Heck today a cat playing a toy piano can monetize their videos to earn income. I’m going to talk about getting extra money by using a skill or skill set on a job you create for yourself. More in the next blog entry about the specifics of where and how you can do this.
My experience is that a person should use LinkedIn to look for jobs and to recommend our connections for jobs. If you list on LinkedIn that you are Open to Work in a specific field you will get other LinkedIn members come calling for your service.
Here’s the word up about this though: I’ve been wary of persons who figure out what my personal email address is and send me a message to that account that is a cold call for me to hire them as the go-between for me and prospective clients of my services.
One man who sent me an email claiming he could get me public speaking gigs I confess I thought of as a pimp. Two others–a woman and a man–also claimed they could get me speaking engagements.
Just no. That’s about as reputable as trusting a business that staples their telephone number to a wooden telephone pole out on the street.
The worst is that you could get like I have a recruiting firm soliciting you via your work email. At first I hit reply to tell the person to stop sending job posting emails to my work account. Then I realized a real person wasn’t lifting a finger to click send to give me the postings every day. The person set up an algorithm to auto-blitz my work email. That’s when I had to click Report Spam.
It’s easy for a recruiter to find out your work email address when your employer has a website. They can simply guess how your name is spelled in the account and then type @queensuniversity for example after your first initial and last name.
The idea that a headhunter is using robo-emails like robo-calls on the telephone doesn’t sit well with me as an effective strategy. At my first job at the insurance firm the prime ethic was to “qualify your leads” for pitching to prospective clients. Not everyone is going to be in your target market so why pitch to them?
It might cost pennies on the dollar to auto-email people job listings. That’s really not cost-effective though. This is a “lowest common denominator” approach that should be frowned on.
You and I should be the ones self-initiating getting jobs that monetize our skills. LinkedIn is the ideal venue for reaching out to others and having them contact you as well.
It’s said that a person should post a comment to their LinkedIn feed 2 to 3 times per week.
In the coming blog entry I will begin to post a list of specific jobs us peers can get using a skill or skills we have.
Recent Comments