Most people know they need LinkedIn to job search. But 99% of job seekers don't know its best features. Here are 6 that will immediately level up your job hunt: 1. Download 1st Connections Networking is easiest with people you already know. LinkedIn will send you a list of them! Here's how: 1. Go to "Me" > Settings & Privacy 2. Choose "Get A Copy of Your Data" 3. Click the 2nd Option 4. Select "Connections" 5. Request the Archive - 2. Find Content Creators Engaging with content is an easy way to network: 1. Search LinkedIn for job-related terms. 2. Filter for "Posts" 3. Go to All Filters > Author Company and add your targets. Now you have a list of content creators at your dream companies! - 3. Find Career Changers 1. Search for your target job 2. Filter for "People" 3. Add 10 targets to the "Companies" filter 4. Add 10 companies in your current industry to "Past Companies" Now you have a list of everyone who went from your current industry to your target industry! - 4. See Who's Hiring Many hiring managers post about open roles. Here's how to find them: 1. Search for: Target Job Title + Hiring 2. Filter for "Posts" 3. Go to All Filters > Author Company 4. Add your target companies Apply for the role and DM the person who posted it! - 5. Cultural Research Ex-employees can give you the scoop on culture. How to find them: 1. Run a blank search 2. Add your target company to the "Past Company" filter That'll show you every person who used to work at your target company. Find ones who left for a better opp! - 6. Find Salaries In Colorado Most companies won't post a salary range. But Colorado passed a law that requires them to. So search for your target job in Colorado. Then adjust the salary range for the cost of living in your area. Now you have more accurate salary data!
Strategies for Career Change at 30
Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.
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STOP underestimating your "unrelated" skills and experience when you're looking for a new job. When I was in college, I had a bunch of odd jobs including working at UCLA’s Campus Call Center. My main objective was to jump on cold calls and convince high schoolers who got accepted to UCLA to come to the school. I knew I really wanted to work in sports, media and entertainment. And this job at the time didn't make any sense to my career growth, but I had to make some money one way or another to pay the bills because my financial aid only got me so far. But with this job, I didn’t see any route or direction that would lead me to my goals. Up to that point, my only "real" jobs were working at Forever 21 as a summer retail associate, YMCA as a referee, and as an afterschool assistant for an elementary school. So each day I’d dial 100+ of calls for work. Then I’d get home and apply for 100s of jobs for me. And it'd lead to rejection after rejection. I couldn’t figure out what I needed to say or do differently to get noticed by organizations. It wasn’t until I realized my current job wasn't just about me making calls. It was about me using skills like: - Relationship management - Persuasive communication - Marketing strategies By reframing my experience, I transformed my “unrelated” job into a stepping stone for my career. This mindset shift was what helped me finally land a job at UCLA Athletics in student-athlete recruiting where I was now convincing high school athletes recruited by UCLA to commit to our programs. So keep in mind that every experience you’ve had, no matter how small, may already be the game changer you’ve been looking for. The key is identifying those transferable skills that align with your dream opportunities. Questions to ask yourself: - What skills am I truly developing? - How can I articulate these skills to potential employers? - Where else could these abilities be valuable? What are “unrelated” skills / past experiences that have helped you in other roles? #CareerAdvice #SportsBiz #Media #Entertainment
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If you are in the transition and haven't spoken to 10+ people in your career of choice to understand what they do...and where you fit You need to re-#baseline your LinkedIn tactics with these 3x steps 1 - Baseline your profile Add a quality photo of you, in uniform, with something that looks like you like life on your face Your Headline is your current job Your About section is the duties and responsibilities (or equivalent) from your last eval No need to translate anything at this point Just list your last 5-10 years of jobs with the exact job title and the lowest level unit that has a LinkedIn company page (so you get a logo) Add a description for each job...from the duties & responsibility section of the corresponding eval Update education, certifications & volunteer sections Make sure the email attached to your LinkedIn profile isn't something ridiculous (baselining tells people your professional identity RIGHT NOW and helps us find things in common ... when you over-translate, we often lose that) 2 - Figure out the "what and where" Talk to family & friends to help determine desired locations Do some online research on the market there Choose a few jobs that seem interesting Check job boards to see how many of those jobs are currently available (there should be a whole bunch to be competitive) Narrow it down to about 3x different roles 3 - Talk to people in those roles Type the job title in the search bar Click "People" Now add a "Location" filter (metro area where you want to be) Then click "All filters" and add "Past Company" with your branch of service This gives you #veterans in that job that are likely to help you Send 5-10 connection requests a day with a message highlighting what you have in common + and request to connect and maybe get some advice 4 - Ask about the role when you talk to them How they spend their time What they actually do Biggest challenges Performance Metrics they track Boss' priorities How they got there Required degrees or certs The goal is to figure out if you want to do THAT JOB or not (+ if you are qualified at this time) 5 - Narrow down and Expand Remove jobs that no longer interest you Add jobs that come up in conversation Figure out what you want to do And then systematically expand your network in that field (via #3) 5-10x new connections a day 3-5 phone calls a week (minimum) And do this until you've found your success ... or need to start over #quinnsights Questions? Anything you would add?
