Writing Boots

On communication, professional and otherwise.

Dumb Question: Have I become a LinkedIn prude?

02.13.2012 by David Murray // 3 Comments

Twitter followers are floozies, Facebook friends are fair weather. But I remember a day when a LinkedIn connection was someone you had, by God, done business with. And so your LinkedIn connections was a modern version of your Rolodex: People you could call in a pinch, who would help you out.

Standards, it appears, have slipped. I keep getting invitations to connect on LinkedIn from people I've never heard of. They've heard of me through Vital Speeches or my blog, I guess, and so they reach out. If they're a speechwriter, and thus might as well be from Timbuktu, I grant them access to my online family. It's good for me to be able to find them, and for them to be able to find me.

But I keep getting invitations from regular old communicators who I've never heard of, who want to connect with me on LinkedIn.

I turn them down.

But I'm not sure I should.

Readers, what's your policy on LinkedIn connections?

And has it evolved recently?

Talk to me.

Categories // Uncategorized Tags // etiquette, invitations, LinkedIn

Comments

  1. Yossi Mandel says

    February 13, 2012 at 10:24 am

    I’m with you on LinkedIn. If someone I don’t know and haven’t worked with wants to connect, I reply to ask what the person wants without accepting the connection.

    Reply
  2. Rueben says

    February 13, 2012 at 11:26 am

    I agree. I tend to limit my LinkedIn connections to people I’ve actually worked with or at least met in some professional capacity. I break it down roughly like this: Facebook is for actual friends and family, LinkedIn is for colleagues, and Twitter is for random strangers – including those whose only real interest in following me is to add to the body count of their network in some futile quest for validation.

    Reply
  3. David Murray says

    February 13, 2012 at 11:29 am

    @Yossi: I bet that sends most of them packing, eh?
    @Reuben: Becoming part of your network isn’t part of a “futile quest for validation,” Mr. Bronee. It is validation itself.

    Reply

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