Thursday, July 30, 2020
Should You Avoid These Top 10 LinkedIn Profile Overused Buzzwords
Should You Avoid These Top 10 LinkedIn Profile Overused Buzzwords LinkedIn has released its annual report on the Top 10 Overused LinkedIn Profile Buzzwords of 2013. This year they analyzed only English-language profiles. As you read this yearâs list, consider for each term whether itâs one you should avoid due to overuse, or whether itâs simply an essential word to have in your profile. As I look through the buzzwords, I find I have a different opinion on each one. Hereâs the list: Responsible Strategic Creative Effective Patient Expert Organizational Driven Innovative Analytical RESPONSIBLE Responsible is a word I have banished from resumes and LinkedIn profiles for years now. I think it must have risen to the top as other overused buzzwords such as âextensive experience,â âresults-oriented,â âproven track recordâ and âteam playerâ have been shaved off most peopleâs profiles. Avoid using âresponsibleâ in your profile â" it doesnât tell anyone about what you actually did! Iâm hoping that the appearance of âResponsibleâ on LinkedInâs list will shrink its appearance on resumes. STRATEGIC Iâm frankly shocked that strategic just appeared on the top 10 list for the first time this year. I believe its emergence as #2 is a testament to the importance of the word. When your job includes strategic planning you must use this word, since it is central to your business role. If you claim you are a strategic thinker, however, be sure to include examples of that thinking and the results it has produced. CREATIVE Creative ranked #1 last year and is #3 now. I donât love this word and rarely use it. âCreativeâ describes people more than accomplishments and is better left for other people to say about you. Anyone can say theyâre creative but the challenge is to prove it. Instead of relying on this buzzword, attach photos and PowerPoints showing your work; provide links to your writing; and describe the ways in which youâve done things that other people have not. EFFECTIVE Effective, which moved from #3 to #4 this year, is a throw-away word in my opinion, often easily avoided by reporting actual results. If you got your intended results, your strategy was effective. PATIENT Patient? Iâm not sure why this word is suddenly on the top 10 list. Iâd say scrap it. Patient is a trait you need to demonstrate, not claim on a piece of paper. EXPERT Everyoneâs claiming to be an expert these days. If you can truly demonstrate expertise in a particular area, I think itâs okay to use the word (of course this is coming from a woman who calls her company The Essay Expert!) I believe some people might search for terms like âE-Learning Expertâ or âTurnaround Expertâ ; if they do, you want to have the word âExpertâ in your headline and job titles. My caveat would be not to claim you are an expert if youâre really not. Be honest or someone could easily call your bluff. ORGANIZATIONAL Organizational first appeared on the buzzword list as #2 in 2011 and kept its ranking in 2012; it has slipped to #7 but is still on the list and I can understand why. Most LinkedIn members are mid- to upper-level managers and executives, for whom organizational goals are extremely important. I think this buzzword is here to stay, at least for a while, and I see no problem with using it. DRIVEN Driven has started to replace âResults-orientedâ as a favorite descriptive word. Take note of its overuse and see if you can provide examples that show your drive instead of calling yourself âdriven.â If you would use this word as one of the top three adjectives to describe yourself, you might choose to keep it in your profile. But know that it will be taken with a grain of salt. INNOVATIVE Innovative is a persistent one. It was #2 on the list in 2010, #7 in both 2011 and 2012. Honestly this word is a hard one to eliminate if you are in any sort of product marketing or management role. Itâs better than âoriginalâ or âcreativeâ in my opinion. If you need to use it, use it. But make sure to explain *what* was innovative about your ideas. Donât just say âinnovativeâ and think that explains something. ANALYTICAL Finally, analytical is a word that you might need to use if youâre in marketing, finance, or any profession for which analysis is critical. Only claim to be analytical if analyzing things makes your heart sing and is central to the work you do. WHATâS NEXT? For the first time this year, I have a vision of a world where the top 10 buzzwords on LinkedIn are not âoverused,â but instead rank as the important words in business for the year. Letâs cut away the fluff and drill down to the essentials. Anyone with me? Buzz Buzz!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.