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You can't solve today's career pivot with yesterday's networking habits. Most professionals think reinvention means starting from scratch with their network. You want to become a novelist, but your connections are all in tech. You're pivoting to consulting, but you only know people in academia. You're moving into nonprofits, but your rolodex is full of investment bankers. So you do what everyone does: cold email strangers in your target industry. Ask for informational interviews. Try to prove you're worth listening to. But here's the reframe. You don't have the wrong network. You're just not using it the best way you can. Your tech friends? One of them went to college with a literary agent. Your academic colleagues? Someone's spouse runs a consulting firm. Your finance contacts? They sit on nonprofit boards and know every executive director in town. The connections you need already exist in your network. Just not in the obvious places. But there's a bigger strategic shift most people miss. Stop chasing people. Start attracting them. When you're constantly reaching out, asking for coffee chats, requesting time from strangers, you're positioned as the outsider who needs favors. When you share your expertise publicly - through writing, speaking, or thought leadership - the right people come to you. They come to you as someone worth learning from. I've seen this work repeatedly: A friend's wife went to college with a well-known independent filmmaker. A television newscaster met at a weekend writing workshop two decades ago. The high-value connections rarely come from obvious industry networking. The shift isn't "I need different connections." It's "I need a different connection strategy." Here's what actually works: Get specific about who you want to meet. Not "people in publishing" but "agents who represent business book authors." Ask your existing network for introductions - without a transactional agenda. People know surprising people. Your job is to find out who. Share your expertise at scale to reverse the dynamic. Write for respected publications. Speak at conferences (even for free at first). Make it easy for the right people to discover you. This is how you stop proving yourself to strangers and start building momentum. The career pivot gets infinitely easier when you realize your existing network isn't the problem. Your strategy is. ♻️ Save this and share it with someone who needs to stop chasing and start attracting. ➕ Follow Dorie Clark for more on how to use your network more effectively.
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Job searching can feel like gloom and doom—but I want you to focus on a different rhyming word instead: BLOOM. Yesterday, I attended the North Carolina Museum of Art's Annual Art in Bloom opening day. I was inspired by the stunning floral arrangements on display, and I left feeling hopeful—reminded that growth happens when you nurture what’s already there. That got me thinking about how career growth works the same way. Here’s a framework you can use to keep momentum during a challenging job search along with some free job search resources: B.L.O.O.M. B – Brainpower your career Before you dive into a job search, the thought work comes first. Jumping straight into applications without a plan is like trying to navigate a new city without a map—you might get somewhere, but it won’t be efficient or strategic. 1. Build your target company list Use tools like Crunchbase and LinkedIn to identify companies that align with your career goals, values, and desired growth trajectory. Look beyond obvious names—consider companies that are scaling, have strong leadership, or are in industries where your expertise is in high demand. 2. Identify decision-makers Once you have your list, use platforms like Hunter and TheOrg to find the right contacts—executives, hiring managers, or functional leaders—so you know exactly who to connect with. 3. Leverage your centers of influence Think about mentors, colleagues, and past collaborators who can help open doors. Share your target company list with them and ask for introductions or guidance. Strategic referrals often get you further than cold outreach alone. L – Leverage your strengths Focus on what you do best. Make sure your resume, LinkedIn, and interviews highlight your unique value—not just a laundry list of responsibilities. See comment section for a resource on how to build out result rich resume bullet points. O – Optimize your brand Your personal brand is more than your resume. Share thought leadership, highlight achievements, and make it clear why you’re the right person for the roles you want. See comments for a white paper on how to write a LinkedIn profile. O – Organized strategy Treat your search like a project. Track applications, follow-ups, and networking opportunities. Small, consistent actions add up faster than sporadic bursts of activity. M – Move forward with confidence Job searches can be slow and unpredictable. Keep taking action, stay visible, and don’t let setbacks shake your belief in your skills and potential. Make daily and weekly outreach goals. **You should not be measuring how many jobs you are applying to each day. Instead, focus on decision-maker conversations.*** When you approach your career like this, you’re not just surviving the search—you’re planting seeds for growth and opportunity, and eventually, you bloom. 🌸
