Business networking is different from social networking. Social network sites allow you to share personal information and to view and connect with your friends and their friends. Business networks showcase your professional expertise while connecting you to your professional contacts’ own networks.
Alumni associations already have online directories, many of which have profile systems that do some of the same things business networking sites do. So why bother with commercial business networks that include millions of people who aren’t your alumni? Because:
Some alumni associations are creating groups on LinkedIn, perhaps the most populated business networking site. A colleague and I posted a “think piece” in the 2006 Higher Education Blog Conference, exploring the role of third-party business networks in the alumni relations toolbox. I think our observations remain relevant today. Read it for a structured exploration of some basic questions, including:
Meanwhile LinkedIn has been plagued with growing pains, almost doubling its membership in the last twelve months. And its customer service has suffered. With about ten million users as of this writing, LinkedIn is pedaling fast to catch up with customer expectations and it remains to be seen how that will play out. There are many independent discussion groups for LinkedIn users as well as a couple of blogs that focus on the site’s ups and downs.
In an upcoming post I’ll talk about the potential advantages and some caveats for organizations thinking of creating alumni groups on LinkedIn, as well as some lessons our office has learned in the 22 months we’ve run our alumni group there. For homework, you might want to read our Higher Ed BlogCon posting and then check out the following sites related to online business networking.
Scott Allen’s LinkedIntelligence blog
XING, an online business networking site popular outside the U.S.
The Virtual Handshake Blog, a useful resource guide
Business Week piece on corporate uses of online networking sites
Note: This post is by Andy Shaindlin, executive director of the alumni association at Caltech and author of Alumni Futures, who will be our guest blogger until mid-April.
Michael Stoner Co-Founder and Co-Owner Was I born a skeptic or did I become one as I watched the hypestorm gather during the dotcom years, recede, and congeal once more as we come to terms with our online, social, mobile world? Whatever. I'm not much interested in cutting edge but what actually works for real people in the real world. Does that make me a bad person?