Making Prospecting Fun With LinkedIn

Build contacts with business executives you don’t know by linking with people you do using the tool LinkedIn. How? Let me provide some background first. LinkedIn is a Web 2.0 social marketing tool that fits into the neat nomenclature of “social network”. It is primarily created for business professionals. For our purposes, we will focus on discovering sales leads.

There has been a massive popularity of social networking sites such as LinkedIn, MySpace and Facebook. In recent years. In August 2007 alone, MySpace had more than 60 million unique visitors and Facebook attracted 19 million, a growth rate of 23 percent and 117 percent, respectively, from a year earlier.

If you are wondering what a “social network” is, think of them as websites where users create personal profiles, search for “friends” or “contacts,” and create extensive networks of connections.

So why might this tool be good for you for sales leads? Because it is big! I mean it is really BIG! It had more than 15 million members as of October 2007. It is one of the fastest-growing online social networks in the world. Traffic rose 323 percent from July 2006 to July 2007, making the site the No. 1 online destination for professional networking.

LinkedIn Contacts

After you register and create a profile page, you are ready to create your contacts. LinkedIn will automatically find all of your e-mail contacts who are already members of the site. You can also use LinkedIn’s “Find Contacts Wizard” to upload contacts from Microsoft Outlook or any other address book software.

Once you’ve uploaded your contacts, you then can select which of those LinkedIn users you’d like to invite to become members of your network. You can also use this opportunity to invite all of your non-LinkedIn contacts to join the site. The more you invite, the more connections you will be establishing.

LinkedIn Connections

On LinkedIn, the people who are part of your network are called your “connections”. Connections imply that you know the person well or that they’re a trusted business contact. LinkedIn warns against adding complete strangers to your network, or accepting an invitation from someone you don’t have a trusted relationship with.

Now what you want to do is to turn a contact into a connection. You will need to invite that person to join your network and they need to accept. Likewise, for another person to add you to their network they need to invite you and you need to accept. Regardless of who invites who, when an invitation is accepted, both parties are automatically added to each other’s list of connections.

How Do Sales Leads Work?

This is where the program gets fun. Think of the game “6 Degrees of Separation” (Usually associated with Kevin Bacon). The game is to find actors that have acted with another actor who has finally acted with Kevin Bacon (or whomever). Because of the mathematical odds, it can almost always be proven that we are all within 3 to 4 degrees (connections) of knowing or being related to each other.

So how does all this lead up to sales leads? Okay, let’s start out this way. Let’s say that you would love to find an in to the new medical supply plant that is moving hundreds of people in next year. Make a call to the receptionist of the personnel manager and ask for a meeting. If you get turned down, no problem. Get her business card. She’ll probably have her email address on it.

Now the fun begins. Add her to your list of connections. This will send her an email saying that you have added her to your list and would she mind if she added you to hers. This is very non-threatening and most people just accept. After all, she’s met you. The next step is to ask for an “introduction” to her boss (the personnel manager). Remember that this is not an appointment, but access to them as a “friend”.

If you get this, you are in. Now the two of you have a common friend (in the receptionist) who is common to each of you. Now it is much easier to invite him/her to lunch. The beautiful part of all this is that it can be done by the dozens and dozens to as many people as you care to prospect . . . the easy way.

Stop pulling your hair out over prospecting. Make it fun.

Randy Eagar, CRS
President WebsTarget SEO
www.WebsTarget.com



November 9th, 2008 by Randy Eagar

This entry was posted on Sunday, November 9th, 2008 at 5:22 pm and is filed under Real Estate SEO, Useful Internet Info. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

1 response about “Making Prospecting Fun With LinkedIn”

  1. Matthew said:

    Linkedin was added to the About.com Top 10 Employment site list with 2 other sites but linkedin is still the only social netwoking site on the list. 3 newest job sites on top list are:

    http://www.linkedin.com (professional networking)
    http://www.indeed.com (aggregated job listings)
    http://www.realmatch.com (matches you to the perfect job)

    Good luck to all those searching for jobs.

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