On LinkedIn you should:
Letter 1: “Ms. Popper, its John I hope you had a great new year and I would like to if a 3.17 GPA as an economics major is decent for my first semester at college. Thank you for your time.”
Letter 2: “Hi, Mrs. Popper its John Jones and I would like to know if you need to have a minor in Broadcast Media to work at NBC with a major in Economics? Thank You for your time.”
These are real letters with changed names. I was generous/silly/stupid enough to answer the first one politely. Then John sent Letter # two. Instead of asking strangers ungrammatical questions, spend time proofreading your letters, studying to get better grades, or applying for an internship or job.
14. When I get an email request to ‘forward an intro’ to someone in my network, a recruiter looking for recommendations for a specific role, or a conference requesting speaker recommendations, I’ll happily respond. That’s what LinkedIn is for. And to hobnob with the top 1 percent of viewed profiles, all two million of us.
On LinkedIn you should:
Letter 1: “Ms. Popper, its John I hope you had a great new year and I would like to if a 3.17 GPA as an economics major is decent for my first semester at college. Thank you for your time.”
Letter 2: “Hi, Mrs. Popper its John Jones and I would like to know if you need to have a minor in Broadcast Media to work at NBC with a major in Economics? Thank You for your time.”
These are real letters with changed names. I was generous/silly/stupid enough to answer the first one politely. Then John sent Letter # two. Instead of asking strangers ungrammatical questions, spend time proofreading your letters, studying to get better grades, or applying for an internship or job.
14. When I get an email request to ‘forward an intro’ to someone in my network, a recruiter looking for recommendations for a specific role, or a conference requesting speaker recommendations, I’ll happily respond. That’s what LinkedIn is for. And to hobnob with the top 1 percent of viewed profiles, all two million of us.