My candidate landed a ₹15 LPA offer at a top MNC without even applying. No resume drop. No job portal. How? ✅ She unlocked the hidden job market that most candidates never see. So, how did she do it? Not with luck. But with a strategy anyone can use: 1. She built her brand before she needed a job. She shared her wins, projects, and insights on LinkedIn consistently. Example: Every Friday, she posted a carousel breaking down a real-life analytics problem she solved at work, tagging teammates and sharing key takeaways. This made her visible as a problem-solver in her field. 2. She reached out to industry peers, not just HR. No generic “Hi, can you refer me?” Instead, she started real conversations about trends, challenges, and solutions in her field. Example: She messaged a data scientist at her dream company, commenting on a recent paper he’d published: 👇 “Hi Raj, I loved your article on predictive analytics in retail. I’ve been working on similar models for FMCG clients and would love to exchange notes!” This led to a meaningful chat, not a cold request. 3. She gave before she asked. She offered feedback on others’ work, shared resources, and celebrated others’ milestones. Example: She congratulated connections on promotions, shared helpful webinars in group chats, and offered to review a peer’s resume before asking for any help herself. 4. She followed up, politely and persistently. After every conversation, she sent a thank-you note: 👇 “Thanks for your insights, Priya! I’ve already started applying your advice. Hope we can catch up again soon.” She stayed top of mind, not just top of the inbox. You don’t need a massive network. You need genuine connections, a clear story, and the courage to show up before you need help. If you’re still waiting for the “perfect” job post to appear, you’re already late. The best opportunities are shared in DMs, whispered in meetings, and offered to those who are already visible. Start building your presence, your relationships, and your reputation today. #jobsearch #jobopportunities #jobinterview #careergrowth
Using LinkedIn for Networking
Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.
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You know you should network. But you probably don’t know what to say or how to get on people’s radar. Here’s an easy 7-step LinkedIn networking strategy (that anyone can use): 1. The 3 Principles Of Good Networking If you want to network effectively, you need to: - Have a way to reach people - Have a way to add value to them - Have a way to keep the engagement going This strategy does all three! 2. Make A List Of Job-Related Keywords Think of keywords, skills, phrases, and jargon that align with your target role. Ex: If you’re in sales, that might be “sales,” “leads,” “pipeline,” “sales cycle,” etc. Make a quick list of these. 3. Run A “Post” Search On LinkedIn Start with one keyword (or the job title itself). Run a search for it on LinkedIn. From the “Filters” option, select “Posts.” Then change “Date Posted” to “Past Week.” 4. Filter By “Author Company” Click on “All Filters” to find the “Author Company” filter. Add all of your target companies to this filter. This will give you a list of all the posts related to your target role, written by people at your target companies, posted in the past week! 5. Analyze Posts & Authors Scroll through the posts. When you find one that resonates? Click the person’s profile and check to see if they post consistently (at least once / week). If they do? Bookmark their profile in your browser. 6. Leave A Value Driven Comment For each author you find that posts regularly in your target space? Leave a comment on their post recent post that is: - Supportive - Postive in tone - Offers your own take / value - Is more than one sentence Repeat for each author. 7. Rinse & Repeat Daily Every day, click through the author profiles you have bookmarked. See a new post? Leave a new comment. Repeat this process every weekday if you can. But aim to leave at least one comment / week at minimum. 8. Why This Works Content creators love engagement. By cosistently offering that in a positive way, you’re going to get on their radar. And when you’ve done this for a week or two, the likelihood of getting a “yes” to a coffee chat, or even a referral, goes WAY up. Give it a shot today! 📣 Want help turning this 7-step networking routine into a system that turns cold contacts into referrals and interviews? 👉 Book a free 30-min Clarity Call with our team and we’ll walk you through exactly how: https://lnkd.in/gdysHr-r
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Jessica Hernandez, CCTC, CHJMC, CPBS, NCOPE
Jessica Hernandez, CCTC, CHJMC, CPBS, NCOPE is an Influencer Executive Resume Writer ➝ 8X Certified Career Coach & Branding Strategist ➝ LinkedIn Top Voice ➝ Brand-driven resumes & LinkedIn profiles that tell your story and show your value. Book a call below ⤵️
