Updates “How to REALLY use LinkedIn” 2512010
Transcription
Updates
“How
to
REALLY
use
LinkedIn”
2512010
Updates “How to REALLY use LinkedIn” 2512010 In this document you will find updates to the book How to REALLY use LinkedIn from January 2009 until this 2010 document. You will need a copy of the book to make sense of these updates. LinkedIn is a website and changes continuously, thus the contents of the book change, too. The purpose of this document is to reflect those changes and keep you current. If you are missing anything, please let me know. Strategy Let me begin with an important reminder that LinkedIn is a valuable tool when you stick to the fundamental strategy and start from your goals. Do we always have to pursue goals? My personal use of LinkedIn depends on my circumstances. When we have a big project or actually need something, or someone, we use LinkedIn a lot. At other times we tend to be more reactionary with our use of LinkedIn: following Groups, connecting with people, and contributing when we have something to offer. It is still vital to keep using LinkedIn during quiet times to keep the connections alive, maintain our networks, and make sure that we remain on the radar screens of other members. However, the greatest benefit is derived from actual questions that seek help— whether we gain more customers, more suppliers, more partners, more employees, a new job, experts inside and outside your own organization, and other people who can help you reach your goals. www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 1 of 22 Chapter LinkedIn Functionality (p. 38) Despite the fact that the layout has changed and LinkedIn doesn’t have a left‐ hand side menu anymore, the description of the menu items remains the same. The only thing you need to do is to find the menus on top. Here are some exceptions: Groups (p. 40) Extra menu item: “following”. This “following” option, apparently copied from Twitter.,can be used to view what topics people from your network may be posting in Discussions. More if offered than just following people’s tweets. Remark: you automatically follow all your first‐degree connections. People who are not in your first‐degree network can be followed by adding them manually. Why would you do this? • Some people write interesting content. • You may want to build a relationship with other people. • By reacting to their posts you increase your exposure. Extra item in a Group: Subgroups A Subgroup is a Group within a Group. This is a very handy feature for larger Groups who want to discuss topics in smaller Groups comprised of people having a specific background. For example, when the “mother” Group is global, you could make a Subgroup per country. Or when the “mother” Group is for HR professionals, Subgroups might be formed around Benefits, Talent Development, Salary Scales, and so on. Extra feature: News Sharing LinkedIn, as I wrote in How to REALLY use LinkedIn, offers many ways to increase your own visibility and credibility as well as to maintain your relationships. When you look at a particular item in the News section of a Group, you will see a bar on top with a few options. Click on “Share” to share the article with your first‐degree connections. www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 2 of 22 In other words, you yourself don’t have to write articles. You can also increase the visibility of articles of other people by posting a reference to them in Groups. Articles you have posted yourself, or those that are posted by others, can then be shared with your first‐degree connections using News Sharing. Contacts (p. 41) Extra menu item: “Contact Organizer”. This gives you the option to categorize contacts, save profiles, and add notes. Although categorization is an interesting feature, I would rather keep the information on my own computer. Remark: this feature is only available for those who have an upgraded account. Applications (p. 42) Three new applications have been added: SAP Community Bio (new) From the LinkedIn website: “The SAP Community Network (SCN) offers complex technical content and expertise for SAP developers, analysts, consultants, and administrators. Demonstrate your technical prowess to your colleagues, potential employers, and the world by broadcasting your membership and contributions in SCN with the SAP Community Bio application. Your profile will indicate your SAP membership status, your recent contributions and articles, and your SCN Point Level. “ In my opinion, this is a test to see how the SAP community reacts to this application and how much they use it. I assume when the results are good, more of these community bios, including contributions, will be added to the website. Tweets (new) From the LinkedIn website: “Access the most important parts of the professional conversation with Tweets, a Twitter client you can use right on LinkedIn. With Tweets, you