Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you know social media, especially LinkedIn, plays an important role in sales. But you may be surprised by just how big that role is. According to LinkedIn research, 89% of top sales professionals find social networking platforms such as LinkedIn important to closing deals.
Indeed, our own research reveals the majority of buyers—82%—will review your LinkedIn profile, and, yes, judge you, before accepting a meeting or otherwise connecting with you.
That’s right! Eight out of every 10 buyers are vetting you on LinkedIn before deciding whether to respond to you.
You’re being evaluated daily based on your digital brand.
All the elements of your LinkedIn profile are under scrutiny: your work experience, skills, summary, education, endorsements, headline, shared connections, number of connections, group memberships, and profile picture.
And the message each communicates can sway buyers to accept or decline meetings or connections with you.
Makes you want to polish things up a bit, doesn’t it?
Fortunately, you can get started on that immediately. In this post, I share how to sell through LinkedIn.
Why Should You Care?
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1 Top Performance in Sales Prospecting Benchmark Report, RAIN Group Center for Sales Research |
Plus, I’ll share 15 ideas for spending 15 minutes a day for selling on LinkedIn. I challenge you to do this for at least 15 days in the next month. After 15 days you'll have a stronger LinkedIn presence and be better positioned to sell through LinkedIn.
More on that later. First, there are few things about selling on LinkedIn you need to know.
Read: 6 Common LinkedIn Selling Mistakes
To get the most out of LinkedIn, focus on these four core activities:
Optimize your profile so it’s complete, professional, and impressive to your target buyers and clients. If the last time you used LinkedIn was to help you land a job, it's probably not communicating what you want. You need to build a LinkedIn profile for sales.
Buyers visiting your profile are asking themselves whether they want to engage with you. Make sure the message your profile communicates has them saying, “Yes!”
Here are some LinkedIn profile ideas for sales:
LinkedIn gives you a valuable view into your connections’ professional lives (and sometimes their personal lives).
Monitor your newsfeed to see what’s happening with your connections, but don’t stop there.
Take your searching and listening to the next level by following these tips:
Connecting with people is an art.
In sales, you can spend a lot of time trying to connect and getting no response, or you can do it right and see some conversions.
Again, LinkedIn’s tools help here—from identifying targets to leveraging your entire team’s network.
Here are some tips for connecting on LinkedIn:
One of the biggest mistakes when selling through LinkedIn is making a valuable connection and then never doing anything with it.
Use LinkedIn to strengthen your relationships. Here’s how:
By taking a systematic approach to LinkedIn, you’ll amplify your brand and become a person of interest to your buyers.
Here are 15 ideas for 15 days of selling on LinkedIn. Commit to just 15 minutes a day for the next 15 days to give these ideas a try.
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Every day: Scan your news stream for a few minutes. "Like" your connections' updates that resonate with you, make comments as you see fit, share articles you find valuable. |
Use the RAIN Group LinkedIn Checklist to help you create the strongest possible profile.
There are several ways to do this. Click on “My Network” in the top navigation and any pending invitations will display near the top of the page. On a member’s profile, click the “Connect” button.
On the “Grow Your Network” page, search your email address book to find contacts or invite them using their email address. LinkedIn can help you search for your connections and make suggestions for you.
Think about your top targets and contacts; search for them specifically and add them. Be sure to customize the message you send when asking to connect.
Search for specific people you want to connect with or people at specific companies. For cold connections, it’s a good idea to follow someone before you connect with them. You can follow anyone from their profile page unless they have restricted followers to only their 1st-degree connections.
Join groups in the areas where you’ll find buyers, clients, influencers, and competitors. Follow members in the group whose updates you want to see. You can also send messages to anyone who’s a member of the same group you’re in, so be sure to join the groups where your target prospects are members.
Go one-by-one through your connections and say hello, catch up, check-in, or set meetings with people where it would be worthwhile. Scan your connections—and the connections of your connections—and then reach out.
Read: Social Selling Tips for Success
Search for your school’s page on LinkedIn and click on “Alumni” in the side navigation to find people who attended your school. LinkedIn will help you search for people with whom you share work, school, location, and other connections. As always, be sure to personalize the message and highlight the shared alma mater when you ask to connect.
Search for and follow companies that are important to you—customers, prospects, competitors, partners, and vendors. You can follow up to 1,000 organizations and get updates with their posts.
Yes, this one again. You’re here to learn how to sell through LinkedIn. Make connections and strengthen relationships.
Highlight at least 15 people you’re not connected to, and don’t currently know, that you want to connect with. They might be buyers, referral sources, or other stakeholders at existing clients. First, simply create this list of targets.
Review each relationship target’s profile for similarities or reasons to connect. This could include work interests, past work experiences, mutual connections, and so on. Customize your message and reach out to connect.
Find profiles that are interesting. See how people describe themselves and what they post about themselves. Take notes about what you like and don’t like. Then review your own profile and make updates.
Scan who’s viewing your profile. If you aren’t connected, reach out and make a connection. If you are connected, reach out and strike up a conversation. Follow important people.
On day 4 you joined groups. Now it’s time to take a careful look at them. Scan questions and answers to see if you want to engage. Start by chiming in and responding to others’ questions, not leading discussions. Scan the list of group members to see who you might want to follow.
One more time! Keep on connecting with people and drumming up conversations. Selling on LinkedIn doesn’t happen without, you know, actually selling.
Take a few minutes to summarize results.
Evaluate the results you’ve had spending just 15 minutes a day on LinkedIn and then calibrate your time and efforts up or down. Do more of what’s working and less of what’s not.
Using LinkedIn effectively doesn’t have to be a big project or overly time-consuming. If you approach it with just 15 minutes a day, you’ll be tapping into this powerful selling tool and building important business relationships in no time.
Take the LinkedIn ChallengeIf you’re ready to dive in and leverage LinkedIn to the fullest, consider accepting our 15-Day LinkedIn Challenge: 15 ideas for what you can do on LinkedIn in 15 minutes. |