Showing posts with label linkedin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label linkedin. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

SPAM Comes To LinkedIn


spam

A tech industry veteran received the message below in his LinkedIn inbox this morning.

He forwarded it on to us with the following note:

My first linkedin spam message! Here is a quick and absolutely guaranteed way for them to turn me off to the service.

The salesperson who sent the note is apparently a couple of degrees removed from the tech industry veteran. And he apparently can't even be bothered to customize his sales pitches when he spams friends of friends.

Here's the note:



LinkedIn

INMAIL: YOU HAVE A NEW MESSAGE

From: [REDACTED]

Date: 6/22/2011

Subject: remote desktop for your iPad, iPhone and soon Android

I have attracted the attention of many CTO's and CIO's as of late with the introduction of our DesktopDirect appliance that supports remote desktop security for the iPad / iPhone and soon Android! This solution will allow your users to connect to desktops inside the office in an extremely secure manner, over the internet, all by clicking a simple app on your device. IT would manage all of the security and authentication. There is no third party involved at all.





When could we chat about how Morgan Stanley and Coach are using our solution today and how it could help you just the same?



[REDACTED]





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SPAM Comes To LinkedIn


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~3/RM8fi8R185Y/linkedin-spam-2011-6

Friday, May 20, 2011

LinkedIn: The Startup Ecosystem and the “Zuckerberg Effect”

No one knows what fate– or the NYSE–will have in store for LinkedIn following today’s madcap opening. But venture capitalists like Benchmark Capital’s Bill Gurley say the company’s $9 billion IPO should have one immediate effect, finally putting to rest Silicon Valley’s long-running apathy toward IPO’s, aka, “The Zuckerberg Effect.”

LinkedIn: The Startup Ecosystem and the “Zuckerberg Effect”


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OmMalik/~3/5EosEn7Tzw4/

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Why Google Should Buy LinkedIn Now, Before It's Too Late (GOOG)

jeff weiner linkedin

Google's new CEO Larry Page is all about winning in social, tying every Googler's bonus to the success of the company's social strategy.

And he's right: Google absolutely needs to win in social because social is driving an ever increasing share of online traffic, and traffic is power and money.

An obvious shortcut for Google to win social is buying other successful social companies.

The company that most often comes up as a potential target is Twitter, because it's the biggest Facebook rival and it's struggling to find a good business model, which means Google could be a long term home for it. But Twitter doesn't want to sell.

One that gets less talked about is LinkedIn, because LinkedIn is more "niche" (albeit a huge niche). But with yesterday's news that LinkedIn is becoming a traffic firehose with its new focus on content, we should note the big reason why LinkedIn would make a very valuable social property for Google.

LinkedIn has one thing that no one else except Facebook has: REAL IDENTITIES.

The focus on real identities is one of the biggest factors in Facebook's success. At the beginning, you could only sign up with a college, and then a work email, which made people sign up with their real identities. Today Facebook still enforces its only-real-names policy.

Real identities are why people go on Facebook all the time. It makes the site feel more trustworthy. It makes sure people have their real friends on there with real photos. Being an online identity repository and system is a huge competitive advantage for Facebook, and something it's doing effortlessly despite every big company trying and failing to get people to use their real identities online. Real identities are what makes social networks "stick" and be so valuable.

With LinkedIn, Google would instantly get a database of 100 million real and valuable identities, which it can then cross-pollinate with Google Profiles, its own ho-hum effort to get people to give it their own real identities.

LinkedIn can then evolve its focus slowly and progressively away from "merely" professional networking. The barrier between personal and professional identity online is getting blurrier and blurrier anyway. Services like Twitter and About.me are already hard at work obliterating that distinction. That would be bad for LinkedIn as a standalone company, but great for a Google-owned LinkedIn.

Sharing content is another big social network activity that LinkedIn is already shifting to, and combining Google's new sharing service +1 with LinkedIn would give it that instant boost. LinkedIn would stop being a resume database but become a sharing hub for information like Facebook and Twitter. 

Integrating LinkedIn profiles and Gmail, like third-party tools like Rapportive already do, would also be a big boon: opening an email you would see not only a person's email and "name" but their real identity. Integrating LinkedIn and Gmail that way might cause privacy jitters (but again, some tools already do this using publicly available info and APIs) but it would improve Gmail and drive a huge new wave of signups to LinkedIn.

In time, LinkedIn could go from being a social network for execs, to a social network for people who have jobs, to a social network for everyone. That would be a real threat for Facebook.

If Google wants to buy LinkedIn, it had better do it soon rather than before it gets a huge IPO pop. So it's something to think about.

By The Way: LinkedIn Makes It Impossible For You To Quit →

Don't Forget: LinkedIn Is One Of The Huge Tech IPOs Coming This Year →

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Why Google Should Buy LinkedIn Now, Before It's Too Late (GOOG)


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~3/6EzAKkKvxrk/why-google-should-buy-linkedin-2011-5

Monday, May 2, 2011

CHART OF THE DAY: Suddenly, LinkedIn Is A Traffic Firehose

Out of nowhere, Business Insider started seeing real referral traffic from LinkedIn last month.The chart below illustrates the spike. 

LinkedIn product manager Liz Walker tells us the traffic is coming from a bunch of sources – mostly new products like LinkedIn.com/Today, newsletters, and LinkedIn News.

All of these sources are programmed by LinkedIn populated "inShares," which are kind of like Facebook "likes" or Twitter "re-tweets."

Who knew?

Google, by the way, is trying to pull of a similar trick with its +1 button.  Larry Page is obsessed with figuring out social. He's worried about how people are finding content in their Facebook News Feeds and Twitter streams before they ever think to Google search for it. Maybe he should worry about Linkedin, too. Maybe he should just buy LinkedIn.

chart of the day, referrals by linkedin, may 2011

Follow the Chart Of The Day on Twitter: @chartoftheday

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CHART OF THE DAY: Suddenly, LinkedIn Is A Traffic Firehose


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~3/NmYHnwlFvdE/chart-of-the-day-referrals-by-linkedin-2011-5