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LinkedIn – how not to get hired

We have moved all our recruitment initiatives to LinkedIn jobs since we felt that South African recruiters add little to no value in the recruitment process – think about it: a typical recruitment agency will charge a company a placement fee of between 7 – 30% of the candidate’s cost-to-company – so if you hire a resource at R400,000 p.a. this will cost anywhere between R27,000 to R100,000 in placement fees. Considering that a recruitment agency hardly ever does much work (i.e. job applicants are ask to “reformat” their CVs and agencies do not validate properly that a CV matches an advertised job), I hardly find it justified to charge such obscene placement fees.

LinkedIn Jobs becomes a more attractive option as the typical cost of a job-posting is around R1300 (for 30 days) and I have noticed that the quality and number of applications has positively increased in the last 12 months. As an example, our Linux admin job post attracted over 100 CV submissions in a space of 1 week and about 40% had a good match and we managed to finalise the hiring within 8 days. Don’t get me wrong, LinkedIn Jobs does require some screening of applications, but certainly not to the extent that I would pay someone tens of thousands of Rands to do it – it is fairly obvious what CV submissions will become short-listed (I pretty much discard any application which does not meet the requirements outlined below).

Having dealt with a fair share of CVs and LinkedIn submissions, and having reviewed thousands of CVs during my career in information technology, I thought it would be worthwhile to give some tips for job-seekers. I am always astonished how little care and attention people give to their CVs and LinkedIn profiles, especially since this is the only way how you as a candidate can market yourself. If you do a poor or mediocre job, it just tells me that you could not be bothered and do not really value your career interest.

Camel-case your name

I have never understood why people write their name in lower-case. Why? For me, the standard convention is to “camel-case” your name – it just does not look right if your CV or LinkedIn profile reads “gerd naschenweng” vs “Gerd Naschenweng”. Whenever I see an all-lower-case name, I tend to think that the person could not be bothered to spell his/her name right and this then makes me wonder how much care/diligence the prospective employee would bring into my company.

Spelling and grammar

English is not my first language, but I try to get my spelling and grammar correct most of the time. While mistakes will happen, I do get concerned when a candidate highlights as a core-strength “great attention to detial” and then manages to spell “detail” wrong, but also misspells the heading of their CV as “Cariculum vitae” (especially bad, when it is in a 48pt font on the first page).

Your LinkedIn profile picture

LinkedIn is a professional network and your profile image should be professional. This means no picture of you as a cartoon character / in a dress-up / not wearing clothes / wearing a bikini (or worse a mankini) / in the bedroom / in the shower / in the toilet / wearing a motorcycle helmet:

If your LinkedIn profile image looks like this – change it

First impressions count – we are human after all and judge – it’s life. So if your LinkedIn profile image contains a picture of you spread out on a bed with guns, nun-chucks and gold-chains it will not be professional (unless you apply for some gang-related position).

Your LinkedIn profile

There is a reason why LinkedIn asks you to complete your profile. If you do not have a work history, make sure that your profile description provides a lot of detail. Even without a work history it would help to add details about hobby projects or publications you participated in – anything which can demonstrate that you possess the necessary skills for the job you are applying for. Link your portfolio- or project-websites to your LinkedIn profile as projects – this is a great way to showing off what you are capable of.

Provide at least some detail about your work history – this should include a summary description of your role and work you did. There is nothing worse about a LinkedIn profile, if it just shows company names and start/end dates of your employment. To me it looks like you “banged” your profile together in a hurry, without much pride and care.

Your LinkedIn job submission

Some really simple rules – which should apply to any job you apply to:

 

 

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