Project Management

LinkPitching – Seven Fatal Errors LinkedIn Users Commit Every Day

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A LinkedIn interaction from some time back still sticks with me today. Why? He and I connected, then he immediately asked to review my personal finances so he could do for me what he had allegedly done for so many other “thrilled customers.” I told him “No thanks.” He replied back asking me why. Being the direct guy I am, I told him I thought it was insincere to connect with me and immediately want to review my personal finances and try to sell me on his service. He said he never asked me to send my personal finances through LinkedIn. At this point, the discussion was no longer about him trying to sell me a service; instead, I wanted to provide a teachable moment for him. I told him that sending personal finances through LinkedIn wasn’t the issue, but I didn’t want to divulge my personal finances to someone I didn’t even know who connected with me only 30 minutes ago. After another couple of interactions, he told me that “nice people” would agree to meet with him (I guess I’m not a nice person) and that he was rescinding his offer to meet (even though I already told him I didn’t want to meet with him). It was kind of like “you can’t break up with me because I’m breaking up with you first”. He then wished me the best. He made an impression on me for sure, just not one he wanted.

As of this writing, LinkedIn has over 600 million users and has become a dominant force in connecting people to do business with each other. It has disrupted geographic barriers, so that someone in his basement in Cleveland can do business with someone in Los Angeles, Paris, or Bangalore. It’s also insanely cheap and easy to establish a platform and reach potential customers who 20 years ago would have been out of reach. This low barrier to entry and massive audience potential is fertile ground for ambitious businesspeople (who I refer to as LinkPitchers) to canvass large populations for business. Now I’m in no way telling the ambitious to not pursue business using LinkedIn with all their passion and energy. But there are right and wrong ways to do it.

My years of LinkedIn experience have led me to seven fatal errors LinkPitchers make:

  1. Not understanding my profile – I know this may sound like a “no duh” but I’m amazed at how many people send me canned messages that prove they didn’t even look at my profile. My LinkedIn banner says “Lonnie Pacelli, Author” next to my published books. Yet I regularly get messages asking if I’d ever considered becoming an author. Before you solicit make sure you take a few minutes to understand what the person actually does.
  2. Not putting space between a request to connect and a follow-up – A request to connect followed immediately with a pitch tells me you’re not at all interested in me; you’re just trolling for business. Putting space between the two at least creates the illusion you’ve taken time to research me.
  3. Not demonstrating you know something about me – Some of the most effective LinkedIn messages I’ve received establish some sort of connection with topics I write about. I write a lot about autism and disability inclusion, so when I get a message asking about autism or telling me they have a child on the spectrum, I’m more likely to respond.
  4. Not asking personal questions before you’ve established rapport – Sorry, but just because I connected with you on LinkedIn doesn’t mean in the next breath I’m going to tell you about my financial goals. It takes time to develop trust in a relationship. Even if you’re a connection of a connection, it doesn’t mean I’m willing to divulge anything to you beyond my profile.
  5. Not being sincere about why you’re following up – An insincere, boilerplate compliment like “I’m really impressed with and I can generate 20k leads a month for you” screams slimy salesperson. I’d feel much better getting a message like, “Thanks for connecting with me. I’m interested in what you have to say and look forward to reading your posts to see if there’s common ground for us to do business together.”
  6. Not having the stripes to do what you’re selling – If you send me a request to connect, I’ll look at your business, education, and experience. If you’re billing yourself as a financial advisor but have minimal relevant education or professional experience, I probably won’t want to do business with you.
  7. Not taking a hint – If you don’t get a response, don’t keep sending “I’m sure you’re very busy and you might have not seen my prior message to you” messages. I saw the message and decided not to pursue it. Sending additional messages will not make my view of you more favorable.

By all means use LinkedIn and the powerful tools it can bring to your business. Just keep these seven fatal errors in mind during your next LinkPitching expedition.


