I constantly get recruiter reachouts from big tech companies and top AI startups- even when I’m not actively job hunting or listed as “Open to Work.” That’s because over the years, I’ve consciously put in the effort to build a clear and consistent presence on LinkedIn- one that reflects what I do, what I care about, and the kind of work I want to be known for. And the best part? It’s something anyone can do- with the right strategy and a bit of consistency. If you’re tired of applying to dozens of jobs with no reply, here are 5 powerful LinkedIn upgrades that will make recruiters come to you: 1. Quietly activate “Open to Work” Even if you’re not searching, turning this on boosts your visibility in recruiter filters. → Turn it on under your profile → “Open to” → “Finding a new job” → Choose “Recruiters only” visibility → Specify target titles and locations clearly (e.g., “Machine Learning Engineer – Computer Vision, Remote”) Why it works: Recruiters rely on this filter to find passive yet qualified candidates. 2. Treat your headline like SEO + your elevator pitch Your headline is key real estate- use it to clearly communicate role, expertise, and value. Weak example: “Software Developer at XYZ Company” → Generic and not searchable. Strong example: “ML Engineer | Computer Vision for Autonomous Systems | PyTorch, TensorRT Specialist” → Role: ML Engineer → Niche: computer vision in autonomous systems → Tools: PyTorch, TensorRT This structure reflects best practices from experts who recommend combining role, specialization, technical skills, and context to stand out. 3. Upgrade your visuals to build trust → Use a crisp headshot: natural light, simple background, friendly expression → Add a banner that reinforces your brand: you working, speaking, or a tagline with tools/logos Why it works: Clean visuals increase profile views and instantly project credibility. 4. Rewrite your “About” section as a human story Skip the bullet list, tell a narrative in three parts: → Intro: “I’m an ML engineer specializing in computer vision models for autonomous systems.” → Expertise: “I build end‑to‑end pipelines using PyTorch and TensorRT, optimizing real‑time inference for edge deployment.” → Motivation: “I’m passionate about enabling safer autonomy through efficient vision AI, let’s connect if you’re building in that space.” Why it works: Authentic storytelling creates memorability and emotional resonance . 5. Be the advocate for your work Make your profile act like a portfolio, not just a resume. → Under each role, add 2–4 bullet points with measurable outcomes and tools (e.g., “Reduced inference latency by 35% using INT8 quantization in TensorRT”) → In the Featured section, highlight demos, whitepapers, GitHub repos, or tech talks Give yourself five intentional profile upgrades this week. Then sit back and watch recruiters start reaching you, even in today’s competitive market.
Creating an Online Portfolio
Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.
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I used to think my portfolio had to impress other designers. So I filled it with sleek mockups, polished animations, and endless case studies. It looked beautiful...But it didn’t land me clients. Why? Because clients don’t hire you for aesthetics. They hire you for outcomes. 🚫 Too many portfolios still look like it’s 2015: → Pretty mockups → Trendy layouts → 10-second Behance loops But here’s the hard truth: Clients don’t care how cool it looks. They care what it does. 💡 Ask yourself: → Does my portfolio solve real business problems? → Am I showing results or just visuals? → Is it written for clients or for other creatives? What actually works in 2025: ✅ Highlight before/after results (data if possible) ✅ Explain your thinking, not just your tools ✅ Tailor your portfolio to your ideal client, not your peers Because great design isn’t just about craft It’s about clarity, strategy, and trust. ✨ Your portfolio shouldn’t be a gallery. It should be a sales tool. One that shows the value you bring, not just the vibe. 💬 Got a portfolio tip that worked for you? Drop it in the comments, let’s help each other grow. 📌 Save this if you’re about to redesign yours. It’s not about looking good. It’s about landing the right kind of work.