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My Relationship-Building Guide (Networking – if we must call it that) After 20+ years in finance, tech, healthcare, and games, I’ve never cold applied to a job. Not once. I'm giving you all my secrets for nothing because I want you to succeed. Every role I’ve ever had came from relationship building. Not from privilege. Not from inherited connections - I had none from my family. Well before any follower count or regular content creation (didn't do that at all until 4-5 years ago). Just consistent effort to connect with people I genuinely respected. This isn’t a cheat code. It’s not fast. It’s not always comfortable. But it is learnable. Important context: I deeply respect concerns around equal access, neurodiversity, comfort zones, and systemic bias. I’m naturally shy too. This isn’t dismissive – it’s practical for the world we’re in. Here are 30 relationship-building principles that shaped my career: 1. Start with alumni networks (school, bootcamps, online courses). Low barrier, real common ground. 2. Be visible online and in person. Familiarity builds trust. 3. Ask: “Is there anyone else I should talk to?” It multiplies your network. 4. Don’t lead with desperation. Lead with curiosity + steadiness. 5. Job talk starts at conversation 3 (minimum). Build trust first. 6. Only build relationships you actually want. No pretending. 7. Always have 5 mentees. Helping keeps you grounded and useful. 8. Always have 5 mentors. Growth never stops. 9. Maintain 10 meaningful conversations. Not 200 weak ties. 10. Say yes to events, then figure it out. 11. Find access (scholarships, discounts, partners). Ask. Research. 12. The “I’m in town” BD trick works. Confirm meeting, then book travel. 13. Celebrate others authentically. Show real appreciation with specifics. 14. Relationships often resurface years later. Be kind always. 15. Think in one-year arcs. Plant seeds. 16. Ask for conversations, not favors. 17. Some of the best convos are about nonsense. Be a person. 18. Never ask what you can Google. Respect time. 19. Map orgs like a business developer. Do homework. 20. Avoid tunnel vision. Great relationships come from unexpected places. 21. Curate your circle. Let go of what drains you. 22. Your performance is your best networking. Reputation travels. 23. Treat people like you're their friend, not their fan. 24. Leave people wanting more. Warm + concise wins. 25. Track outreach (I keep a simple CRM). Helps you be intentional. 26. Keep notes on key people (kids, pets, interests) because you care. 27. Think before you speak. Two minutes changes everything. 28. Be a 5x giver. Lead with generosity. 29. Be authentic and quirky. Realness is memorable. 30. Put good into the world. Giving creates trust that compounds. Here is the long-form of this guide in article form, if you want to learn more: https://lnkd.in/emKD4c93
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Career pivots at the senior executive level require more than experience—they demand the ability to translate your leadership skills into new industries or roles. If you're navigating this transition, here’s how to position yourself for success: 🔍 Identify Transferable Skills Start by isolating the core leadership skills you've mastered. Strategic thinking, operational excellence, change management, and stakeholder engagement are valuable across industries. Align these strengths with what your target industry prioritizes. 🗣️ Bridge the Language Gap Every industry has its own language. Research how your target sector talks about challenges and success. Replace industry-specific jargon with universal leadership terms that resonate in your new field. ⚡ Highlight Adaptability and Learning Agility Senior roles in new industries often require quick learning and adaptability. Share examples where you led through market shifts, integrated new technologies, or managed cross-functional teams—proving your capacity to thrive in unfamiliar environments. 🏆 Showcase Relevant Achievements Select accomplishments that demonstrate impact aligned with your new goals. Led digital transformation? That’s relevant to tech-driven industries. Scaled operations globally? That’s valuable in any growth-focused sector. Frame your results in a way that speaks to future employers’ pain points. 🚀 Craft a Forward-Looking Narrative Your story should connect past success with future potential. Communicate how your experience equips you to solve challenges in this new space. Phrases like, “My experience driving operational excellence positions me to...” help bridge the gap. A successful pivot isn’t about starting over—it’s about leveraging your leadership in new and meaningful ways. For those who’ve made a successful transition, what worked for you? Let’s share insights below! 👇 #careers #executivecareers #jobsearch