can now display your most recent tweets on your LinkedIn profile. Tweets also gives you instant access to the updates of people you are following on www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 3 of 22 Twitter and the power to tweet, reply, and retweet—all from your LinkedIn home page.” For tips on how to benefit from this Application, see my remarks in the update about the Profile (below). Events (new) From the LinkedIn website: “See what events your entire professional network is attending and find events recommended to you based on your industry and job function! Meet up with prospects at the next industry event or reconnect with old friends. You can learn more about each conference and seminar, including reading comments about events, seeing who's attending and who's interested. You can put important conferences on your profile—even show when you are presenting or exhibiting!” For tips on how to use this Application to your benefit: see my remarks in the update about the Profile (below). Polls (update) Polls were already mentioned in How to REALLY use LinkedIn, and I now add more advice on how to use them. Polls can benefit you in several ways: 1. Get useful input from your own connections for yourself. 2. Get useful input from your own connections to use in an article, 3. Increase your “Know” factor (see the Fundamental Principles of Networking in How to REALLY use LinkedIn) among your own connections. 4. Increase your “Know” factor with people you want to reach (for example, new customers or new employees). This can be done in two ways: o By paying—which allows you to select specific functions or roles and consequently access to people whom you don’t know yet. o By asking your first‐degree connections to invite their network to participate as well If you use this application, my advice is to create something with the results. Write a blog post, a short article, or create a SlideShare presentation. Then, share the your project with your network and the people who responded by sending them the link and showing it in your Profile (see more tips in the Chapter about Profile). www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 4 of 22 Add connections (p. 44) There is no longer a green button on the left‐hand side, but a green hyperlink on top of the screen instead. This is also accessible from Contacts and then you can Add Connections. Account & Settings (p. 48) Remark: this menu item at the top has been renamed “Settings”. Many people ask questions about how LinkedIn works regarding interactions between people or how they can change which actions and details are displayed to other people. This page is the place to learn and fine‐tune how LinkedIn works for you. Since there are lots of options, take your time to click on all items to understand what they do. Use How to REALLY use LinkedIn as a guide. These are new items: Under Profile Settings • • Member Feed Settings o Your personal feed displays Network Updates from actions you have performed on LinkedIn. You can choose to whom it should be visible. o Choose one of 4 options: My member feed is visible to… Nobody (don't display my member feed) My Connections (first degree) My Network (first three degrees) Everyone Twitter Settings o Display your Twitter account on your LinkedIn profile. Options: Yes, visible to anyone No, do not display on my profile o Share your tweets in your LinkedIn status. Options Yes, share all tweets Share only tweets that contain #in or #li (For example: "Working on a new blog post about increasing meeting productivity #in") More elaborate tips can be found at: http://learn.linkedin.com/twitter/ Also read my advice about this LinkedIn‐Twitter integration in the section of the updates regarding the Profile (see below) www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 5 of 22 Brand new section “Groups” • • • Group Invitation Filtering o You can control how you’ll be notified of group invitations. Options: I am open to receiving group invitations. (Recommended) I am not interested in receiving any group invitations. Group Invitations will then automatically be sent to your “Blocked” list. My Groups: takes you to the Groups page. Groups Order and Display: a very handy tool to change the order of the Groups of which you are member. The more Groups you join, the more interesting this feature becomes. www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 6 of 22 Chapter “How to use LinkedIn: Basic Strategy” (p. 55) Profile (p. 55) Remark: since LinkedIn introduced the Maiden Name field, you don’t have to “abuse” the Name field anymore. Extra item: “Twitter”. Here you can link your Twitter and LinkedIn accounts (see also the tips in the Applications chapter). However, think about your strategy before integrating the two accounts. This is a copy/paste from a blog post on my blog “The Networking Coach’s Opinion” (www.janvermeiren.com) Pros