?? STOP Doing These Spammy Tactics on LinkedIn
Joshua B. Lee
?? The Dopamine Dealer | Helping Entrepreneurs & Executives Build Authority, Create Influence & Drive High-Value Opportunities on LinkedIn | Author | Speaker
LinkedIn is an amazing sales tool and it continues to get better-- so much so that I would declare, "Cold Calling is Dead, Thanks to LinkedIn."
Unfortunately, certain salespeople have also moved many of their bad habits onto the platform. And I'm not just talking about sending spammy InMails. Salespeople are abusing LinkedIn in many other ways.
I'm not the only one noticing this problem. I asked a few colleges and clients what LinkedIn-enabled sales approaches they hate most. Here are the top four.
1. “The Cold Shoulder” – Uncustomized, Stale LinkedIn Connection Requests
“Too many salespeople use the default connection request message, they don't bother to customize their note with their reason for requesting a connection.”
There’s nothing worse than what seems like a robotic canned connection request.
Instead, make yourself visible and relevant in a believable way. For example, subscribe to your prospect's blog and comment on a post if you can add to the conversation.
Of course, not every company blogs or monitors their blog comments very closely. So if your prospective customer doesn't have a blog, comment or like a post that your prospect has shared on LinkedIn. If they haven't shared anything, read what they've liked and engage them with context from that article by saying, "What did you like about that article?" If they are completely inactive on LinkedIn, it's probably a sign that they don't use it that often.
When salespeople make this small amount of extra effort, and then reference shared behavior as common ground, most people are more likely to accept your connection request
2. “The Quickie” LinkedIn Sales Pitches Gone Bad.
Salespeople aren't stopping their spammy ways once prospects accept their connection requests. In fact, they're using LinkedIn in the same way many abuse email, by sending unsolicited, uncustomized, long-winded, self-promotional InMails.
This type of pitch happens “when a salesperson with a mutual connection or two requests to connect with you, then proceeds to send a very self-serving, promotional InMail within hours of accepting the connection request. It's tempting to ignore these salespeople, but their connection with your trusted colleague implies they're worth knowing."
I recently realized I had 4,000 unaccepted LinkedIn requests. Since I had zero interest in individually reviewing every request that has piled up over the years, I accepted a few hundred of them.
Within hours, I began receiving many "quickie sales pitch" InMails from salespeople. The messages were all about them, their amazing business, and why I should stop what I'm doing and schedule a call with them. The barrage of spam certainly discouraged me from accepting more connections. I imagine I'm not the only one that doesn't accept connection requests for fear of being spammed. And that’s ultimately bad for salespeople -- how long before buyers stop accepting new connections altogether?
Of course, it doesn't make sense to stop connecting with prospects. It’s fine to connect to prospects you don't know through someone else on LinkedIn. I even do it occasionally. But instead of spamming them right away, I suggest waiting one or two weeks to familiarize yourself with your connection’s LinkedIn activity.
That way, you can make sure you have something that will be truly relevant and valuable to them. In other words, target your connection and introduction requests to people you know you can definitely help.
I also suggest that all of my clients “spend more time customizing your invitation.”
When crafting your note, make it about them, not you. Comment on something they did or share some industry news and why you think it'd be relevant to them. If you're going to talk about yourself, do it in terms that will resonate by talking about how you've helped companies similar to them.
Also, if you actually know someone that knows your prospect, consider requesting a connection through LinkedIn from a trusted mutual contact using LinkedIn's introduction request feature. These types of introduction requests are a lot less likely to be ignored. Why? If a mutual contact passes along your note, it implies you are worth talking to, especially if they add an endorsement.
3. “Nothing to Say” Spamming LinkedIn Group Discussions
This spammy sales tactic is a personal pet peeve of mine.
Way too many salespeople post their content on LinkedIn Groups. Some even pop in and out of multiple groups just to post links to their content in each one.
This behavior has destroyed many formerly active forums. I previously managed a forum for marketing agencies until it was overrun with threads from salespeople more interested in promoting themselves than engaging in a dialog. Managing memberships and moderating became too time-consuming, so we declared bankruptcy on the group entirely.
Be a helpful resource that your potential customers can rely on and trust. Focus on adding value with each interaction vs. pitching your products. Whatever you do, don't be sleazy enough to hijack a thread like this so many salespeople do...
4. “The Great Fake Out” Creating Fake LinkedIn Accounts to Spy on Competitors
This one makes me crazy. Some salespeople would rather spend their time figuring out which of their competitors they can steal clients from instead of creating their own demand. It’s ridiculous.
LinkedIn lets their members see second-degree connections by default, so some salespeople connect with their competitors on LinkedIn to see who their competitor's customers are.
Of course, most salespeople are smart enough not to connect with their competitors. So, in very competitive industries, sales people resort to creating fake accounts.
That’s right -- some sellers will actually go so far as to create fake LinkedIn profiles that look like people their competitors want to connect with. And once they trick them into accepting the phony account’s request, they go to town digging through their network.
I imagine these same salespeople won't think twice about sending un-customized connection requests and "Quickie InMail Sales Pitches" once they do connect with their competitor's customers. These deceitful thieves are the salespeople we really need to stop.
LinkedIn Is a Treasure. Let's Treat it Like One.
Most salespeople agree that LinkedIn and especially LinkedIn Sales Navigator is probably the best sales prospecting tool ever created. The value, of course, is that it provides efficient ways to identify, connect, and engage LinkedIn members. It is a treasure trove of prospective customers as well full of insights about those prospective customers. It is a dream come true for new business sales professionals.
But if salespeople don't stop employing the shortcut sales tactics above, we risk killing our prospecting gold mine. Not only will buyers rely less on LinkedIn, LinkedIn will be forced to constrain our activity (even further) in order to protect their golden goose: active engaged members. Even paid LinkedIn Sales Navigator customers can only send a certain amount of InMails per month. Why do you think that is? Because with no limits, salespeople would abuse the system. Imagine if LinkedIn had to clamp down even further because prospects got fed up enough to leave the site.
Let's cut out this spammy sh*t before it's too late ??
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GenAI Business Strategist - $1 Billion in Sales
12 个月The majority of LinkedIn business users don't have a professional sales process and just wing it. This lack of a customized sales process is the issue.
(Personal) Brand Strategist & Networking Coach → Helping entrepreneurs & executives build brands that attract clients, talent & opportunity | Family Man | Superconnector | AI & ?lockchain ?ull | Hot Sauce Aficionado???
3 年PREACH
Helping Home-Based Entrepreneurs Save Thousands with Audit-Proof Tax Strategies | Download My Free Home Business Tax Preparation Checklist ???? ????
3 年Great article! This needs to be shared all over LinkedIn!
Certified Health and Wellness Coach ???? Lucrative business opportunity Stress Management Coach
3 年Great article. Not just a rant but with helpful advice too! I actually came off LinkedIn recently due to the amount of requests from Coaches wanting to sell their services to Coaches. I felt annoyed, angry and sad because this is a business platform, and we are here to make connections, help others, learn, grow our business, make sales, however, the self-serving pushiness level has reached new heights. I did for a milli second think perhaps my approach is wrong and this is how it's done!. I actually started doubting myself. ??♀? I hope more will follow your help and advice ??