Apr 2, 2012

Philippines - Definitely Not The Weakest Link


MANILA, Philippines - LinkedIn is the largest online social networking site for professionals in the world, with over 150 million users globally. About 25 million of these are in the Asia Pacific, the fastest-growing region in terms of users for the site—and in the Philippines, LinkedIn recently passed one million members.

Leaps And Bounds

LinkedIn was founded in 2003 in Mountain View, California. It currently has offices in Amsterdam, Bangalore, Delhi, Dublin, London, Melbourne, Milan, Mumbai, Munich, Paris, São Paulo, Singapore, Stockholm, Sydney, Tokyo and Toronto, and has more than 2,000 employees.

LinkedIn is about “enhancing people’s online brand,” says LinkedIn managing director for Southeast Asia, New Zealand and Australia, Clifford Rosenberg, “by connecting people and companies worldwide.” Users upload their CVs and résumés into their online profiles and make connections with fellow professionals. It has become a very popular social and promotional tool for job-seekers, recruiters and employers.

Four of the 16 languages that LinkedIn is available in come from the Asia-Pacific region. “This is a very fast-growing region for us,” says Rosenberg. He adds that the data the site gathers from users worldwide helps the company adapt its products for each region, and helps it evaluate opportunities in the market that will help the recruiters, employers and job seekers that use their services.

In January, LinkedIn received 100.1 million unique visitors and three billion page views per month, ranking number 33 on comScore and marking a 34.5 percent year-on-year growth rate. In 2011, there were over four billion searches on LinkedIn, mostly looking up individual professionals’ names as well as company names.

Another Social Networking Site?

Some consider Facebook as a notorious timewaster, decreasing productivity among employees. Wouldn’t another social networking site just add to the problem? Rosenberg believes that LinkedIn can do the opposite: “We’re about trying to save people time rather than waste time,” he insists. “We are adding productivity tools and processes that make professionals even more productive, like mobile applications and services that users can download.”

Rosenberg also believes that the enormous number of accounts on LinkedIn does not diminish the value of the site for its users. “The more we scale up and add on new members, the more we benefit recruiters,” he says. This is because many of their users are what he calls “passive job candidates”—already with a job and not actively looking for another one, but “they’re developing their online brand for recruiters and potential employers to discover. The more the database and talent pool out there, the better for recruiters, especially for jobs that are in high demand,” Rosenberg explains.

He also adds that LinkedIn’s mission is connecting the world’s professionals to make them more productive and successful, and career opportunities and connectivity take top priority. “We are all about professional context,” Rosenberg says. “When we speak to our members, time and again they tell us they want to separate their social profile with what they’re doing in their professional lives. So they have their Facebook pages where they communicate with friends and family, and they have a profile on LinkedIn so that they can enhance their online brand. We’re optimized for the web. When your name is searched in a professional context and they get your LinkedIn profile,” he says, “it’s showing you in the best professional light.”

LinkedIn In The Philippines

As of press time, LinkedIn has surpassed one million users in the Philippines. Of this number, 62,723 are listed as “entrepreneurs”.

By LinkedIn membership, the top three universities are the University of the Philippines, De La Salle and Ateneo, and the top three industries in the country are information technology, education management and accounting. While professionals from the technology- and media-based industries were unsurprisingly the first ones to get on to LinkedIn, the range of industries with professionals on the site have expanded, says Rosenberg. “The kind of businesses we see [with many professionals on LinkedIn] include mining, tourism, medical industries, travel, BPOs [business process outsourcing firms], agribusiness and manufacturing,” he informs.

Making LinkedIn Work For You

According to LinkedIn data, 80 percent of recruiters are now using social media and the web when sourcing candidates for a job, and an online profile on LinkedIn might just be the thing that brings them to potential jobseekers.

“Your profile is like a constantly evolving CV or résumé that’s more three-dimensional than if it were just a Word document or PDF,” says Rosenberg. The more complete your profile, the better. “Professionals are realizing more and more that they need to be their own chief marketing officers and need to take control of their careers and personal brand,” he adds.

BARBARA MARCHADESCH
mb.com.ph



Business & Investment Opportunities 
YourVietnamExpert is a division of Saigon Business Corporation Pte Ltd, Incorporated in Singapore since 1994. As Your Business Companion, we propose a range of services in Strategy, Investment and Management, focusing Healthcare and Life Science with expertise in ASEAN. We also propose Higher Education, as a bridge between educational structures and industries, by supporting international programmes. Many thanks for visiting www.yourvietnamexpert.com and/or contacting us at contact@yourvietnamexpert.com

No comments:

Post a Comment