Editor’s Note: you can no longer research skills using the /skills page on LinkedIn. However, I’ve figured out other ways to get this information.
Are you taking control of what skills show up on your profile? Or are you letting your connections determine what’s listed on your LinkedIn page?
Guilty of the latter? Big mistake. That’s a rookie move.
Many LinkedIn users will pick a few skills and leave things alone. What happens next is your network begins endorsing you for skills derived by LinkedIn’s software. Some are fitting, some are not. Either way, many of these skills are not optimized for what employers typically search for.
(Or even worse, they’re so generic it’s barely possible to stand out amongst the crowd.)
When an employer searches for skills, they either use them as keywords, or through the LinkedIn Recruiter product where skills are a search parameter. So to increase the likelihood of being found by employers, and getting endorsed for the most relevant skills, use the following game plan to pick your LinkedInSkills.
Head on over to http://linkedin.com/skills and look for Project Management. You’ll see this is the eighth most popular skill used by all LinkedIn users.
So if you are a project manager, it certainly makes sense to use this skill. However, you’ll notice the top 10 people in your network with this skill.
Click on the number one project manager listed there. (On my list, the number project manager has 321 endorsements for the skill).
If you have more experience than them at a higher rank in a company, then you don’t need this article. If that person outranks you, keep reading.
Step 1: Start With a Basic Skill
First, you want to start high level. Pick a Skill that is all encompassing for what you do. Using the skills’ pages’ auto-suggest, begin typing the name of your Skill. LinkedIn will suggest the most commonly used version of that name.
Open up that skills page and add it to your profile if its not already there.
Step 2: Filter Down to More Targeted Skills
Once you’re on the high-level skills page, there are a number of important research tools available to you.
Next, look for the graph called Relative Growth on the top right of the page:
This chart tells you which skills are growing, year over year, relative to other, related skills.
Now pick a skill with a positive growth rate.
You may find many skills with a negative growth rate, avoid these. Act like you didn’t see them.
Next, tab over to the Size chart. You’ll see your high-level skill will devour it’s closest competitor, much like this:
Click on the next one down to get a better view:
Start picking related skills but have a smaller size and a positive growth curve. For example, I found Creative Resourcing is a skill with relatively fewer competitors (only 460 people use it) but with a very high growth curve (23% year over year growth).
Jackpot.
Step 3: Build Your Skills Library
Quick Recap: We began with a high-level skill and added many related smaller, high-growth skills. This allows you to build a smarter skills library.
This is what your skills library should look like:
I (Large size, low growth)
I-I-I (Medium size, medium or level relative growth)
I-I-I-I-I-I (Small size, high growth)
Your last step is to add no more than 50 total skills. Then sit back and wait for your endorsements to trickle in.
It’s a beautiful thing.
Joshua Waldman, author of Job Searching with Social Media For Dummies, is recognized as one of the nations top authorities in Social Media Career Advancement. To learn Joshua’s secret strategies for shortening the online job search and getting the right job right away, watch his exclusive video training here to learn How To Use Social Media Find a Job
too bad it’s discontinued 🙁
great article Josh – never really considered how important these skills were to the linkedin profile until now. very enlightening.
JohnGenovese Glad you liked it!
Josh, I’m trying to follow the steps above and I’m not seeing what you describe. First, when I search for Project Management at the URL you give, I don’t see anything about a ranking on the resulting page, nor do I see a graph of any kind. At the upper right of the Project Management box, I do see a percentage of -3.3% next to what appears to be a down arrow. But the arrow isn’t “live.” (I’ve tried clicking it in Mozilla and in Internet Explorer.)
Any idea what’s wrong?
lindacfb Oh heck! LinkedIn took this away! I’m so sorry. But they must have removed these features this week.
Well, heck, indeed! Never fear. I’m sure that in no time at all you will find something just as useful to pass along. 😉