Site icon Katrina Kibben

Explaining A Career Change On Your LinkedIn Profile

When Coronavirus was a complete unknown in March of 2020, it felt like everything was up in the air, including Three Ears Media. For so long, we had been focused on job postings – and now? No one was writing job postings. Everyone was too scared to make a hire because they didn’t even know if they’d make payroll or if their people would survive this mysterious virus that was killing tens of thousands of people.

I panicked. I had so much momentum in my business at the time – 20+ speaking gigs booked, some of the biggest projects we had ever done – and in a matter of weeks, they were all gone. My calendar was clear. These opportunities went up in smoke and I was so scared my company would be gone, too.

I remember sitting at my desk and wondering out loud to no one how I would survive this shift. I didn’t know how I could keep this talented team I had built with no customers or how I could sustain this business I loved so much. I went to a business mastermind and cried, just praying this wouldn’t be the end of the company I loved so much.

How Do You Utilize LinkedIn For A Career Change?

In this group, I found a new short-term business model when I realized that the same formula to write a job post could be used to create a better LinkedIn profile. I could analyze job titles to make sure people were found by recruiters, find a way to write the story of someone’s life, and design this digital space to get the right people to read. (You can watch a free webinar to optimize your LinkedIn profile here.)

Then, through a connection, I had the opportunity to pitch this LinkedIn profile writing service on a platform that was a lot bigger than I ever imagined. Suddenly, I was writing a few profiles every day.

While some stories were very straightforward – consultants who wanted to market their businesses, people looking to make a parallel move from one company to the next – there were also a large group of people paralyzed by fear. In this time where everything changed, so many people went from feeling like they knew their path to dreaming up a new one. For the first time ever, people weren’t so determined to build a traditional career path. They wanted to be happy.

Storytelling Is Key

The shift from a life everyone could predict to a plan that only makes sense to you is hard enough. Switching careers always seems practical to the person making the change, but it’s not so simple to explain in a LinkedIn profile that recruiters simply scan while they look for a reason to reject you.

There were some common questions about making a career change on your LinkedIn profile. Questions I think every job seeker should understand if they’re looking to write about a career change on LinkedIn.

Make the leap. You don’t have to wait. 

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