Start Connecting on LinkedIn

Published: March 14, 2015, 8:55 p.m.

b'Lots of young lawyers have a LinkedIn profile (most, in fact).\\nBut do you know what to do with it?\\nLinkedIn is for making connections, but are you only connecting with your own colleagues? \\xa0Well don’t just sit idle – in this episode of Non-Billable you will start making connections and expanding your network today.\\nTranscript – How Lawyers can Start Connecting Using LinkedIn\\nWhat is the best way to make connections and build your profile using LinkedIn? That’s the question I’m going to take a look at today in Non-Billable. Welcome to Non-Billable, my name is Chris Hargreaves, I’m from tipsforlawyers.com. In Non-Billable I take a couple of minutes out of my day to answer some questions, have a bit of a rant or give you some advice that might give you a bit of a quick hit to take you into the day or the next day or the week.\\nLinkedIn, every professional by and large is on LinkedIn by now.\\nCertainly hundreds of millions of people use it, but how are you using it?\\nDo you just have a profile?\\nWhat should you be doing?\\nIs LinkedIn actually a platform where you can accomplish anything or is it just something where you put up your profile and then not do anything after that? That’s certainly my experience with many of my colleagues. They make their profile, they might put up their professional picture, but they don’t end up actually doing anything with their LinkedIn profile.\\nReally the best way of using LinkedIn isn’t different to using any other social media platform.\\nIt’s about engagement, it’s about relationship. If you want to use LinkedIn to actually develop relationship and have some advantages and meet some new people then I’d encourage you to engage. If you enjoy an article, put a comment on the article. If you enjoy a particular group discussion, weigh in, express your opinion.\\nIf you’re going to disagree with people do it politely. It’s the same way as if you’re going to a networking function really. You’re just interacting with people you don’t have an excuse to get to know. But that’s okay, they’re on LinkedIn. They’re there because they want to network and they want to connect with people as well.\\nLook, if you’re a newbie to LinkedIn, here’s what I’d do.\\nGet your profile up to scratch so that it’s an accurate representation of you.\\nSecondly, join some groups that are relevant to either your profession, in this case lawyering, or to the industry in which you work.\\nIf you’re in building or construction or planning and environment or personal injuries there are going to be specific groups that you might want to join, and that’s a great way to get engagement because groups are where a lot of the discussion happens. You can really get to know people because with groups in LinkedIn you have an excuse to contact people. You can send them a note, hey I enjoyed your article on LinkedIn, hey I enjoyed your other comment on LinkedIn. You can have an in to get in to contact them. Use those opportunities.\\nUse those functions that LinkedIn gives you because it is a platform designed to help you build a relationship, no different to any other social media platform. It just has a unique set of tools.\\nThat’s how I’d use LinkedIn. I’d get in a group, I’d start weighing in to some discussions, and then I’d start sending people some invites to connect and then I’d follow up with them and see how they’re going. Send them a personal note from time to time. You don’t have to become a stalker, just become the person that is there, who is participating, who is weighing in.\\nThe last thing I’d do, if you’re inclined towards writing and you enjoy writing things, take advantage of the LinkedIn publisher platform. It’s pretty easy to use these days. They are rolling it out so depending on when you’re listening to this you...'