The market rewards visibility. It rewards value. It rewards those who choose to
Spend the next 48 hours optimizing your headline, adding a featured section, and commenting on five industry posts. Crush It on LinkedIn- Build Your Brand- Get Hir...
"Hi, I want a job. Do you have any openings?" (This is noise.) Send this instead (The Value DM): "Hi [Name], I’ve been following [Company]’s recent launch of [Product]. I noticed you optimized the onboarding flow. I actually wrote a case study on reducing drop-off rates by 25% using a similar method. If you have 30 seconds, I’d love to share the PDF. No ask, just wanted to contribute." Result: They now owe you a favor. They will ask for your resume. You just Crushed It . Strategy C: The Testimonial Before you even get the interview, provide value. Find a pain point the company has (check their Twitter mentions or Glassdoor reviews). Create a 1-page audit of how you would fix it. Send it to the Director. The market rewards visibility
Be that human. Update your profile. Start typing. Go get hired. Liked this article? Repost it to your network (go ahead, I give you permission) and comment "Blueprint" below if you want me to DM you the 5-step profile optimization checklist. "Hi, I want a job
“I didn’t want to apply blindly. I wanted to show you how I think. Here is a 3-point plan to fix your support ticket backlog.”
Whether you want to land a six-figure job, attract recruiters without applying, or become the go-to expert in your niche, this is the only blueprint you need. Here is exactly how to and Get Hired in 2024 and beyond. Part 1: The Foundation – The “All-Star” Profile That Actually Works Most people think an "All-Star" profile just means filling out every field. That is wrong. You need a magnet profile. Recruiters spend 6 to 8 seconds scanning your profile before deciding if you matter. Here is how to win in those 8 seconds. 1. The Headline (Stop using your job title) Your headline is the most valuable real estate on LinkedIn. Do not just write "Marketing Manager at X Corp." That tells me nothing.