Social media for law students (and everyone else)

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Social media tools allow every­one, not just infor­ma­tion tech­nol­ogy afi­ciona­dos, to cre­ate and main­tain their online pro­fes­sional per­sona. They have become key tools as online research has become ubiq­ui­tous. Using Google to look up poten­tial new hires is some­thing that many in the tech indus­try have been doing for years (I’ve been exam­in­ing poten­tial new hires online for almost 10 years, as have many peo­ple in the IT world). Now that man­agers in all indus­tries are doing this, appli­cants out­side of IT need to man­age their pro­fes­sional online image.

Previously, online searches would turn up news­group post­ings, bul­letin board com­men­tary, per­sonal Web sites, mail­ing list post­ings, and so on. As Facebook and newer forms of “social media” grew, the poten­tial infor­ma­tion grew both in scope (to include more per­sonal infor­ma­tion espe­cially) as well as breadth (to include peo­ple who were not nec­es­sar­ily in the IT field). Clearly, exer­cis­ing care in what per­sonal and non-​​professional infor­ma­tion one posts (drunken Facebook pic­tures are the canon­i­cal exam­ple) remains impor­tant, but effec­tive job-​​seekers and net­work­ers today should go far­ther and proac­tively take charge of their pro­fes­sional online life.

LinkedIn is a prime ser­vice for cre­at­ing, main­tain­ing, and shar­ing pro­fes­sional infor­ma­tion. It opens up your pro­fes­sional back­ground to poten­tial hir­ing man­agers, as well as clients and col­leagues. It is key now that Googling appli­cants has become rou­tine. Kevin O’Keefe of LexBlog echoes this sen­ti­ment in Law school stu­dents using LinkedIn : It’s a no brainer:

As a hir­ing employer, I look at someone’s LinkedIn pro­file before any­thing else. I then run var­i­ous Google searches to get a feel for a candidate’s back­ground. Talking to other employ­ers, I’m find­ing I’m pretty typ­i­cal. So if you’re a law stu­dent with­out a com­plete and grow­ing LinkedIn pro­file, you’re miss­ing the boat.

Google, obvi­ously, will turn up more than LinkedIn pro­files. But LinkedIn pro­vides a very effec­tive method of pre­sent­ing your pro­fes­sional face to the world, and can help you present the infor­ma­tion about your­self that you want to present, as you wish to present it. This can help you guard against mis­taken iden­tify prob­lems (con­fus­ing you with some­one with the same name who has not been care­ful on MySpace, for exam­ple), or even old infor­ma­tion that really is about you, but that does not reflect your cur­rent pro­fes­sional persona.

To make effec­tive use of LinkedIn, Kevin O’Keefe sug­gests that you:

  • Make sure your pro­file is complete.
  • Connect with peo­ple you know.
  • Get rec­om­men­da­tions.
  • Join appro­pri­ate groups.

He also sug­gests you do old-​​fashioned net­work­ing, with or with­out the help of LinkedIn, and make use of other social media tools like Twitter. To this, I sug­gest that if you con­sider blog­ging, too, as another method of dis­play­ing your ana­lytic and writ­ing talent.

What was once the domain only of infor­ma­tion tech­nol­ogy pro­fes­sion­als has opened up to every­one through easy-​​to-​​use social media tools like LinkedIn (or lesser-​​known ser­vices like Plaxo and Wink). Given their easy of use and effec­tive­ness, all law stu­dents — and every­one else in the job mar­ket today — should take advan­tage of them.

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