of Twitter integration: ‐ When someone looks at your Profile and likes it, they can click immediately on your Twitter ID and start following you. This is a benefit because sometimes it is hard to find someone on Twitter (despite the search engine). Why? Not everybody uses their own name or when they do they don’t always use the same picture as on LinkedIn (and then you try to figure out which John Smith he is). Of course, most of the time it is not difficult, but shortcuts that make our life easier are better. ‐ You have to post something only once, instead of posting it on Twitter and then again on LinkedIn. This single step makes life saves time. Cons of the Twitter integration: ‐ Some topics people post on Twitter are personal. Members of a professional networking website may have no interest in them (and sometimes it is better that they don’t know what their connections are posting; be aware that everything you post online might be found by your professional contacts, so always think of this before you write!) ‐ Twitter has a different pace from LinkedIn. Some people tweet 20 times a day. LinkedIn goes much slower and people use it in a different way. This sometimes frustrates younger people who prefer the speed of Facebook and Twitter. But remember, it is a website for professional networking with its appropriate pace. To take care to benefit from the advantages, while avoiding the disadvantages, take this tip into account: www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 7 of 22 As I wrote in my book How to REALLY use LinkedIn, there are free services that allow you to post to different websites at the same time (Facebook, Plaxo, MySpace and many others as well as LinkedIn and Twitter). For every message you post, you can select the websites where you want it to appear, giving you more control and saving time as well. Such services include: ‐ Hellotxt.com ‐ Ping.fm ‐ Pixelpipe.com New item: Personal Information You can add your Phone Number, Instant Messaging Name, Address, Birthday, and Marital Status. Before you fill in any of these fields, ask yourself if you want to share these with the world in general, and on a professional networking website, in particular. Applications I have discovered new benefits from some of the applications. This might be very useful information for you, too! SlideShare application Use the LinkedIn wizard to help set up a free account on SlideShare.net, upload a document (it doesn’t have to be a slide show) and link this with your Profile. Why? For two reasons: 1. You can share interesting information with your network. This increases your “Know, Like, and Trust factor” as well as your personal branding, visibility, and credibility. 2. SlideShare is a web site that Google loves. As a consequence, you can achieve a high rank in the search results. I accidentally discovered this when I saw that one of my presentations was second in Google! Many companies pay large sums of money to get their website so high and still fail. You might do better this way, without spending a cent! Remarks: • It is always crucial to share insights and tips with people in your SlideShare documents. “Normal” marketing material or a sales pitch have no place here. www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 8 of 22 • Use different slideshows from your regular presentations you do for a live audience. If you craft the latter well the text is limited. You use them as the backbone of your presentation with lots of pictures and only a small amount of words. Since people don’t hear you when looking at the documents on your Profile without audio (unless you put extra effort into it and make a so‐called SlideCast), you might need to rework your documents before posting them on SlideShare. Events When I wrote the book all the Applications and Events were brand new. In the beginning, Events was even not categorized as an application. I also predicted that LinkedIn would do more with it. It has already happened and I predict it will become even more important in the future. Why would you use Events on your Profile? • People can see what event you are going to attend, present, or exhibit and meet you there in person. That’s always preferable to meeting online. People can see this in your Profile or on their Home Page under Updates. • You can help promote an event (of your own or someone else). There are so many events and often we don’t know they exist. Our connections might discover many interesting events by reading our Profiles and updates on their LinkedIn Home Page. • Of course, you can also learn about events by looking at your Home Page and in people’s Profiles and find where you can meet them. Google Presentation Although you might think: I won’t need this one if I already use the SlideShare application (and I can use 3 SlideShare presentations in my Profile and only one Google Presentation), you