251,794 followersYour LinkedIn headline is one of the first things a recruiter reads about you. More than that, though, it’s an important part of search results. When a company uses LinkedIn Recruiter to search for candidates, the information in your profile’s headline weighs heavily in search results. Optimizing your headline is like optimizing your entire profile for better placement results when recruiters run a search. My favorite formula for a LinkedIn profile headline is: TARGET JOB TITLE | 3 HIGH-PRIORITY SKILLS | PERSONAL BRANDING STATEMENT Let’s break down each one. First, you want to use your target job title. If I’m a recruiter running a search on LinkedIn for a client services manager, I will use this position title to pull profiles of candidates who are already in this role or have past experience in this position. Second, as a recruiter, I will include specific skills in my search that are critical to success in the role. I might use “customer relations,” “sales,” or “operations.” This will give me a list of candidates with the relevant experience and skills required for the role. Third, the personal branding statement is your chance to convey value to the hiring manager. It’s what gets them to click on your profile and read it, versus another candidate. It’s your unique differentiation factor. On my profile, I use this personal branding statement: I help executives attract better job offers with personal-brand-focused resumes. This branding statement communicates who I help (executives), the value I deliver (attract better job offers), and how I do it (with personal-brand-focused resumes). Those three elements combine to create a unique value proposition. When creating your personal branding statement, include who you help, how, and to what end. I used this headline formula to update my husband’s profile last year when he launched his job search. He received a message from a recruiter within 24 hours of his headline update. Melissa, one of my LinkedIn Unlocked course students, saw a 1,277% increase in profile views after updating her headline. Another student, Josh, saw a 2200% increase in profile views after updating his. #Networking #JobSearch #Careers #LinkedInTopVoices
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If I had 3 months to land a job at ONE specific company, here's exactly how I'd do it. Forget mass applications. This is about strategic relationship building. Month 1: Research & Connect → Go to their LinkedIn company page → Click "People" tab, filter by your location → Search for your target department in the search bar → Find 5-10 employees in that department → Check their recent posts for engagement opportunities → Comment thoughtfully on their post first → Send connection request with personalized note Example message: "Hi Beth, I saw your post on content strategy - great insights! I've been on LinkedIn for 5 years and love connecting with strategic minds. Would love to see more of your content on my feed." Month 2: Build Relationship → Engage with their posts twice weekly → Use their content as natural conversation starters Month 3: Make your Move → Now you can naturally ask for referrals → Request heads-up on upcoming positions The principle: Give first, ask later. No matter how small. Having an insider who is in your corner will go a long way. This may take time, but it will pay off. Happy Midweek, guys! How has writing on LinkedIn been treating you? I'm answering questions in the comments.
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LinkedIn has brought me career opportunities and friendships I never could have predicted. Yes, I have a large following now. But I started at zero (just like everyone else). Here are 8 LinkedIn tips to help you land your dream job and build a strong network: 1. Post thematically (not randomly) LinkedIn rewards activity. Instead of posting whenever inspiration hits, choose themes your network expects from you: • Industry insights • Insider lessons from books or conferences • Personal projects • Inspiration • Advice or asks 2. Talk about your industry, not yourself Industry insight = authority. The frequently shared LinkedIn content (in no particular order): • How-to posts • Lists • Deep, neutral analysis Teach first. Reputation follows. 3. Be a strategic “liker” Likes are memory cues. When you intentionally like someone’s post, you: • Stay top of mind • Create an instant conversation starter later • Build relationship momentum without DM’ing 4. Your profile is not a résumé It’s a living signal of who you are and what you care about. LinkedIn favors complete profiles, yet nearly half of users leave sections blank. Those extra sections (courses, volunteering, boards) make you more searchable and more human. Incomplete profile = invisible profile. 5. Kill buzzwords (they blur you) Words like strategic, passionate, expert are everywhere. Replace them with language you’d actually say out loud: • “Strategic” → decisive, judicious • “Experienced” → seasoned, practiced • “Leader” → guided, directed Your vocabulary is part of your brand. 6. Be an “adder,” not a commenter Comments aren’t for agreeing, but for adding value. Great comments: • Expand an idea • Share a relevant example • Offer gratitude or context If you want to impress someone, help their post become smarter. 7. Send smart connection requests Never send a blank request. Always answer: • How do I know them? • Why this person? • What’s in it for them? 8. Optimize for your audience Your profile shouldn’t appeal to everyone. Ask: Who do I need to succeed? • Freelancers → clients • Climbers → leaders • Switchers → future industry peers • Speak directly to them. 9. Network after you connect Connections decay without touchpoints. Once a month is enough: • Congratulate promotions • Share relevant info • Make an intro • Invite for coffee when traveling Consistency beats intensity. 10. Use “People Also Viewed” This section tells you: • Who LinkedIn thinks you are • Who you’re being compared to • Who you might be missing If you don’t like the comparison, adjust your language and connections. You don’t need to do all 10. Start with 1-2 and let the momentum compound. What’s one LinkedIn change you’ll make this week?
