sincerely say it is well worth the time setting up your profile and actually
completing it. It is pretty much the
ultimate business networking tool-until replaced by a competitor of course! Much
of facebooks’ features have been mimicked into the site also, which helps
evaluate shared topic interests.
LinkedIn, would be completing one’s profile to the 100% level and obtaining as
many recommendations as possible, although now with Endorsements (from LinkedIn contacts) the written recommendations
have been fully taken over by the latter. Pre-MVP award, I had made
efforts to request recommendations, or exchange them, to grow over the ten
person threshold, since, at the time, I
believed establishing credibility by means of online references is a
significant prerequisite to mastering LinkedIn’s networking potential. If you
recommend someone online, they are taking a leap of faith in you; since it is
something they are willing to state in front of the entire world basically how
that individual feels about your workplace conduct (i.e. playing nice in the
sandbox). However, once the option of endorsements for specific skills became
available, the ease of it simply opened the flood to hundreds of endorsements
(if you are publicly contributing by blogs or writing, this has been my
experience, at least, as you can see below).
LinkedIn endorsements, accumulated after five years of blogging, writing, speaking, etc. |
describe the way you prefer to work exactly (e.g. personally, I described
following
Brad McGehee’s Exceptional DBA guide
), or the methodology you follow, itwill allow you to bring in qualified clients/opportunities and provide the
chance to filter out unwanted mandates. My current job in Montreal was found through
recruitment agencies working ironically, in another province!
LinkedIn also provides opportunities for diversity of work, which contributes
to experience on a whole, proves invaluable and maintains the profession of
being a DBA across platforms (or DBA
polyglot as I have pushed), even if only minimal tasks executed over a few
days here and there accumulate into a personal body of knowledge which bloggers
can benefit from themselves, as well as the contribution to community. Inside organisations, I encourage DBAs to
post blogs to demystify our profession and approach, as well as help educate
Developers and elude some pretty foul code.
usual Curriculum Vit
æ or Résumé in North America (unless you are in MX, or the province of QC) but in accordance to the formatobviously, because perhaps if you place details in the wrong portion of your
profile, an opportunity could easily be missed. I love the way a
mate here in Montreal (
Martin Arvisais) describes it as a great place ‘pour vendre tasalade’ (cute local way of saying to sell your stuff in French). Now you can
upload word documents to your LinkedIn profile directly for those who would
like to see the traditional format.
The other improvement, although not that recent, is that LinkedIn is much like
a blog platform too, since you can share almost anything. It is method to
make a pillar of the all-important (in this net-oriented generation), Online
Persona.
forthright, showing how you can contribute to your professional community, and
thus leveraging your contacts within this tool. There are several
SQL Server related groups in LinkedIn, my contributions through the
LinkedIn groups are part of the reason why Canada’s MVP Lead approached me back
in 2009 for a nomination (also, thanks to a referral from
SQLServerToolBox.com‘s Scott Stauffer, andfrequent speaker, a SQL DBA based in Vancouver) – therefore, what more
motivation could one implore to
Link themselves In.