How To Use Three Killer Steps for Your LinkedIn Summary (About)

How To Use Three Killer Steps for Your LinkedIn Summary (About)

Was it the same for you?

Did you join LinkedIn in the early years and post an electronic version of your paper résumé and felt great about completing a profile? Today it’s a different story. LinkedIn has morphed from a job board into a business exchange of ideas among peers, business partners and of course, recruiting. And your LinkedIn profile should have an eye-popping summary in the About section.

Your LinkedIn About = Your Elevator Speech?!

Your About (formerly summary) creates interest about you, from 35,000 feet. You’re about to start a conversation, very much like you might at a business reception. Answering the unspoken, “What do you do?” means?tell me why I should care?about what you have to say.

It shouldn’t be a restatement of your career experience. There’s ample room for that in the work experience section – that’s where your career achievements are listed by employer and by title and by years in that position. Here in the About section is where a reader decides to dig in deeper?or not.

You need to write your elevator speech with pizzazz and make?that?sizzle. If you’re one of those professionals with a vague description of what you do for whom – your LinkedIn reader will move on to the next profile, discarding the option of engaging with you.

You can write a terrific LinkedIn About yourself and here’s how to do it.

Three Killer Steps for your LinkedIn summary

WOW.?Write something intriguing (even puzzling) that will make the other person want to read more. You can share an anecdote, offer an interesting statistic or inject humor into your summary. Ideally, the reader’s curiosity is sparked and stimulated to know more about you. Here is a client sample from a client.

Bored with corporate speak? Feeling like you’re stuck in a world of stale solutions to pandemic challenges?

HOW.?Next, quantify or qualify your successful career. Answer the unspoken question and explain exactly what you do for whom and what results you get. Add an emotional benefit which addresses the intersection of demand & supply – how you deliver an outcome that no one can or does as well as you.

Here is an example of legal sizzle:

"Complex business issues are simplified when your corporate counsel or banking compliance officer relies on me for legal research tools – tools which integrate content with expertise for immediate solutions to those unanticipated questions from your CEO."

NOW.?Shift into showing proof. Maybe use storytelling or giving a concrete example of a recent experience that demonstrates your ability. Most of all, make it relevant. Show how you solve the market demand for what you do.

"We get retained for information cybersecurity candidate searches for several reasons:

  • You’ve tried on your own but aren’t finding the right people for your team.
  • You can’t spare the time due to your already heavy workload.
  • You need a third party to approach competitors confidentially.
  • You’re not sure how to pitch the opportunity and orchestrate the interviewing process."

Your takeaway:?Schedule time to polish your summary section. Make this section a priority?this week.?If you’re stumped, consider looking at other profiles within your vertical to get some pointers.



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