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I ran an experiment. On Saturday, I wrote 100 comments (took about 2.5 hours). It generated 284,070 views. I saw a noticeable spike in great ICP connection requests, profile views, newsletter subscribers, and two demos that noted they checked out DoWhatWorks after I engaged on their post. Here is what makes commenting interesting… 1) No frequency cap. Comment as much as you want, and there’s no diminishing returns on impressions. 2) Nuanced comments build name recognition. People appreciate it when you add genuine value. A thoughtful comment that expands on the post, shares your experience, or surfaces a new facet of the discussion positions you perfectly for an ABM play. 3) You can include links. While links in posts often hurt reach, I haven’t seen that penalty on comment reach. 4) Quality drives views. Commenting on high-reach profiles boosts potential impressions, but only if your comment earns engagements and stays at the top. I’ve left cursory comments on viral posts that gathered fewer than 500 views because they added little value and got buried. 5) Avoid AI-generated comments. AI comments erode trust, and they come off as vapid. We all know when people are doing them. They probably get minimal reach. 6) Start back-and-forth conversations. LinkedIn rewards genuine conversations around the post in the comments. In the thread featured in this picture, I had 3 comments that collectively drove over 8,000 impressions. And not to have people getting crazy with being the "last word" but the last comment in a thread is the one visible by default to scrollers and does seem to get 30-40% more views on average. Has anyone else tried something similar? What were your results?
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In the last 3 months, I've audited 50+ LinkedIn profiles for founders across industries. The results? Eye-opening. Most founders fall into predictable traps with their LinkedIn presence: 👉 They have professional achievements but amateur presentation 👉 They invest in business operations but neglect personal branding 👉 They know their value but struggle to communicate it effectively After transforming these profiles, here's what actually moved the needle: 1. Strategic Profile Photos We replaced casual selfies and cropped group photos with professional headshots that conveyed approachable authority. This single change increased profile visit-to-connection ratios by 35%. 2. Headline Transformation Generic titles like "Founder at XYZ Company" became strategic positioning statements that instantly communicated what they bring to the table. For example: "Helping eCommerce brands increase AOV by 40% | Founder of ConversionBoost | Ex-Shopify" 3. Banner Optimization This prime real estate is wasted by 90% of founders. We converted these into powerful CTAs with: 🍀 Clear offers 🍀 Specific results 🍀 Ways to connect The founders who implemented this saw a 27% increase in direct messages. 4. Authentic About Sections We completely rewrote these sections to balance personal journey with industry expertise—showing both the "why" behind their mission and the "how" of their solution. The key was weaving authentic storytelling with clear evidence of capability. 5. Custom Content Strategy For each founder, we created 60+ industry-specific content ideas tailored to their unique: 👉 Expertise 👉 Target audience 👉 Business objectives Unlike generic "thought leadership," these strategies focused on connecting with potential clients through problem-solving content. The results were transformative: One SaaS founder received 3 partnership offers within weeks A sustainability consultant was shortlisted for an industry award they didn't apply for A B2B service provider hired their dream CTO after attracting attention My biggest takeaway? Most founders try to implement unfocused LinkedIn "hacks" without a coherent strategy. They generate views but not sales. The founders who succeeded focused on strategic positioning first, engagement second. Your LinkedIn profile isn't just digital wallpaper—it's often the first impression potential clients, investors, and talent have of you and your business.
