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17 Must-Have Items for Your Professional LinkedIn Profile to Shine in 2021
From:
Neal Schaffer -- Social Media Marketing Speaker, Consultant & Influencer Neal Schaffer -- Social Media Marketing Speaker, Consultant & Influencer
For Immediate Release:
Dateline: Los Angeles, CA
Wednesday, April 28, 2021

 

17 Must-Have Items for Your Professional LinkedIn Profile in 2021

LinkedIn continues to evolve at a fast pace with 722 million users – but is your professional LinkedIn profile still stuck in the past?

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I’ve blogged about LinkedIn profile tips as well as as well as how to update your LinkedIn profile. It’s time to provide you an update aligned with all of LinkedIn’s changes over the years to help you create the perfect professional LinkedIn profile.

What is a LinkedIn professional profile?

Consider your professional LinkedIn Profile to be equivalent to the front page of the website of you. It’s not a resume of your experiences: It’s a tool to showcase your professional brand. And while recruiters might check you out as a potential candidate if you have a strong profile with relevant skills, the objective in creating one is about building out your branded career story and showcasing the key positions you’ve had and experiences that will help your profile standout and showcase your core skills.

Think about it: Whatever activity you do on LinkedIn, it will always lead people back to your profile. Think of all the time and effort that businesses put into investing into creating a well-branded and strategic website. Have you spent even a fraction of that time in thinking about how to create a strong professional LinkedIn profile?

Even if you think you have your bases covered, pay attention to your professional LinkedIn profile while you read this. Better yet, ask someone you trust to read this and then give your professional LinkedIn profile an audit. You might be surprised what they find!

How do I create a professional LinkedIn profile?

Here are my 17 suggestions for you to make sure you include in your professional LinkedIn profile regardless of your profession. Note that all of the below can be done on any free LinkedIn account. In other words, you don’t have to pay to get access to professional profile features!

Professional LinkedIn Profile Tips Checklist

1.) Get serious about your photo

I’ve blogged about LinkedIn photo tips in the past, but it bears reminding that unless you need to hide your face in the public for personal security reasons, you should always have a professional looking photo represent you. You might be able to get around not having a photo, but as studies show in having photos in Google search results, those with photos might expect a significant increase in CTR (click-through rate) after people find you in LinkedIn search results.

Actually, LinkedIn themselves have said that profiles with photos are 7x more likely to be viewed by others. And, besides, if you want to make a deeper connection with someone, shouldn’t you be showing your real face?

2.) Professional names only, please

I talk a little about the SEO (search engine optimization) of your profile below, but those that put in keywords, or even worse phone numbers, as part of your name look cheesy and like you’re blatantly out to sell me on something.

LinkedIn is the most trusted social network out there, so you should have a name that is cognizant of that and stay away from gimmicky nicknames.

You’ll have plenty of other areas in your profile where you can differentiate yourself. Check out this link for more advice on your LinkedIn profile name.

3.) Professional Headline branding is critical

What is a good professional headline for LinkedIn?

In terms of areas to differentiate yourself in your professional LinkedIn profile, look no further than your professional headline, the formerly maximum 110 now 220 characters that appear prominently just under your name both on your profile, and more importantly on search results. You don’t need to put here that you are TITLE at COMPANY NAME – viewers can see that in your profile.

You need to include information in your Professional Headline that will draw your potential visitor into wanting to find out more about you.

Be explicit as to how you can help people – but do it in a professional and well-branded manner. Overtly selling to people in your Professional Headline feels like a slap in the face to many a LinkedIn user. Ouch.

4.) Optimize your location

Here’s counter-intuitive one, but it’s important to put yourself in the shoes of your target visitor. I live in Orange County, California, but if I was in charge of a territory that was primarily centered around Los Angeles, I would want to change my location to Los Angeles. It makes me more approachable in my target market because I’m considered “local,” and it also means I get found in more relevant search results because many are using the location feature to filter results.

