Oh, goody. My LinkedIn connection, Diana, just endorsed my skills in marketing strategy. Yesterday Sylvie gave me a thumbs-up on my team-building expertise, and last week Martin endorsed me as the corporate communications guru I imagine myself to be. Self-esteem is running high, which means self-doubt can’t be far away.
And here it comes: Diana knows me from soccer and can’t possibly endorse me for anything more than falling over; Sylvie is a freelancer I have worked with for years but who has never watched me build anything more than a pile of sugar packets once at an airport; and Martin serves with me on a volunteer board where whatever skills I may demonstrate, they don’t include corporate communications.
An interesting side-note is that Martin invariably endorses me a day or so after we disagree about something in a board meeting. Is an endorsement the social media equivalent of an apology or an offering?
I am a huge fan of LinkedIn, and not just because I’ve twice been unemployed in the past ten years. I have vigourously defended this platform against my too-cool-for-charcuterie friends and the likes of Jesse Hirsh, who described LinkedIn as a place for “old people who are afraid of Facebook” in this piece for CBC .
Good thing he doesn’t waste his time with 500+ followers and a bunch of endorsements. This profile is surely someone else’s.
But I’m just not sure I’m liking this endorsement thing. Far from being a place for people afraid of Facebook, I’m worried that LinkedIn is becoming a place run by people who are bored of Facebook. Endorsing the skills of your connections is feeling a lot like the random “Likes” that are the currency of Facebook credibility. But without any context, it looks like what it is: people gaming the platform to drive their own visibility.
Now I just feel cheap and a little bit grubby.
We need some rigour, here folks. Just as I think it’s a terrible idea to befriend anyone on LinkedIn that you havent’ actually met, it’s an equally terrible idea to go around endorsing people whose skills you can’t possibly evaluate. Let me help you. The following must be true before you can click the Endorse button:
- You must actually know the person you are endorsing (see my previous post if you are unclear about what this means)
- You must actually know what the skill you are endorsing means. If you have no idea what it looks like when somebody installs a new Large Hadron Collider, then you probably shouldn’t be commenting on how good they are at it.
- You must actually have seen your LinkedIn buddy do this thing you say they’re good at. “Well she’s really nice and makes the best guacamole” does not translate to “And she’s got outstanding budget planning abilities.” They are not related skills.
- Let me know if you want the guacamole recipe
So here is what I’m worried will happen if the Facebookification of LinkedIn continues unchecked. I’m worried that unwarranted endorsements are just the beginning of the end. I’m worried that someone is going to start a game called Cubefarm. In Cubefarm my bored friends will start sending me pivot tables and three-hole punches. They will expect me to care that they have successfully offended 80% of their customers or harvested the Q2 crop of trinkets. They will want me to join their Cubefarm. Side note: check out the Cubefarming blog here.
And then it’s a short, slippery slope to the equivalent of the Facebook Poke. Perhaps they’ll call that an “Interrupt”. That’ll be fun.
So let’s all promise that we’ll stop endorsing people just for the hell of it or to make them feel better or to rank a little higher for recruiters. Let’s use LinkedIn for good, not for time-wasting evil. That’s what YouTube is for.
Related Posts:
Why I Won’t Accept Your LinkedIn Invite
BizMarketer is Elizabeth Williams
You can reach me at escwilliams@gmail.com
or follow me on Twitter @bizmkter
Steve Revill says
Thanks Elizabeth for putting into words what I’ve been feeling for some time now.
It really does start to feel like LinkedIn is ‘dumbing down’ and in doing so devaluing the currency of a ‘recommendation’ through the ‘endorsement’ to reach a wider audience via increased activity and ‘notification spam’.
Lavine says
I love what you put here. I love this – Self-esteem is running high, which means self-doubt can’t be far away. You have really high level of mentality and philosophy to be able to say this.
I am not saying I don’t like endorsement either. I feel happy when my friends endorse me. But there are different levels of a skill. Endorsement cannot clarify different levels. And I also notice people who don’t like each other still endorse each other; people who did only one single task immediately add new skill set to their profile to show their “experience”. Is that how whoever created endorsement function got inspired, so that, everyone can endorse anyone so long as he/she did something? What’s the purpose then? To get hired? To get a better job? How can a recruiter tell the difference when everybody can do anything?
Don Merwin says
Thank you for the article, Elizabeth! I’ve given this a lot of thought, and still torn between hoping that by endorsing others it is some value to them, and wondering if the volume of all the endorsements makes them less reliable as a gauge of someone’s true talents. But if they’ve taken the time to list all those skills and connect with me, I still feel good about pushing the button!
Don Merwin says
By the way, I’ll be posting your article on my FB, Twitter and LinkedIn this week via Buffer.com, Wed April 16th. Hope you get some hits!
bizmarketer says
Thanks for the share.
bizmarketer says
Hi Don,
Thanks for your comment and, if it feels like the right thing to do, go ahead an push the button!