There are some downsides to not being on the platform though:
- Lack of alternative networking options at conferences. Keeping in touch with cool presenters or people you meet (email is ok, but requires pro-active messaging).
- Perhaps missing more lucrative job offers?
- FOMO
However the negatives I see are:
- Shallow and egotistical content being posted by "high flyers" etc.
- Cold messaging or soliciting / spam
- Data privacy concerns (as with any social media platform)
Interested to know what people think as a whole of LinkedIn.
The content is useless unless you are into reading business and self help books. Nothing wrong with it, but learning about whatever is “humbling” people is meaningless to me.
The feeds have become really terrible. This wasn't always the case. Before, a lot more weight was given to posts from people you were connected to, vs. the weight given to their overall engagement. This offered two kinds of value: One, you were more likely to keep updated on what's happening within a professional niche (assuming lots of your connections were in that niche too.) Two, your own writing would be shown mostly to people in your business niche, which helped foster trust.
I've formed a lot of useful connections this way. A lot of client relationships, past and present, started out this way. A bunch of people helped me in a bunch of ways (intros, advice) because they felt I was a real person, not a rando profile image.
That's mostly gone now. A useful post is now so rare, and the rest is "engagement" fodder. Eventually, I turned off the feed, and that's how it stays most of the time. (I installed an extension someone once posted about here.)
The chat feature, which was always really powerful, is still there. But it used to be that the flow was written insights -> chat -> in person/Zoom. Without that slower process of getting acquainted, the connecting itself has less potential to become really useful.
It's a directory not a social media platform.
I do fairly well just posting about the problems I’m working on and the puzzles I’m trying to solve.
As far as the downsides - nothing is forcing you to read anything on the site, so that is an easily avoided problem. I find cold messaging to be a good thing - ignore it if you are not looking, reply with your desired role if you are looking. Data privacy is a valid concern, so only post the public information you want people to have to find jobs.
So sure, if you try to use it as social media it is problematic. If you think of it as a directory to let recruiters know when you want work, it works just fine. Just don't make it anything more than it really is.
Deleting it had no effect on my career or ability to find and get work. I'm really glad that I did it.
One thing to note, I never updated my profile to have that "open to work" banner. My other coworkers who were laid off at the same time still seem to be job hunting.
I posted a few articles years back. I no longer do really but do when I get/refresh a cert or change jobs.
I look at jobs when they pop in through messages or job alerts that look interesting. Always be open to that.
I do not however log on everyday and consume what others are posting. Low return and mostly find they’re self serving posts.
Use it for it’s strengths
I wouldn't bother with any of the social networking aspects of LinkedIn. Turn off every notification you possibly can.
I've gotten instructions accidentally mailed to me by recruiters indicating to only accept candidates with a profile photo. I've yet to decide if this means I should have one or not.
Whole platform seems like a bit of a parody of itself to be honest.
I'd say it's worth being active when you have a specific goal in mind. It requires much lower effort than Twitter because you don't have to build up your list of followers - your connections are your followers by default.
And, like everyone else says, you need to keep in mind that it's just a social media platform like Facebook and Instagram. Outrage/feel-good posts will tend to dominate the feed, so don't get discouraged when your post only gets a dozen likes. The post was still probably viewed by hundreds of people.
I created a LinkedIn for my most recent job to repost ads for the company.
Now that I am no longer employed by them, I have deleted the account again.
Reason: I just don't care about social networks. I don't like their business model, or their addictiveness.
LinkedIn was funny in a way, because toxic and sarcastic positivity are indistinguishable from a distance.
If you find value in networking or keeping in touch with people, simply put it is the directory for many industries (including SV tech) and a good way to stay in contact, and I think that you are definitely missing out on the network value if you aren't on it. Like you called out, unlike email it does not require anything proactive and in my experience people are often excited to hear from you years later. I'm not here to tell you what to value though.
Anyone who reads this though please don't do this. You need to have a Linkedin profile to get a job and it needs to be tailored with language so specific to your industry that anyone outside your industry has no idea what it actually is talking about or what you actually got paid to do. If you don't do this you are a missing out.
If you have a good resume you'll get a stream of recruiter messages. You can ignore them unless you're looking for a job in which case they are invaluable because they are a free ticket past the resume screening part of the application process.
Maybe that's most of humanity and I'm not their target market and that's fine. I just find it an absolute pain because there's no one way to summarize what I did in past roles that is universally clear to all the roles I might be considering that I have the requisite skillset.
All the spam and social media content is not a concern because: I disable linkedin notifications, so no alerts, no emails, no nothing. I use it when I need it. If someone writes me there, I’ll know when I visit the website (twice per month or so). I don’t use the app.
When I first switched careers to tech, I got some great LinkedIn advice: You don't have to like it, but you should know how to use it.
It's perfectly possible not to use it, but it's been pretty helpful for me over the years.
Most notifications from LinkedIn never reach my inbox, though.
LinkedIn can be very valuable if you use it as a tool, with a professional purpose.
There isn’t a shred of genuine human experience on that platform though.
2025 might be the right time.
If anyone wants to network and try build a relationship for potential co-founders shoot me an email. (profile)
I've got lots of ideas and can code almost anything.
Every technical person I know building a company is active on LinkedIn and most technical people I know employed at FAANGs are active on LinkedIn.
Every event I go to in SF has people trading LinkedIn or Twitter.
I myself have had multiple previous job opportunities through LinkedIn and still get high quality job opportunities through it regularly.
On the other hand, despite the fact that Microsoft makes plenty of money from other business, and LinkedIn all of the above value would be effectively free to maintain and generate an immeasurable sum of relevance and good will, somehow it's still subject to the same Capitalist-American-tech cultural incentives to engage in a short-sighted McNamara fallacy to drive engagement. This means that the feed in LinkedIn is every bit as bad as any other social network as folks jockey for visibility and influence, but with the added wrinkle that peoples careers depend on this, and it's well understood in the corporate world that negativity is counter-productive to large group efforts, thus leading to an extremely saccharine and "toxic positivity" vibe that can come off extremely dystopic to independent thinkers.
What I like and see less and less of: I have this one open position I really super need filled, if you know anyone who has done this I'm looking to join So yeah, I think linkedin is fine, and I keep my network super tight, I'm pretty sure I've met everyone I'm connected with IRL or know someone IRL who knows that person very well.