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Most people freeze when they want to reach out to someone influential. Here’s the 5-step formula I’ve used to connect with the CEO of Scribe, the co-founder of Leland, the content team at Notion, and even creators I admire 👇 1. Follow first. Connect later. Don’t just hit “connect.” Follow them, spend a few weeks learning from their content and activity. Be a quiet observer. 2. Find your entry point. Look for a personal connection - a post you loved, a campaign you admired, a shared background, a comment thread you can join. 3. Create context. Once you find something specific, DM them with a message that shows: → You’ve done your homework → Why this moment made you want to connect → What you admire or learned from them 4. Make the ask polite + specific. Don’t write paragraphs. Respect their time. Example: “Would love to ask you 1 question about your work at [company] – totally okay if now’s not a good time!” 5. Nurture the connection. Even if they don’t reply, keep engaging with their content. Most of my opportunities came weeks after my first message. This method helped me land internships, collaborations, interviews, and lifelong mentors. Try this 5-step system and tell me what worked. #linkedin #network #tips
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Spending over 23% of your day on LinkedIn as a founder or coach but still stuck with less than 10% conversions. Your services and products are not being recognized and sold even on one of the biggest B2B platforms. Based on my recent client experiences, I have included 5 strategies to resolve your issues below. Lead gen on LinkedIn is more like going to the gym. → As in a gym, you don't jump onto 20 kg dumbbells for your workout; similarly, when you think of lead gen it's not about $5,000 clients on day 1. → As in a gym, you focus on building a habit of walking there; similarly, you should build a habit of talking to ICPs. Once you are onto this stage: 1) Write what appeals to your targeted ICPs. → Educational Storytelling → Value-based lead magnet → Before and after case study → Client case study with proofs → Emotional trigger-based content 2) Connect with ICPs without selling in the 1st text → Talk about their personality → Talk about something they are good at → Talk about what's wrong + how you can fix → Talk of their contribution + how to take forward → Talk how they have impacted your life positively 3) Connect with a set of ICPs through comments → Create a list of 50 people in an Excel sheet → Comment on 25 on alternative days → Write genuine words → After 4-5 days of mutual conversation → Send a connection request with an intent 4) Create a strong lead magnet for your ICPs → Find people who fit your ICP list → Send them a connection request. → Ask about a problem they are facing. → Showcase how your lead magnet can be fixed. → If they agree, send it to them and take it on. 5) Leverage the potential of reactions & comments. → Open profile of a big creator who fits your ICP. → Open recent posts & find reactions + comments. → Filter them out; they are the most active ones. → Send customized connection requests regularly. → And you’ve a list of active ICPs to contact daily. When you build a habit, you find new ways to strengthen, exactly how you go to the gym, and build a habit of better posture and mobility. Focus on building habits with better actions; you'll be surprised to witness the results. P.S. If you want to dive deeper into lead gen and become the top 1% in the industry through content, DM me.
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A BIG follower count looks impressive. But followers don’t pay the bills 🤷🏻♀️ High numbers ≠ revenue. Why? Because followers don’t always translate to trust. That’s the difference between having an audience or a community. An AUDIENCE listens. But they’re passive. They consume your content and move on. A COMMUNITY? They engage. They connect. They show up for you. Audiences might watch from the sidelines. Communities take action. They invest. They stick around. And here’s the key difference: Communities are built on shared values, not just content. If you’re struggling to monetise, it might not be about growing your follower count. It’s about deepening your relationships. So, how do you build a community on LinkedIn? 1. Start conversations, not monologues. Ask questions. Invite opinions. Respond to comments with thought and care. 2. Be authentic. Share your wins and your challenges. Vulnerability creates connection. 3. Engage outside your posts. Comment on other people’s content. Join relevant discussions. Be present where your audience is. 4. Create shared value. Offer insights, solve problems, and share ideas that help your network grow. 5. Highlight others. Celebrate their wins. Share their content. Show that you care about their journey. 6. Be consistent. Communities thrive on trust, and trust is built by showing up regularly over time. 7. Take it offline. Meetups, coffee chats, or webinars. Bring your LinkedIn network into real-life connections. A handshake or face-to-face conversation builds bonds no algorithm can replicate. Communities aren’t built overnight. They grow when you focus on connection over attention. Because people don’t just buy products or services. They buy trust. They buy relationships. When you build a community, you don’t just have followers. You have advocates. Supporters. Friends. That’s the real game-changer. PS: Do you have an audience or a community?
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