Wednesday, July 1, 2020
Rude Linkedin Introductions, you just sent one!
Rude Linkedin Introductions, you just sent one! Believe it or not, this is just rude and lazy Illin LinkedIn Introductions In the last few weeks, I feel like I suddenly got popular with all the LinkedIn Introductions I have received. Not in the âhot girl at the danceâ kind of way and not in the our company just got a billion dollar valuation way. Either my name is on a wall in a bathroom stall or my LinkedIn account hit a tipping point and has enough momentum to build on itself. The issue I have with these Illinâ (Inconsiderate LinkedIn Lazy INtroâs) LinkedIn Introductions is that they arrive in the inbox with no note, no introduction, and what I feel is a lack of professionalism. If I have known you for a while, we just caught up and when I get back to the office I see the invite to connect, I almost get it, but even then, would it kill someone to include a âgreat catching up with you? Lately, I have been receiving a lot of invites from people I donât know with no note, no introduction, nada. Just the standard message that your LinkedIn introductions provide: âId like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn.â For those of the Facebook generation, let me put it into perspective. OMFG! Seriously! Thats just rude! I donât care how hot, popular, or rich you are, I just think it is a little assuming to show up in my inbox with no introduction or purpose and ask me for something. It is one step removed from the pop up that you receive when on a porn site that says something like âLavender92 left you a messageâ. Not that I would know. . . I work in HR. Am I asking too much? Am I old-fashioned? LinkedIn introductions give professionals a great vehicle to connect, has made it super easy to reach out and touch someone and more often than not the opportunity is squandered. Just a couple of clicks of the mouse and you have the potential to be connected. Look, mom no typing! But this isnât Facebook. This isnât a personal and informal network for the mamarazzi. I look at this as a platform and opportunity to show off professional chops. I donât want 500 connections with people I have never worked with, emailed with, or been introduced to. I would rather have 50 quality connections that I trust, have worked with, or networked with. If I am going to connect with someone, I want the first impression to be one that is thoughtful, shows some respect, and yes, kisses up to some extent. I am not reaching out to you, you are reaching out to me. Are you such a celebrity that I should be jumping at the chance to connect with you? True Story: A family member was the right-hand woman to the governor of our state. The governor, who I had never met before in person, came to our house to pick up the family member. I opened the door and the governor doesnât introduce himself or say hello. Just says âis (family member name here) around?â I was seriously pissed. Of course, I know who this guy is. He was an Asian Super Hero in my mind UNTIL THAT MOMENT. Of all the people who should have some manners. . .it should be this guy. In our household, we were brought up to always invite a guest into the house and never yell for someone but to speak to them face to face. I wanted to stand right there in front of him, look him straight in the eye and yell out my family members name and say âsome old dude is here for you!â I didnât invite him and his protection detail in the house, but I did go upstairs and fetch my sister. I am no philistine. Does this sound familiar to your LinkedIn introductions? Show up, ask for something and assume I am going to run hither? If you are reaching out to connect with me (and I am a nobody), is it wrong of me to ask WHY? Is that vain of me? I am not expecting anyone to say, âhey sexy, saw your picture on LinkedIn, wanna hook up?â But would it kill anyone to type something like: Heard you speak at the recruiting event last week and wanted to reach out. I took your advice, thanks! Let me know if I can return the favor. Saw your blog post and wanted to reach out. Thought what you said about networking was spot on. I saw that you are going to attend the Best Place to Work awards next week, and was hoping I could introduce myself there, just wanted to reach out. The above gives me confidence that this connection may lead to something that we will both appreciate. It leaves me all touchy-feely-goosey- bumpy and even if you are a vendor looking to get into our pants, at least I get the feeling you are trying. Am I asking too much when I ask for 2 sentences? Did common courtesy just pass me by? Well, today is your lucky day because HRNasty wants to be the role model. Be one of the first 5 people to post this to your LinkedIn network and your thoughts in the comments below and I will send you an HRNasty window decal with a handwritten thank you note. I am bringing it back old school biatches! Boohhhyahhhh! Did technology kill professionalism and courtesy like video killed the radio star? I just did a speaking event for someone last week and the thank you I received was an email that said âthank for speakingâ in the subject line and the body of the email was blank. Not even a signature. Thanks a lot, buddy. LinkedIn introductions are a tool. Just like your daddy said, Take care of the tool and the tool will take care of you. See you at the after party, HRNasty nasty: an unreal maneuver of incredible technique, something that is ridiculously good, tricky and manipulative but with a result that canât help but be admired, a phrase used to describe someone who is good at something. âHe has a nasty forkball. 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