LinkedIn tips: How many connections is too many?
By C.g. Lynch
,
CIO
, 10/15/2008
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As a user of LinkedIn, the quality of your connections with other users will, in general, matter more than the quantity. That's the argument made
by one of the company's main spokespersons, Krista Canfield, who talked with CIO.com in the wake of our recent article about users of LinkedIn who decide to connect with large numbers of people via the service.
For example, one person we profiled had some 8000 LinkedIn connections. In general, garnering that many connections can be
risky, Canfield says.
The more directly you've done business with someone, the stronger the connection will be, making your digital Rolodex that
you build on LinkedIn more useful for you and your connections, Canfield argues.
If your social networking modus operandi has been to say yes to LinkedIn connection requests without much deliberation, consider
these three reasons why you should be selective about your connections.
1. You Don't Want to Botch Introductions
Often, the way to connect with someone on LinkedIn is getting introduced through your current connections. The way this happens:
if you find someone at a company that you really want to connect with, you can get introduced through one of your connections
who is already connected with that person. When this happens, the person trying to connect you generally puts a message in
an introduction message for the person that you're trying to reach.
As such, if your contact list is littered with people you don't know well, you will frequently be asking for introductions
from people whose introduction notes may not come off as a ringing endorsement of you - making the likelihood of your connecting
with your intended person much lower. And as the old saying goes, you won't get a second chance to make a first impression.
"If a person is your bridge, they want to trust or know you before they endorse you [in the introduction]," Canfield says.
2. With LinkedIn Connections, Your Rolodex Defines You
Given LinkedIn's default settings, when you connect with someone on LinkedIn, that person will be able to view your connections
list. If you don't thoroughly vet your connections, you're chancing the possibility that someone you have connected with (such
as a boss or colleague) will see non-credible contacts on your connections list.
What do you really know about that friend of the contact you made at a tradeshow? If the answer is almost nothing, reconsider
the connection.
Another reason to vet carefully: You also may open up those trusted connections to be spammed by people that you didn't screen
thoroughly.
"Your connection list is a reflection of who you are as a professional," Canfield says. "Being connected with someone you
don't know won't give you much credibility with the people you do know and are connected with."
3. At Job-Hunting Time, Meaningful Connections Matter
You may never need LinkedIn more than at times when you need a job. The more meaningful connections you build, the better
chance that those people will vouch for you when you're looking to connect with potential employers.
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Comments (4)
You don't think quantity matters?By wecandobiz on October 16, 2008, 3:59 amYou don't think there are people for whom quantity is everything? You haven't seen any of LinkedIn's PR then. It is ALL about talking about 25 million members are...
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You don't think Quality MattersBy Anonymous on October 16, 2008, 5:25 amLI is very hard to use as a business service if you restrict it only to people you know really well. You are limited to searching your network!In actual fact those...
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Connect to people you know and trustBy Anonymous on October 16, 2008, 8:52 amIt all depends on how you want to use the system. If you want to send a note out of the blue to someone who doesn't know you, then by all means connect to everyone...
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how do you politely refuse a connection?By Anonymous on March 16, 2009, 10:28 amI don't like it when people ask to connect with me without any explanation, or intro of themselves, or why they are interested in my and my profile. Usually, I will...
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