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🔄 Feeling stuck in your career but unsure how to pivot after years in one field? You’re not alone. Many professionals crave a new challenge but don’t know where to start. Here’s how to make a smooth transition: 1️⃣ Identify Transferable Skills Your experience is more valuable than you think. Even if your industry is different, your core skills—problem-solving, leadership, communication, project management—are universal. ✅ Action Step: Make a list of your key skills and match them to roles in your target industry. 💡 Example: If you’ve worked in finance but want to move into tech, your analytical skills and data interpretation experience are still highly relevant. 2️⃣ Reframe Your Experience for Your New Audience Hiring managers in a new industry won’t automatically connect the dots—you have to do it for them. ✅ Action Step: Rewrite your resume, LinkedIn profile, and elevator pitch to highlight how your background applies to the new field. 💡 Tip: Focus on outcomes, impact, and skills rather than job titles. Instead of: ❌ "10 years of experience in pharmaceutical sales." Try: ✅ "Experienced relationship builder skilled in consultative sales and market expansion." 3️⃣ Expand Your Network & Learn From Insiders Changing careers isn’t just about applying online—it’s about getting in front of the right people. ✅ Action Step: Connect with professionals in your target field and request informational interviews. 📩 Example message: "Hi [Name], I’m exploring a career transition into [Industry] and really admire your experience at [Company]. Would you be open to a quick chat about your journey and insights?" 4️⃣ Gain Targeted Experience (Without Starting Over) The biggest fear in career pivots? “Do I have to start from scratch?” The answer: No. ✅ Action Step: Look for ways to gain relevant experience while still in your current role: ✔️ Take on cross-functional projects ✔️ Volunteer for industry-related work ✔️ Freelance or take short-term contracts 💡 Example: If you’re transitioning into marketing, start by managing internal communications or social media for a nonprofit. 5️⃣ Be Ready to Tell Your Career Pivot Story Hiring managers will ask: “Why are you making this change?” You need a clear, compelling answer. ✅ Action Step: Craft a confident pivot story that focuses on why this shift makes sense and how your skills align. 📌 Formula: ➡ Past: What you’ve done so far ➡ Present: Why you’re making this change ➡ Future: How your skills translate & add value 💡 Example: "After years in operations, I realized my passion lies in product management—solving customer pain points and driving innovation. My experience in process optimization and stakeholder management gives me a strong foundation, and I’m excited to bring these skills to a product-focused role." Making a career pivot is challenging—but absolutely possible with the right approach. 💬 Have you ever pivoted careers? What worked best for you? Share your experience below! 👇
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Stop Applying and Waiting—Use the 2-Step Method Instead It’s not enough to apply for a job and hope for the best. And mass-applying—whether manually or with an AI tool—won’t get you hired faster. Instead, use the 2-Step Method to stand out and gain an advantage. 🔹 Find a job → Find a contact 🔹 Find a contact → Find a job By taking this approach, you’ll not only differentiate yourself from other applicants but also gain the support of an insider who can help your resume get noticed. Step 1: Apply Strategically This part is straightforward. ✔ Find a job online. ✔ Tailor your resume to highlight your most relevant qualifications. ✔ Write a thoughtful cover letter that explains why you want to work at the company—this means doing real research beyond just knowing their name. Step 2: Find an Insider This is the step most job seekers skip—but it’s the game-changer. Find someone who currently works (or previously worked) at the company and reach out. Yes, it takes effort, but securing an internal advocate, ally or informant dramatically increases your chances of getting noticed. This is called an employee referral, and it’s one of the most powerful ways to land an interview. 💎 Reversing the 2-Step: Start with People, Then Find the Job 💎 If you have a list of target companies, begin by identifying people you know who work there. Reach out and reconnect—even if there’s no job opening at the moment. Why? ✔ They may know about a job before it’s posted. ✔ They could refer you when something opens up. ✔ They might introduce you to someone hiring elsewhere. Not everyone will respond, and not every lead will pan out—but what if just one does? That’s all it takes. Use LinkedIn to Find Insider Connections LinkedIn is the best tool for this. 📌 Visit a company’s LinkedIn page and see who works there. 📌 Check your connections—first-degree contacts are ideal, but second-degree can be valuable too. 📌 Use your college/university alumni network to find former classmates at your target companies. AI can’t replace human-to-human connection. And while this takes effort, the hard work can pay off. Try the 2-Step Method for a few weeks and see how it changes your job search.
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