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How I created my UX Portfolio from scratch ↴ This post covers: building case studies + choosing the platform. (📝 Resume tips coming in upcoming posts!) 👉 The first time I built my portfolio, I had no design background — just the Google UX Design Certificate I finished in 1.5 months, and 3 case studies (all hypothetical). 👉 The second time, I had some real experience — and updating it led to my first Product Design role. 💼 Here’s what actually helped me: ✅ 3 solid case studies Doesn’t matter if they’re hypothetical problems 🖥 Web design 📱 Mobile app 🌐 Different industries + different approaches Even while freelancing, I chose projects that helped me grow & build versatility. ✅ Choose your platform wisely You can go for Behance or Dribbble — but I strongly recommend creating your own website. It makes you stand out. I used Wix — no code needed, super flexible, cheap domain. (Con: not super responsive on tablets — but worth it.) ✅ Research + take notes Google: “Top 20 UX Portfolios 2025”. Open 20–30 of them — don’t just read case studies. 📸 Screenshot everything you love: footers, testimonials, cover banners, page layouts, even animations. Look at their: • Brand color, logo, minimal or bold style • Case study structure (overview → research → design → outcome) • Additional pages like Photography, Playground, Blog, Illustrations ✅ Start planning before designing Use Notion / Trello / Google Docs. Start listing tasks + ideas: • What projects are you showing? • What skills do you want to highlight? • What types of projects are you aiming for? Then, create a Google Doc for each page — About, Case Study 1, etc. Add text, image ideas, testimonials, design section layouts — everything. 💡 Label it as V1 — no pressure to be perfect. Iterate → V2 → V3. ✅ Build like a designer: from docs to design Use the docs as a blueprint. Start translating your ideas into your site. 🛠 In Wix, I began with my branding — logo, theme, vibe. 📄 Started with the header + footer, then one page at a time. 💡 Pro tip: use Strips in Wix — acts like auto layout in Figma (easy to move sections). 📌 Google everything you’re stuck on — there’s a tutorial for everything. ✅ Present your work right Don’t just show designs — tell the story. Include: • Goals • Research • Wireframes → Final designs • Design files / prototypes • What you learned, what changed 📷 Add photos of yourself working, behind-the-scenes, anything that adds authenticity. ✅ Go live 🚀 Buy a domain. Add resume + social links. Publish + share on LinkedIn. Let people see your work and give feedback. Your portfolio is never final — keep improving. 🎯 UX portfolios take time. Be patient. Stay focused. If you want that first job — this is where you show what you’re capable of. 💬 Let me know if you want me to break down how I write case studies — happy to share! And meanwhile — follow me on Instagram @inher.designera for videos + more tips! #productdesign #design #uiuxdesign #portfolio
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We all know we're supposed to "show instead of tell." But most design portfolios fail to do this and here's why. 👇 Designers love showcasing their raw work in their portfolios including outputs or deliverables such as: → Sketches → Diagrams → User flows → Wireframes → Sticky notes → Journey maps But to be honest, 90% of the time, I have absolutely no idea what is going on in those images. For example, I'll often come across a screenshot or picture of 25+ sticky notes, but: → They are too zoomed out. → If I zoom in, they're too blurry. → Even if I can seem them, they're too overwhelming. Then I start asking myself questions such as: → Am I supposed to read every sticky note? → What's important about these sticky notes? → Is this worth my time and attention to decipher? This is where storytelling comes in. What if instead of showing a raw zoomed out screenshot of sticky notes, we instead pulled out the key highlights and takeaways? Then we can guide the reader's attention to what's actually important, and optionally include a link to the original raw image afterwards. This creates a far more compelling narrative for our audience (hiring managers and recruiters), and ensures we're showing the right level of detail that is necessary to understand the story. Now to be clear, I'm not saying you should entirely avoid raw images or assets (or even raw Figma files). For example, these can be effective during the interview process because the designer can use their voice to guide their audience through the image. But when it's an online written case study submitted with an application, then you won't be in the room when a hiring manager first sees it. In that moment, your story will need to stand on it's own. It will need to communicate the right level of clarity and detail to compel the hiring manager to offer you an interview. In summary, when we want to "show instead of tell", that doesn't mean slapping a raw screenshot or image in our portfolio. It means reflecting on how we're using our words and images to give context, clarity, and tell an impactful story. Use it effectively to your advantage. What are your thoughts? #ux #design #portfolio #casestudy #storytelling
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Most portfolios fail in the first 10 seconds. Here’s why: I'll tell you exactly when I know a portfolio won't make it past my screen. The moment I land on "Hi, I'm a passionate designer who loves solving problems..." Listen. I've already read your CV. I know your name, your experience, and where you're based. I don't need a repeat performance. What do I need? To see if you can actually design. Here's what happens when I review portfolios: I have 10 seconds to decide if your work is worth 5 minutes of my additional review and hours of the interview process. And you're wasting those seconds telling me you "love design." Of course, you love design. You're a designer. That's expected. Show me this instead: → Your work / style / taste (Immediately) → The problems you've solved → The impact you've created → Your actual design thinking When I land on your portfolio, I'm looking for: First impressions that matter. Is it accessible? Any animations that show craft? Does it load fast? Can I navigate intuitively? Your portfolio IS the first design problem I see you solve. And if you can't design for me, your user, why would I trust you with my users? What actually gets you hired: ✓ Business context as a stage setting ✓ Your specific role (not "I did everything") ✓ Team composition and timeline ✓ The REAL problem you solved Not 20 personas. Not 50 wireframes. Not your entire design process is outlined. Give me: - 2-3 key research insights - 1 example of iteration that mattered - The final solution (3 screens max) - Actual impact or expected metrics Here's the brutal truth: I don't care about your design philosophy. I care if you can move my metrics. Design isn't just about beauty or experience. It's about business impact. Show me you understand that balance: - Skip the autobiography. Start with your best work. - Make me think "I need to talk to this person". Not "I need to read more about them." Your portfolio should work like your best designs: Clear. Intuitive. Impactful. Remember: I've hired dozens of designers. The ones who got offers? They showed me their thinking through their work. Not through their "About Me". Designers, what's the first thing visitors see on your portfolio? Time for some honest self-assessment (and a potential change).
