absolute cream of Macedonia's IT and retail sectors. In fact even so many years later, those contacts are still the most important people in that region.
Another impressive show of power and vote of confidence for these networks was a meeting I had with the director of a very large corporation who actually had a printout of my LinkedIn profile with him for our meeting. This worries me as the profile is actually a very bad summary of a person the way most of the social networks design it. Our online life is a very small part of our actual life, even now, even for people like me. The networks have to find a better way of presenting people, otherwise it will be as bad as hunting on spokeo for people's dirty laundry. This works both ways as a top level exec called me up one day and I grabbed him by the horns saying "hey, I notice you were checking out my profile on LinkedIn!" thus taking away his nonchalant air advantage in the negotiation that followed.
But more and more my contacts are having to decide on ONE network to use. Too much work to keep them all up to date. And since it is your professional profile on the line you can't afford to be lazy. So like the Highlander films 'there can only be one'. And it is the tools, the interface and the logic behind them which will define the winner.
In the meantime you can find me on all of the above, plus Naymz, ecademy, Xeequa and many many others. Unlike those who worry about the stuff they throw in the public domain being used against them I know that it is the true bravery of being completely open which is now rare in the business world. If you don't like my style, don't send me an invitation to connect!
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