Of course you know what LinkedIn is—you already have an account, right? And you read "Eight Things to Do Right Now to Get More Out of LinkedIn" a few weeks ago on MarketingProfs.com, and have been working on each of those things...

Still, there are people scratching their heads saying "now what do I do," and others who are saying "something weird happened and I'm not sure how to react."

I've put together four LinkedIn-related questions that I've come across recently, along with my recommendations on how to handle certain scenarios:

Question: Who should own the account?
Quick Answer: You should!

This can be a tricky one. I strongly encourage everyone to have a personal LinkedIn account, with your personal (non-business) email as the primary account email. This means using an email address from Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, another email provider, or even your own domain (but not your company email). If you change jobs today, you don't want your ex-employer to have complete access and control of your LinkedIn network.

Note that you can have multiple email addresses on your account; just make sure that your primary email is not your employer's email address. I know of at least one situation where someone was terminated and the employer claimed that the LinkedIn network was theirs, leaving the individual empty-handed.

If your boss wants you to set up a LinkedIn account for the company, or your role in the company, make sure you have your own LinkedIn account that you manage and grow at the same time.

Question: Who should you connect with?
Quick Answer: It depends, but don't connect with everyone who invites you.

Once you get your name out there, with articles, involvement in forums and blog comments, and general networking, you'll start to get invitations from people you don't know. LinkedIn suggests that you connect only with people you "know and trust," which seems well-defined but can be interpreted a number of ways.

Of course, the strategy you choose in connecting with others will depend on whether you are an open networker (more prone to connect with almost anyone) or a closed networker (only connecting with those you know and trust). But the power of LinkedIn comes from your network's reaching a critical mass, even if you connect with those you might not know very well.

What if, after speaking to a group, someone in attendance invites you to connect? You might not know them, but they may feel they know you after having listened to you for an hour. My approach is to connect with such people—they are reaching out with good will, based on which you can develop a relationship.

Clearly, there are others who don't know you and don't care to know you, but are simply trying to make their network bigger. You need to decide whether adding them as a contact adds value to your networking strategy—if it doesn't, don't be afraid to reject their connection request.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Jason Alba

Jason Alba is the author of I'm on LinkedIn—Now What??? and is working on his second book, I'm on Facebook—Now What???. He blogs on networking, career management, personal branding, and job search topics at JibberJobber.