might want to reconsider. Why? Nowadays, video is used increasingly on the Internet. However, on LinkedIn there is no room for a video UNLESS you use Google Presentation in combination with YouTube. This is how to add video to your Profile using Google Presentation: 1 ) Make a SHORT video (2‐3 minutes) 2 ) Upload it to YouTube 3 ) Go to Google Docs (you might need to create a new account such as a Gmail account) 4 ) Choose "Create New" and then "Presentation" 5 ) Choose "Insert" and then "Video" www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 9 of 22 6 ) Search for the video you just uploaded to YouTube, click on it and press the "Select Video" button 7 ) Log in to LinkedIn and choose "Profile/Edit Profile" 8 ) Scroll down until you see Applications (left‐hand side) and Press "Add Application" 9 ) Choose "Google Presentation" 10) Select the presentation you have just made. A word of caution regarding the content: always use videos (or slideshows or documents) to share tips and help people. Explicit sales messages have no place on your Profile. Encourage people to know and like you first by sharing and helping (remember the “Know, Like, Trust Factor”!). This also applies to job seekers. Share some tips regarding your expertise in your video. This will give insights to future employers of your potential value to them. And video also shows how proactive and creative you are since almost nobody uses video in their LinkedIn Profiles. This gives you an extra advantage! Extra strategies for organizations using the LinkedIn Profile To achieve better branding and visibility results from a company’s point of view, here are some additional tips: Websites I advise using the websites on the Profile of the employees of an organization in the following way: 1. Website 1: link to the home page of the website of the organization (for example: www.company‐abc.com) using the same key words for all coworkers. Remember to use the “other” function to add these key words. Multiple links to a specific page will cause it to appear higher in Google (or another search engine) when people search with these key words. 2. Website 2: link to a specific page on the website of the organization that relates to the job of the individual. For example: www.company‐ abc.com/products/copiers.html for an account executive for copiers. Also use the key words for finding copiers. This will help the website to reach a higher rank in search engines, and it will make a connection with the expertise or job of the individual. 3. Website 3: “free” link. This can be used to link to a blog, a personal website, or another web page of the organization. www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 10 of 22 Summary and specialties I explained in the book “How to REALLY use LinkedIn” the difference between Summary and Specialties. In Specialties you find jargon, abbreviations, and “tech talk”. Use Summary to explain what you do in words that everybody can understand, whatever their background. This is my advice for building your Summary: 1. One paragraph about the organization that is the same for all coworkers. This elevates company branding. 2. One or two paragraphs about the professional expertise of the individual. This helps personal branding. 3. One paragraph describing some personal interests. Let the visitors to your Profile see more than just your resume! www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 11 of 22 Chapter Advanced Strategies (p. 93) If readers had a critical comment about the book, it concerned the repetition in this chapter. I agree that many tips are the same for the different types of people. However, my intention was that everybody could read just the part that was applicable to them, NOT the other parts. But I gladly listen to suggestions for improving the book (and everything else that relates to Networking Coach). I will simplify the tips in the second edition of the book. That being said, here are a few extra tips that are applicable to all Profiles: Make sure people can see who you are when you look at their Profile. When you look at someone’s Profile the default settings are “Only show my anonymous profile characteristics, such as industry and title”. Change the settings to “Show my name and headline” so people can see you have visited their Profile. Why? Chances are that they will see it and will contact you because they are curious why you visited their Profile. They might contact you instead of your having to contact them. However, as you have read in How to REALLY use LinkedIn, I suggest that you take action by arranging an introduction through a mutual contact. That works much better than waiting for other people to contact you after your visit to their Profile. Since it takes only a few seconds to adjust these settings, you just can add, “Show my name and headline” to your “strategy portfolio”. How to change