5.) Align your industry

The concept here is the same as in optimizing your location. What would the type of person you want to find you enter in the “Industry” field?  This can be tough because even those that work at the same company as you might list different industries here.

One interesting thing is if you have upgraded to a paid LinkedIn account, your complete “Who’s Viewed Your Profile” will also include data as to which industries best represent the visitors to your profile. You might have to do some experimenting here, and not everyone uses the Industry feature to filter search results, but you should put your best foot forward and experiment in seeing how changing your industry might affect your profile views.

6.) Customize your profile URL

LinkedIn provides you with a default URL which you can – and should – customize. Some talk about the SEO benefits of doing so, but I look at it this way: Once you’re invested in LinkedIn as part of your professional infrastructure, you’ll probably want to include your LinkedIn URL in your email signature or even print it on your business card. Wouldn’t you rather have a professional looking – and easy to input – URL like http://www.linkedin.com/in/nealschaffer rather than http://www.linkedin.com/pub/neal-schaffer/4a/z89/145/ ?

7.) Your Activity will show your latest status update – do you have one?

When this feature was rolled out in early 2009, many were asking, “What should I use my LinkedIn status update for?” Since that time, posting updates of our lives has become a common part of our culture, whether it’s through Facebook, Twitter, a photo on Instagram, or even in our enterprise using Salesforce Chatter or Slack. When someone finally lands on your profile, your activity section will show your latest status update – if you have one.

This is the only dynamically updated part of your profile which gives others the ability to see what’s on your mind, so get into the habit of updating your status on a regular basis. Sharing thoughtful, insightful, and relevant news that might interest your target visitor just once a day is a great way to keep your professional profile “fresh” – as well as engage with your own network of connections!

8.) Your Professional Summary: Expand upon your Professional Headline – and support it

Updating your status update should be part of your daily LinkedIn routine but will undoubtedly be one of the more time-consuming tasks in this checklist. One of the others will be writing a well-crafted and branded professional summary to support your professional LinkedIn profile.

If your Professional Headline served the role of luring visitors to your profile from people search results, your Professional Summary must expand upon that branding further while also supporting what you say in your headline as well as potentially ending with a good call-to-action. You must “close the deal” by making sure that, after your profile visitors read your Professional Summary, they will be sold on you and want to initiate contact.

If you work for a company who is cognizant of their employer branding, you might want to ask your HR or Marketing department if they have a standard paragraph you could use to showcase the company you work for. Either way, if there is one area you want to spend time on crafting a few well-versed paragraphs, it’s here!

9.) Fully connect with your past

Your professional LinkedIn Profile is about helping you get found: It is an Inbound Marketing tool, not a mere online resume of your experiences. That’s why it’s important to connect the dots with your past as much as possible to allow as many people from your past to find you – and for you to be able to find them. Don’t stop at your current employer: Go back in history and fill in every employer you’ve ever worked for and educational institution you’ve attended. I go as far back as high school on my own profile, and even include short-term study abroad programs – which have helped me restore old ties with valued professionals in my network.

10.) Keywords

Using the right keywords is essential if you are planning to use your LinkedIn profile for social selling.

I wrote about how you can leverage using keywords in your professional LinkedIn Profile in my Windmill Networking: Maximizing LinkedIn book way back in 2009, but there are many who either a) haven’t leveraged it enough or b) over keyword-stuffed their profile to the point that they make come up high in search results, but the more someone looks at their profile, the more they realize they’ve been duped.

Whenever I speak on LinkedIn I offer this advice: Do a search for keywords for which you would like to appear in LinkedIn search results. Look at the profiles of those that appear in the top few results. Examine the location and frequency for which they’ve placed those keywords. Now take that knowledge and apply it to your own profile.

