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Post by account_disabled on Dec 23, 2023 19:44:44 GMT -8
This is one of the hidden features of LinkedIn. This is not new. There have always been hidden features on LinkedIn. The “topic” function allows you to find out more about a topic (positions, companies, articles, etc.): In which companies is it most often found? In which university is it found most frequently? What are the top skills in the field? How many profiles have this skill? Which profiles have this skill? What ads are looking for this skill? What “popular” articles cover the subject? You must go to the page which lists and provides access to all the subjects (topics) taken into account. On the home page, around a hundred featured topics are Email Data highlighted. At the top of the page, searching by name provides access to hundreds of others. For example, for the “marketing” theme. It is accessed via the “topic” page, profiles have the “marketing” skill. We find it mainly among… freelancers (105,686) then at IBM (27,120), Microsoft (26,659), Google (22,378) and L’Oréal (21,668). The “Top Universities” (LinkeIn does not indicate how to interpret this criterion): University of Phoenix (88,117), Fundaçao Getulio Vargas. The “top skills” of marketing: Management , customer service , social networks, marketing strategy (6,841,044), Microsoft Office profiles contain the word “marketing”. So not all marketers necessarily have “marketing” skills. The articles that come up are all in English. I don't think this will profoundly change your experience on LinkedIn, but it can in certain cases provide interesting insights, particularly in the choice of skills to put on your profile, even if this information is less easily exploitable than what LinkedIn offered until recently. 4 or 5 years.
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