Post by account_disabled on Dec 19, 2023 22:09:45 GMT -6
Me receiving at least one automated prospecting message. I implemented a slight change to my profile that allows me to immediately know whether or not the message I receive was automated, before I even read it. Why you absolutely should not automate your actions on LinkedIn As I just mentioned, I receive automated messages every day and it is “direct vertical ranking”. These messages are generally insipid, non-personalized, self-focused on sales. In short, they don't make you want to respond. A bad one with an automation tool is still a bad one. We say, for trolls: “thanks to the Internet everyone will know that I am a big idiot.
We can say, about automation (when it is done badly): “thanks to automation, everyone will know Email Data that I am bad”. Certainly automation can save valuable time, but generic, impersonal prospecting messages generally have very little effectiveness on LinkedIn. And if we automate, we send the same message to dozens or hundreds of people and it becomes very difficult to personalize our approaches. It's not impossible, but few do it. In any case, I have never received an automated prospecting message that was well done. And in speaking with my clients, who are all, at their level, decision-makers, not one has been able to show me a counter-example, among all the messages they have received.
So if automation allows you to save time, to have endorsements, to develop your network, to like lots of content, in terms of commercial efficiency, apart from a few cases, success is not assured. But there's another reason why you can't afford to automate anything on LinkedIn: IT'S TOTALLY PROHIBITED and by doing so you're breaking the platform's rules. In 1 search, I found an alert message: and no less than 5 articles in the English “help center”. Excessive Page Requests on LinkedIn If we receive an abnormally high number of page requests from your account, we may suspend or restrict the account. Unusually high traffic volumes may be generated by third-party applications or browser extensions that copy data from, automate activity on, or otherwise interact with LinkedIn in violation of LinkedIn's User Agreement.
We can say, about automation (when it is done badly): “thanks to automation, everyone will know Email Data that I am bad”. Certainly automation can save valuable time, but generic, impersonal prospecting messages generally have very little effectiveness on LinkedIn. And if we automate, we send the same message to dozens or hundreds of people and it becomes very difficult to personalize our approaches. It's not impossible, but few do it. In any case, I have never received an automated prospecting message that was well done. And in speaking with my clients, who are all, at their level, decision-makers, not one has been able to show me a counter-example, among all the messages they have received.
So if automation allows you to save time, to have endorsements, to develop your network, to like lots of content, in terms of commercial efficiency, apart from a few cases, success is not assured. But there's another reason why you can't afford to automate anything on LinkedIn: IT'S TOTALLY PROHIBITED and by doing so you're breaking the platform's rules. In 1 search, I found an alert message: and no less than 5 articles in the English “help center”. Excessive Page Requests on LinkedIn If we receive an abnormally high number of page requests from your account, we may suspend or restrict the account. Unusually high traffic volumes may be generated by third-party applications or browser extensions that copy data from, automate activity on, or otherwise interact with LinkedIn in violation of LinkedIn's User Agreement.