The LinkedIn search algorithm is similar to Google: No one knows exactly how it works and it change at any time. So instead of being fixated on the search results, in addition to the exercise I just mentioned, consider adding as niche as possible keywords to your profile to differentiate yourself. Keywords really do matter: One of the case studies in my Maximizing LinkedIn for Sales and Social Media Marketing book was about a gentleman who generated 50% of his annual revenue because he was the only person who came up in a search result living in a certain country working in a certain industry who utilized a certain keyword.

11.) Build credibility with recommendations

A resume usually says “references upon request,” but you can actually add them digitally through receiving recommendations.

With all of the quid pro quo recommendations you see out there, many ask if  LinkedIn recommendations are for real. Yes, they very much are in the context that they help you establish credibility if someone viewing your profile doesn’t know you. When I speak on LinkedIn, I often talk about how I was looking for a realtor on LinkedIn and found three good looking profiles. One had zero recommendations, another had two, and another had about more than 30. Who do  you think I first contacted? You don’t need to have 30+ recommendations, but a few real recommendations can go a long way in helping to establish your credibility.

12.) Don’t ignore endorsements – manage them

Of all the features that LinkedIn has released, endorsements are the one that have stirred the most controversy in the professional community. I believe you should avoid that controversy about potential LinkedIn endorsements spam and need to utilize whatever functionality LinkedIn provides you. With that in mind, there are great ways in which you can utilize LinkedIn endorsements. For the purpose of your profile, you should at least be editing your Skills and make sure that those that you want associated with your brand comprise all of the maximum 50 you can display, making sure that you “pin” your most valuable 3 Skills at the top of the section. Some believe that endorsements might also affect how you appear in LinkedIn search results.

It’s time to stop ignoring endorsements and embrace them by letting them show off your Skills and providing your profile with a little bit more credibility (although not nearly as credible as having good recommendations, of course).

13.) Embrace the visual

linkedin featured section options

LinkedIn has given you the opportunity to add visual elements to your profile for some time, but have you leveraged the opportunity? They have recently begun to prominently feature (pun intended) these strategic visual elements in their new Featured section, which will appear just below your About section which displays your professional summary.

Unless you’ve been living in a cave without the Internet for the last year, we’ve seen the emergence – and importance – of the visual in social media marketing. This primarily includes photos and videos but it applies to memes (like the one I’m using at the top of this post) and all sorts of graphics – and even presentations.

LinkedIn gives you the ability to upload contents from a variety of sources as shown in the image above. If you’ve ever been interviewed or had your picture taken at a professional event, this is your chance to promote yourself by adding these visual elements. But don’t stop there: This is the area where you can be as creative as you want to be. If you’re lacking in ideas, ask your creative marketing folks for ways in which you can help promote your company through uploading visuals onto your profile. Even uploading your standard corporate presentation will at least provide something for your viewers to look at – and it might provide you business benefits as well!

14.) Make yourself contactable

How contactable are you? If you’re on LinkedIn looking for business opportunities, you need to make sure that you make yourself easy to contact. If you’re a 3rd degree connection or beyond, many won’t go through the hassle of sending a high-risk introduction or buying an InMail in order to contact you.

LinkedIn gives you the ability to include your contact details, such as up to three websites and a Twitter handle, for anyone to see. There is also a “Advice for Contacting [Name]” section where you could include your email address and/or phone number. You also have the option of subscribing to a paid plan and joining the OpenLink Network, giving those not in your network the opportunity to email you without having to pay for it. Don’t make it hard for those who want to get in touch with you to contact you: If they can’t easily contact you, they might just move on to the next person!

15.) Join relevant LinkedIn groups

Why would I mention joining LinkedIn Groups as part of a blog post on professional profiles? It has to do with your contactability: Joining the same Group allows others to contact you using the Group messaging feature. Which LinkedIn Groups should you join? You don’t have to join the maximum 100, but at least join a few groups that are related to your industry, discipline, or location – not to mention alumni groups from your university or even previous workplaces. If you haven’t been active in groups before, you might be surprised as to the business opportunities that exist within LinkedIn Groups! Even if you don’t have time to be active, displaying those group logos on your profile increases your contactability.