those settings can be found under “Settings (on top of every page) ‐> Privacy Settings ‐> Profile Views) Use “Who’s viewed my Profile” In addition to the previous tip, look for the people who have visited your Profile. If you find visitors, you can contact them with thanks for visiting your Profile and ask how you can help them. Refrain from selling yourself or your products/services—your priority is building relationships. www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 12 of 22 If you see just general characteristics you can click on them. LinkedIn will then do a search with these parameters. Most of the time it will generate so many results you won’t be able to do anything with this glut of information. But once in a while you might find only one person. Then you can contact them by thanking them for visiting your Profile and asking them how you can help. You can determine visitors to your Home Page on the right hand side under “Who’s viewed my Profile?” By the way, here is a tip that was already published in How to REALLY use LinkedIn: many people are confused when they read: “To see more people, upgrade your account.” They think that paying reveals the names of the people instead of anonymous profile characteristics. The limitation is that you can see MORE people (with a free account you only see 5 people), but not WHO they are. To be able to see who they are, THEY have to change their settings in their account. www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 13 of 22 Chapter Hot Discussion Topics and Burning Questions (p. 137) Here are some questions we have received in our presentations, workshops, and training courses. “My Profile is not 100%. How will people react to this?” Relax. Nobody can see your percentage. LinkedIn uses this percentage only to help you to make your Profile as attractive as possible to other people. So follow the advice LinkedIn gives you, It is OK if you don’t have 100% (yet). “I want to reach the help desk, but I can’t find the contact form” It is still there, but you have to take an extra step: • Click on “Help” on the top of any page • Type one or more keywords in your question in the search box • You will receive some answers from the Frequently Asked Questions database • On top you will now see an extra menu item “Ask Customer Service”. Click on it and use the page to get in touch with the LinkedIn help desk. “How do I remove and block someone who is spamming the Group Discussions?” As a Group manager you can do this. • Go to Group/Manage/Members. • Search for their name. • At the top: click on the grey button: “Remove, Block, and Delete all contributions”. “How do I put video on my Profile?” Normally you can’t put video on your Profile, unless you use Google Presentation together with a YouTube movie, as explained above. See the chapter How to REALLY Use LinkedIn: Basic Strategy and then the sub‐ chapter “Profile” in this document for the steps to accomplish this. www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 14 of 22 “How do I save my searches and where can I find the ones I have already saved?” After you have performed a search, next to the number of results you find the option: Save this search. Depending on your account type you may have 3 (basic account=free) to 10 saved searches. You can find your “Saved Searches” on the right‐hand side at the top of the page “Advanced Search” in blue. Or at the same location after performing a search. “I upgraded my account so I could send InMails, but I still can’t reach some people.” I already explained that it is much easier to have yourself introduced by a mutual contact (preferably using a Magic Email) than to send “cold” messages (to strangers). However, some people still want to have direct contact and since you can send only direct messages to people from your first‐degree network, they will pay and upgrade their account so they can send InMails (= direct messages to people who are not first‐degree contacts). However, some people still can’t be reached. Why? Because everybody can choose whether or not to accept InMails! This can be done under Settings/Email Notifications/Contact Settings. There are two options: • I’ll accept Introductions and InMails (default) • I’ll accept only Introductions. Therefore, if people change the default setting to the limited one, you still can’t reach them, even if you upgraded your account type. Tip: if you really want to send a direct message to someone, look in his/her Profile to see which Groups (s)he has joined and become a member as well. The default settings allow people to accept direct messages from other Group members whether they are in their first degree network or not! This option can be turned off as well, but most people leave it active. www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 15 of 22 Chapter Free Tools To Save You Time When Working With LinkedIn (p. 166) There are two extra tips for this chapter. HelloTxt An alternative to Hellotxt.com for posting your status updates or tweets just once and having them appear on all the websites where you have an account: ‐ ping.fm ‐ pixelpipe.com TinyURL An alternative for TinyURL that also shows how many people clicked on the shortened hyperlink, is Tr.im (http://tr.im). You will also receive other identifying information: e.g., when people clicked on one of your links, which website they came from (when you use Tr.im in combination with HelloTxt you always can see if people come from LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook or another website), from which countries, and so on. www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 16 of 22 Update on Ads This part of LinkedIn is for a limited audience and thus is a separate item in this document. It is worth mentioning because many companies might benefit from it. For your information I will provide you with an overview of the options (disclaimer: this is copy from the LinkedIn website). I don’t use this function on the LinkedIn website myself but I wanted you to know that it exists. If you are interested in using Ads, please go to the LinkedIn website or contact LinkedIn (not us ). You will find these options at the bottom of every page on LinkedIn under “Advertising”. There are two ways to use ads on LinkedIn: Large corporations (or organizations with a larger budget: +25.000 dollars): direct link http://advertising.linkedin.com/ 1. Custom LinkedIn Group (http://advertising.linkedin.com/customgroup): the only difference for the moment from a regular LinkedIn Group is that you can add a video and RSS feed on the overview page. 2. Four ways to target a specific audience: a. Run of Professional Targeting: Reach out to all 57M affluent, influential, and motivated professionals on LinkedIn. b. InCrowd Targeting: Efficiently send a message to one of nine popular, pre‐defined target groups: i. Small & Medium Business Professionals: Professionals working in companies with 50 to 500 employees—more than 3.7M ii. Business Decision Makers. Directors and above at any size company—more than 7.0M iii. Financial Service Professionals. Finance professionals or those who work in the financial services industry—more than 7.5M iv. Sales Professionals. Professionals whose job function is sales—more than 2.8M v. Marketing Professionals or those who work in the marketing and advertising industry—more than 3.5M vi. Startup Professionals. Professionals working at companies with 1 to 50 employees—more than 3.2M vii. Corporate Executives. Directors and above at companies with more than 500 employees—more than 2M viii. IT Professionals whose job function is IT or engineering — more than 5.5M www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 17 of 22 ix. Career Changers. Professionals who have changed positions or employers in the last 60 days—more than 970k c. Content Targeting: Deliver your message in areas contextually relevant to your brand, product, or service. d. Custom Targeting: Identify and target hard‐to‐reach audiences using multi‐faceted profiles or behavioral data. 3. Means to reach them: a. Display Advertising: bannering. b. Sponsorships: i. Answers ii. Polls iii. Events iv. Applications c. White Paper Distribution d. Partner Messages LinkedIn Direct Ads for any budget direct link: www.linkedin.com/directads LinkedIn Ads work the same way as Google Ads: • You make a small ad (title, 2 lines description and a link) • You choose your target market. LinkedIn lets you combine these parameters: o Company Size o Job Function o Industry o Seniority o Gender o Age o Geography: So far LinkedIn lets you choose only a specific geographical location with more than 1 million members. At the time of writing, the countries were Australia, Canada, India, Netherlands, UK. and USA (and each state of the USA). • You choose a daily budget (minimum 10 US dollars per day) and Pay per Click (minimum 2 US dollars per click, making it pretty expensive compared with Google, but making people think more avoids ad‐spam) or Pay Per 1000 impressions (minimum 3 US dollars). www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 18 of 22 Recruiting on LinkedIn LinkedIn is a fantastic tool to find new employees. How to use LinkedIn to find them? For starters, I suggest you read all the tips in How to REALLY use LinkedIn and use LinkedIn to recruit people. First begin with the basic strategy and then follow the advanced strategies. If you want more results, or an even better tool, contact LinkedIn directly for their LinkedIn Talent Advantage program (see also http://talent.linkedin.com) I wish you happy networking! Jan PS: If you know people who are struggling beginners with LinkedIn, feel free to mention the FREE light version of the book How to REALLY use LinkedIn which can be found at