Under each position in the Experience section of your LinkedIn, you should have a short description of your responsibilities and accomplishments. If you don’t, at least copy and paste a few bullet points from your resume. Sharing information under each position makes your LinkedIn page look more thorough.
If you already have job descriptions, make sure each bullet point starts with an action verb, such as managed, directed, assisted, or created. Once everything is spick and span, read it over and make sure there aren’t any spelling errors or outdated information.
Include a link or two (2 minutes per link)
Your LinkedIn page is the place to include as much information about yourself and your dominican republic phone number resource skills as you can. Sure, you can write plenty of great things about yourself, but it’s more credible when third-party sites are saying great things about you as well.
In the Experience section of your page, link to an employee profile on your company’s website, a project you worked on, an interview you did, or anything else relevant to your job search.
The links you include depend on your industry. As a writer, I link to my author page, personal blog, and articles I’ve written.
Having direct examples of your work and providing additional information about yourself improves credibility. It only takes a minute to copy and paste a link, but it can make a huge difference to those viewing your LinkedIn page.
Review your job descriptions (4 minutes per position)
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