16.) Accomplishments

add linkedin sections to your profile

While this might not apply to everyone, if it applies to you, you should certainly be leveraging this. LinkedIn gives you the ability to add a number of additional items to your professional LinkedIn profile called “Accomplishments”, including:

  • Publications
  • Patents
  • Courses
  • Projects
  • Honors & Awards
  • Test Scores
  • Languages
  • Organizations

If these are important to you or your professional brand, you’ll want to make sure they’re part of your professional profile.

17.) Are you connected enough?

My final tip isn’t directly related to filling out your professional LinkedIn profile, but it is very much related to how many people might find and interact with you on LinkedIn. If you don’t have enough connections, you simply might not show up on as many searches as a 2nd degree connection as you should. From an outbound networking perspective you also won’t discover many of the hidden connections that exist all around us that are only uncovered when 1) we have a specific objective to search for a person and 2) we have a robust network.

Read my advice here on the Top 10 Ways How to Get More Connections on LinkedIn.

Any other tips to add to this professional LinkedIn profile tips checklist?

Grab My Free LinkedIn Ebook!

If you need more help with leveraging LinkedIn for your business, make sure you grab a copy of my free LinkedIn ebook Maximizing LinkedIn for Business.

For your handy reference, check out this infographic I created with my marketing partner MarketMeSuite based on this blog post to help you visually learn how to best create a professional LinkedIn profile:

Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters on Unsplash

Professional LinkedIn Profile Tips: A Checklist of 17 Must-Have Items. #linkedin #infographic See it here: http://maximizesocialbusiness.com/professional-linkedin-profile-tips-checklist-9648/

Hello, Neal, your article was very innovative also checklist given was very awesome this will surely help in maximizing social business for every startup.

Best regards,

Jason
MarketJoy, Inc.

Thanks Jason!

Thank you for your suggestion, the tips mention by you will surely help full in enhancing your LinkedIn profile.

Linkedin is the best one i’ve ever met

Yes – me too!

Anyone looking for help in these specific categories, can head straight to LinkedIn ProFinder for help in some of these specific areas! Check it out here: https://www.linkedin.com/profinder?trk=socialmedia

The key comment I receive is that I post so frequently. Being consistent and sharing content, to me, is the basis of success with LinkedIn.

I’ve had the same feedback Edwin. LinkedIn is not Twitter, so if you are getting that feedback, you might want to lower the frequency of your posting on LinkedIn. That’s what I did.

Great tips for maximizing results on Linked In~ Thank you!

You’re very welcome Carla!

Thank you, Neal, for the checklist.

I don’t think the status update is still being used on LinkedIn. If it is, I haven’t seen it in a while. Can you verify? Sometimes a second pair of eyes is good! :) Thanks!

(Have you noticed: LinkedIn can change overnight!!!)

Yes, Janet, the status update is still there – you need to go to the home page where at the top you should still be able to see the box!

Another great set of tips! One other tip I’d add is using ALL CAPS inside your LinkedIn summary and job descriptions. The reason being, LinkedIn doesn’t allow you to format text (bold, italic, etc.) so instead you can catch a reader’s eye with phrases like this:

WHAT I DO: (The Key problem I solve for clients or the key value I bring to clients/customers, etc.)

HOW I DO IT: (Explain your credentials, your unique experience and approach, what makes you different better/etc.)

WHAT CLIENTS SAY: (Testimonials can be written in here if you don’t have them already included below certain areas of your profile.)

Also Neal did you see the recent study (I read it on Social Media Today, I think, can find the link later) that said 64 percent of all website traffic coming to corporate websites via Social Media was coming from LinkedIn?!

It is really exploding as a great B2B marketing platform in particular. Way more than just a “job” website now! :)

Hey John, thanks for chiming in and your suggestion.

ALL CAPS, to some people, might seem a little “in your face”. I agree that it is a unique way of visually organizing things, but it “might” be a turnoff to some. Really depends on your own branding as well as your target market as the LinkedIn demographic is the most sophisticated of any social network.