www.how‐to‐really‐use‐linkedin.com www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 19 of 22 About Jan Vermeiren and Networking Coach Other than other training companies Jan Vermeiren and the team of Networking Coach are specialized in online and offline networking and referrals. So we don’t do anything else, but for other topics, we are happy to connect you with a specialist from our network. Products • • • • • Free networking ecourse: www.networking‐coach.com Network book and bestseller: “Let’s Connect! A practical guide for networking at events and on the web for every professional whether in sales or not (free light version available at www.letsconnect.be) Network CD: “Let’s Connect at an Event. Thirty immediately‐applicable networking tips to make every event a success” (free light version available at www.networking‐coach.com ) Everlasting Referrals Home Study Course: how to create a network of “ambassadors” that will bring you in contact with prequalified prospects so you can end cold calling (www.everlasting‐referrals.com) Book How to REALLY use LinkedIn (you already know that one ): www.how‐to‐really‐use‐linkedin.com Services For individuals: • Workshops and training courses (open format and customized): o Introduction session: networking or referrals (half day) o What’s Your Sticky Story©? (half day) o Proactive Networker Training Course (2 days) o Everlasting Referrals Training Course (2 days, for business owners and sales personnel) o Power of Networking and Referrals Course (3 days, for business owners and sales personnel) o Smart Networking Training Course (3,5 days) www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 20 of 22 • o We happily provide tailored training courses in a class room format, or via teleseminars or webinars or a combination of these formats. (Interactive) Presentations and Keynote Speeches, some examples: o “Everlasting Referrals, No More Cold Calls”. What are the 7 main reasons that most organizations don't receive (spontaneous) referrals and what to do about it? o “Your Net Works”. How to tap into the Power of your Network. o Network toward a new job. o “What's your Sticky Story©?” How to answer “And what do you do?” in a memorable way. o “Oh no, another reception”. How to network efficiently at a business cocktail gathering, conference, or any other event. o “How to REALLY use LinkedIn”. How to find and be introduced to the people who can help you reach your goals (new customers, a new job, new employees, suppliers, partners, or experts). Detailed descriptions and the calendar of open training courses and seminars can be found at www.networkingcoach.com For organizations: • Interactive presentations and keynote speeches (see above) • Strategic consulting to integrate networking and referrals as a sales strategy • Strategic consulting to integrate networking and referrals for recruitment • Advice on how to stimulate networking between participants in a networking event Contact us for a presentation, incompany workshop or advice via +32 3 216 27 47 or connectwithus@networkingcoach.com www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 21 of 22 References Here are some of the companies and professional organizations for whom Networking Coach team has worked: Accenture, Agoria, Alcatel, Antwerp Diamond Bank, Belgacom, BIASS, Bosch, Colruyt, CTG, Deloitte, Delta Lloyd Bank, Dexia, Dupont, Eandis, ECM Congres (European Cities Marketing), EDS, Ernst & Young, Euphony, Fortis, Gemeente Den Haag, Getronics, IBM, ING, Janssen Farmaceutica, Johnson Controls, KBC, Leaseplan, Mobistar, MOVI, Nationale Bank van België, Nike, Partena, Resources Global Professionals, SAP, SD Worx, Securex, Siemens, SOFIA, Stad Gent, Stichting Kwaliteitskring Limburg, Stichting Marketing, Sun Microsystems, Telenet, TNT, TvZ‐congres, Unisys, Unizo, USG People, Van Breda Risks & Benefits, VIK, VKW, Vlaamse Overheid Bestuurszaken, VMA, VOKA, VVSG, Women and Network and many small business owners and freelancers. These are some of the universities, alumni organizations and nonprofit organizations organizations for whom Networking Coach team has worked : Aiesec, Ehsal Alumni, RSM Erasmus International MBA Rotterdam, Hogeschool Arnhem Nijmegen Alumni, JCI (Junior Chamber International), Karel De Grote Hogeschool, Markant, Palliatieve Zorgen Netwerk, Provinciale Hogeschool Limburg, PSA Holland (Professional Speakers Association Holland), Solvay Business School Alumni, University of Antwerp Management School and Vlerick Leuven Management School International MBA. Subscribe to the monthly network‐ and referral tips from Jan Vermeiren and his fellow networking and referral experts from all over the world (www.networking‐coach.com). Read Jan’s weekly blog full of networking and referral tips at www.janvermeiren.com Contact us via +32 3 216 27 47 or connect‐with‐us@networking‐coach.com www.networking‐coach.com Updates Page 22 of 22