Posted on: January 29, 2021 09:00 AM | Permalink

Comments (13)

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Kwiyuh Michael Wepngong
Community Champion
Financial Management Specialist | US Peace Corps Yaounde, Centre, Cameroon
Wow... merci Lonnie,
I'll obviously upgrade my LinkedIn experience.. Thanks for sharing this

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Donna King PM III| Orbital ATK Ellicott City, Md, United States
Honestly, I don't find LinkedIn very useful. I'm interested to hear how others are using it, outside of pitching services, that makes it worthwhile as a career building tool.

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Gretchen Ullrich Program Lead| Bank of Anerica New York, Ny, United States
This is spot on!
Slimy salespeople are just that - slimy!
I use linkedin to maintain work relationships and share information.

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Rita Giovinazzo Director Information Technology| Contract Irvine, Ca, United States
There was a time I found LinkedIn to be a very useful application, however I am now getting several requests for 'Paid' surveys. Apparently I am suddenly an 'expert' in the medical field because of my experience??? As you said, nobody is bothering to read a profile.
My bigger pet peeve, the inundation of emails from recruiters every Friday afternoon saying I'm the perfect candidate for 'blah, blah' position. Yet when I respond, I may be lucky to get 1/10 replies back. And yes, I always respond yes or no as I'm one of the unemployed who would really love to be working.
I've discovered inclusivity doesn't mean the over 55's, especially if your a female in IT. At least I have 17 Certificate of Completions through LinkedIn Learning, so it's not a complete waste. :-(

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Jerry Russell, PMP, CSM Sr. Project Manager| SHI International Corp. Bayville, NJ, United States
You hit the nail on the head with this one Lonnie. Just last week I received a request to connect with the sales pitch right in that request. And, as you say, he clearly did not look at my profile for more than five seconds. I'm an IT PM and I had a project that involved an HRMS implementation. He's selling me his services involving "your workforce". Uh, I don't work in HR. I helped that department implement an application.

I politely declined the connection and told him why. You're selling me something that I will never need before we're even connected.

LinkedIn I still find useful though. This is just white noise.

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Francis Moeris Project Manager| Self employed Zoersel, Belgium
Hi Lonnie, I would summarize your comment with "Show respect". Thanks for you good hints.

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josepH Howell Burton Senior Project Manager| Jones Lang LaSalle Austin, Tx, United States
Short and sweet. Nice work, Lonnie.

An example I have that probably fits on your list, but just hit me right on that particular day....

I had a young job seeker determine which Firms he was interested in working and sent out a batch of connections with a polite note of what he was seeking. I was just about to hit delete when I thought, what the heck I'll pass him along to our Market Office. He didn't get on with us, but they did visit with him and he was subsequently successful in landing a spot a couple hours away with one of our competitors. I still check in with him on occasion.

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Rahul Patekar Project Manager| Xebrium Ca, United States
The article was a great read. It gives a nice set of filters to apply before reaching relevant people in the industry.

Thanks for sharing this.

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Maruthupandi Kathiresan Project Manager Chennai, Tamilnadu, India
Really good one, Lonnie!

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Kevin Light Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
LI is devolving into a professional's FaceBook imo. Looking at some of the posts from my network it spans the gamut of professional insight to Q-Anon and Qultist level conspiracy theory. I rarely use it these days.

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Ivona Fikejzlova Associate Director / Global Research Centre| Kantar Prague, 10, Czechia
I use LinkedIn to follow inspirational people and their posts. Trainers, university professors, authors, business leaders etc. I can just follow them and not bothering them with connecting. This way I get instantly fed with ideas and trends which I can immediately apply or at least to think about.

As you mentioned, it is great that it breaks the boundaries and you can meet people through your connections and comments. That's a huge advantage.

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peter king CEO| PGK Management LTD. Kitimat, British Columbia, Canada
Before I connect with someone I check their profile, if they only have 2 contacts, that is a good hint. I am not opposed to cold calls but as you say, it is how they Approach it.

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Boykin Jordan Springfield, Va, United States
Great points Lonnie! I have also disconnected from everyone whose second communication was a request to particpate in a sales pitch. My rationale that's not actually interested in long-term relationship -- just a sales transcation.

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