As for the study, I believe that was of the FTSE 100, or top 100 companies in the United Kingdom. I wrote a book on LinkedIn sales and marketing back in 2011, so it’s been a business platform for awhile now ;-)

Excellent list. Recommend this for all those interested in improving their social presence through linkedin.

Thanks for stopping by Pooja!

Thank you so much for this concise, well-written and explained list. I am working to improve my profile and this is outstanding advice!

You’re very welcome! Good luck to you!

After reading this, I have a lot of work to do to utilize LinkedIn better! Thanks for the clear checklist.

You’re very welcome Ron! Good luck with it!

Thank you very much for sharing valuable tips! Additionaly I am allways tying to meet my contacts in person and facilitate their business as much as I can!

You’re very welcome Vladimir! Yes, your profile is static, but you also need to be dynamically networking in person as well!

Good solid checklist. Thanks I have some work to do. Am I the only one who feels like LI is doing a much worse job than previously about controlling the spammers & scammers? Seems like a ton of my LI communications are junk.

I think it’s more about an increase in spammers than anything else Harold.

Great list Neal. Unlike with other social media, LinkedIn has been the the basis of professionalism and that’s how important it is for businessmen to build one as well as maintain a good reputation. Glad you shared your secrets. I owe you a lot today. Thanks :)

You’re very welcome Belinda!

Neil….ABSOLUTELY NEEDED!! This information confirmed a lot of the ‘helpful hints’ I have received along the way BUT was not fully convinced on some items. Much Gratitude in sharing this wisdom! You are a SOCIAL MEDIA EXPERT !!!

Thanks Jennifer – I’ve been blogging about LinkedIn since 2008, so it was time to raise the stakes in the blogosphere ;-)

Neal, Very comprehensive post. I noticed that Tip #14 mentions you can include links to 3 websites and your Twitter account. Is that still true? I thought that feature went away. If it’s still around, please share where to find it and use it since it no longer appears on my profile. I totally agree with your point about adding multimedia to your profile. I think it’s essential to do so. The only other tips I’d add are: 1. You can move sections around to customize the flow of your Profile; and 2. Insert in there somewhere that you have a Company Page and share the name for searches should visitors like to learn more about your Company. Thanks for creating this post!

Thanks for the comment Michael! Yes, you can still edit your three websites in “Edit Contact Info,” NOT “Edit Profile.” Moving sections around is also a great idea – might not be used by everyone but can come in handy. As for the Company Page – well, that would be covered in an upcoming How To on Company Pages ;-) Thanks again for stopping by and commenting!

Neal, Fantastic! And I thought they’d done away with the 3 link feature. Thank you for directing me to it. So happy. :-)

You’re very welcome!

A nice set of 17 LI optimization update tips Neal (with an A)

I was surprised to see LI generated more engagements vs. my Google+ profile which I use 10x times more but since my G+ posts talk to my LI Groups using Friends+Me I get to see and share what’s important on both platforms.

Appreciate the comment – and correct spelling – Neil ;-)

LinkedIn is getting better at becoming an engagement-generating platform … and more professionals are learning to engage on the platform!

Great article Neal! Thanks for the refresher and a swift kick to take a new look at my profile and my keywords! Rethink time! Cheers!

My pleasure Ginger!

Neal, the keywords are what get me on LinkedIn. There are so many people doing what I do, I’ll be lucky to appear on the 10th page of the results! Is there a way to narrow that down any? I’ve been doing “Social Media Psychology” lately, maybe that’s a narrow niche?

Wade, I never ended up writing a blog post about it, but there was awhile when I was shut out of LinkedIn search results. That’s when I learned that you can’t rely on search results – you need to engage. Hope the advice helps you my friend!

Great list of must-haves! Thank you, Neal, for providing such a clear, concise checklist.

Glad you enjoyed it Debbie!

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