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Tired of employers not seeing your value? The "Portfolio Strategy" will fix that (in 7 simple steps): [Context] Companies hire people for one reason: They believe they'll bring the most value to the role. Resumes, cover letters, and LinkedIn are traditional ways to illustrating that value. But they're not the best. If you're struggling to see results with them? You need a portfolio. 1. Choose Your Platform First, choose the place where you'll host your content. I recommend a place that: - Allows you to create the way you want - Maximizes your visibility If you're job searching, it's tough to beat LinkedIn. Medium is another solid option. 2. Identify Your Target Companies Next, brainstorm your list of target companies. You're going to be researching them and creating value that's directly tied to their goals, challenges, and vision. I recommend starting with 3-5. Bonus points if they're in the same industry. 3. Align Your Projects Start with one company. Research the heck out of it from a high level. Then dive deeper into researching the specific product and team you're targeting. Your goal is to identify: - Goals -Challenges - Initiatives Learn as much as you can about them. 3a. Align Your Projects (Examples) Marketer? Perform site audits and recommend 3 ways for companies to get more leads. Software Engineer? QA your favorite apps / tools to identify bugs or improvements. Graphic Designer? Refresh the branding for your favorite products. 4. Map Out The Process Start with your methodology: Why this company / product? Break down your research, brainstorming, and solution process. Find and include reputable data. Project outcomes / ROI if you can. Finally, make a compelling case. Don’t just summarize, sell! 5. Show Your Work Now turn that process into content! Write up a "case study" showing: - The problem / opportunity - How you identified it - Your solution(s) - How you came up with them - The process for implementing them When it's ready, hit publish! 6. Share Your Work Now your case study is out in the world! First, add it to your LinkedIn featured section. Next, break it down into bite sized pieces of content. Start writing posts around: - Your research process - Your solutions process - Insights you came across - Etc 7. Systematize It This works best when you consistently work at it. Create a daily schedule and commit to it. Before you know it, you’ll have a body of work that includes *real* results and clearly illustrates your value. That’s going to get you hired!
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What You Need to Do with Your LinkedIn Profile In a market this competitive, every small detail counts. No single change will land you a job, but refining your materials once and focusing on outreach, relationships, and applications makes all the difference. More than half of the profiles I see need cleanup. Here is what you should do. • Have a custom banner and profile photo that stand out. Your banner is the first thing people see. Choose something personal and relevant to your work that reflects your professional identity. • Make your portfolio or website link easy to find. Add it in your Featured section, profile header, and About section. Do not hide it. Recruiters should reach your work in one click. If you have a premium account, use the custom link field at the top. If not, place your link at the start of your About section. • Keep your profile clean and readable. Simplicity shows professionalism. Avoid long paragraphs. Use short sentences and white space. Open your profile on your phone and ask yourself whether you would keep scrolling. • Write a headline that draws attention. Your headline is not just your title. It is a quick snapshot of who you are and what you bring. You can keep it simple or make it more human, such as “Game Producer helping teams build unforgettable worlds.” Think of it as your first line of connection. • Craft a concise, human About section. Summarize what you do, your main skills, and the impact you create. Do not just list tasks. End with a line that shows what drives you or what you love about your field. People remember people, not job descriptions. • Structure your Experience section for clarity and impact. Group related roles under the same organization and keep your total list to around ten entries. Use one or two short bullets for each position describing what you did and the results you achieved. Use action verbs and quantify where you can. Older roles can be summarized briefly once they are more than ten years old. • Avoid empty entries. Every role should have at least one line that explains what you did and why it mattered. Even short or contract roles deserve a description that shows your contribution. • Feature your strongest work. Use the Featured section to highlight up to ten items that best represent you. This can include projects, portfolios, or posts. Keep it focused so viewers leave your profile with a clear sense of your strengths. DON'T FORGET THESE LAST 2: • Show education, awards, and volunteer work. These details make your story complete and reveal values beyond your job titles. • Add relevant skills. Include the skills that match your target roles. This improves search visibility and helps recruiters understand your strengths. Do these things and your profile will instantly stand out in the crowd. Because remember, the person reading it is not just reading yours. They are reading hundreds, maybe thousands. Make yours memorable, efficient, and real.
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Let me ask you this: Does your portfolio reflect the work you actually want to be hired to do? If your answer is, “Yeah! I want to be an instructional designer!” ...that’s not what I mean. I’m talking about the kind of instructional designer you want to be. Do you want to design courses? Build systems? Lead strategy? Improve performance? Facilitate change? Because here’s the thing…most portfolios default to the same stuff: ✅ Storyline modules ✅ Rise demos ✅ Job aids about the ADDIE process And that’s totally fine (minus the ADDIE job aid)....if that’s the kind of work you want to do. But not every ID role involves eLearning. Not every L&D professional is a course creator. And not every portfolio needs to be packed with eLearning examples. Your portfolio isn’t just a box to check. It’s a positioning tool. A statement. A signal. It should help you attract the kind of work that lights you up, and quietly filter out the stuff that doesn’t. Ya know, when I built my first portfolio, I learned this the hard way. I thought the goal was to showcase everything I was capable of. So I loaded it up: presentations I’d designed, facilitator guides I’d created, eLearning courses I’d built, videos I’d edited—everything. My thinking at the time was: “The more I include, the more capable I’ll look.” But what actually happened? Hiring managers couldn’t tell what I specialized in. And I kept getting inquiries about work I didn’t even want to do. That experience taught me a valuable lesson: Your portfolio mirrors your focus. Get specific, or get overlooked. So if your goal is to land work you enjoy and work you’re great at, then your portfolio has to tell that story. Show the kind of work you want to be hired for. Be intentional. Be specific. And don’t be afraid to leave things out. Because clarity isn’t limiting, it’s powerful. 👉 If you want to see what it looks like to build a portfolio without any eLearning examples, check out my latest video with the link down in the comments! Have a great week! 👋 Tim #eLearning #InstructionalDesign #LearningAndDevelopment
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“They rejected me because I had no experience.” But how do you get experience without someone first giving you a chance? 🤔 This is the loop every student & fresher struggles with. I’ve been there too. And after 8+ years in tech + mentoring 1000s of students, here are some unique strategies that actually work to crack your first internship or job : ✨ 1. Build “Proof of Work” Don’t just say you know coding/finance/design, show it. Small projects, GitHub repos, case studies, or even writing your learnings on LinkedIn builds trust. Detailed explanation : https://lnkd.in/gqhmkfFb ✨ 2. Create a “Skill Portfolio” Instead of listing random certificates, make a 1-page portfolio with projects, visuals & outcomes. Recruiters notice impact, not paper. ✨ 3. Network the Smart Way Instead of cold “please refer me” DMs, write posts, share insights, and engage with industry people. When they see you show up, opportunities come naturally. ✨ 4. Use Reverse Applications Don’t just wait for job portals. Make a short pitch mail + attach portfolio → directly to startups, NGOs, or small firms. Hidden market > job boards. ✨ 5. Document Your Journey Online If you’re learning Python, post your Day 1 → Day 30 journey. This not only keeps you consistent but also attracts mentors + recruiters. ✨ 6. Hackathons & Open Source Even without prior job experience, hackathons and open-source projects prove your teamwork, problem-solving, and coding skills. That’s “real-world experience” most resumes miss. ✨ 7. Learn Skills Recruiters Value Today 2025 is skill-first, not degree-first. Breaking into your first role isn’t about luck - t’s about strategy + visibility + proof. Don’t wait for HR to give you permission to start. Start building your career assets today. I’ve guided thousands of students into their first role, and I’ll keep sharing what works. Follow for more. 👉 Tell me, what’s the BIGGEST challenge you’re facing in landing your first role? #career #guidance #freshers
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🤔 Design portfolio pro-tip: Level up your user flow communication through showing your decision tree. While showcasing basic user flows is a good start, hiring managers often go beyond that. In a sea of portfolios, distinguish yourself by demonstrating: 1. Deep user understanding: Embed user insights and pain points within your flow charts. 2. Creative problem-solving: Highlight how your user flows tackle specific challenges and optimize the user journey. 3. Impactful storytelling: Weave a narrative through your flows, showcasing how they influenced design decisions and drove positive outcomes. Remember, hiring managers want to see evidence of your design thinking and strategic impact, not just technical proficiency at creating a user flow chart. Instead, show your thought process: 1. What are the different types of flows you considered? 2. How did you make a decision on the end result? 3. What research, log data, audits or user feedback did you consider to make your final decision? For example, in this diagram below, my decision process could look something like this: DECISION Reason 1: Reduced onboarding steps by 3 screens Reason 2: Reduced onboarding abandonment by 30% Reason 3: Allow users to skip part of the onboarding flow and return later, increasing signups by x% Let me know if you have any questions! #design #portfolio #portfolioshowcase #uxcommunity #uxdesign #uxdesigner
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