Monday, June 1, 2020
LinkedIn Invitations All You Need to Know (and Then Some!)
LinkedIn Invitations All You Need to Know (and Then Some!) As an active LinkedIn networker, blogger and trainer, I receive lots of LinkedIn questions every day. This week, there seemed to be a common theme LinkedIn Invitations. Many interesting questions crossed my desk, so I thought Iâd compile them all in one place and share my answers with you. Have a question about LinkedIn invites? Itâs probably answered below⦠Take a peek! 1. Whatâs the best way to invite someone to connect? I always tell people to never send an invitation unless youâre fairly certain it will be accepted. A best practice is reach out to that person elsewhere first (email, phone, real life conversations, Twitter, Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn messages, InMail, group discussions, status updates, etc.) and start a conversation. If they seem amenable, go ahead and invite them (customizing the invite to remind them how you know each other and why youâd like to connect). Never send the default invitation verbiage since it does turn off some people. And definitely donât bulk-invite everyone in your email contacts list. Thereâs no way to personalize the message and it could lead to some invites that you probably didnât intend to send (your ex-spouse, grandma, doctor, mechanic, that employee you fired, people who might not know you or remember you and/or people who arenât even on LinkedIn but will now get marketing emails to join LinkedIn⦠something they may not appreciate at the end of the day). 2. How many invitations can I send? You are allotted 3000 invites to send out and you can send out as many as you want per day, but you will be required to enter a Captcha for each invite over 100 sent in a 24-hour period. 3. How can I prevent accidentally inviting the same person more than once? If youâve already invited that person, you will no longer see the regular âInvite John to Connectâ screen with the gray box and the radio button list. You will instead see a similar screen with only one option to invite that person by plugging in their email address. This screen tells you that youâve already invited this person in the past. 4. Can I withdraw an invitation once Iâve sent it out? Yes, simply go to Inbox Sent Sent Invitations tab to see all of your sent invitations. Click on any invite you want to withdraw to open the message then click the âWithdrawâ button. The person will not be notified that youâve withdrawn the invitation. (If you want to find a specific invite to withdraw, go to the search box in the top right corner of any screen, choose Inbox from the dropdown menu, plug in the name of the person you wish to un-invite and it will pull up that specific invite in the search results). 5. If I withdraw an invite, is it credited back to my account? Nope, Iâm afraid not. Once youâve sent an invite, it counts toward your 3000 invitation limit whether you withdraw the invitation or not. 6. What do I do if I run out of invitations? Simply email LinkedIn Customer Service and ask for more invites. As long as you havenât been labeled a spammer by getting too many declines, they will typically grant you another 500 1000 invites (per month) to send out. If you use them all up, you will need to wait until that month is up before asking for more. 7. Why would I ever want to withdraw an invitation? I recommend withdrawing an invite if it hasnât been accepted in the past week or so. It means that either a) the person doesnât remember you, b) they donât want to connect with you for some reason or c) they arenât very active on LinkedIn (and may not remember you by the time they do log back in⦠which greatly increases the chance that youâll get declined). 8. What happens when someone clicks âI donât know John?â Many people donât realize this, but this type of decline is EXACTLY the same as getting marked as Spam. IDK (I Donât Know) and Spam are identical in LinkedInâs eyes and if you receive approximately 5-7 of these declines (either type, in any combination), then LinkedIn will place a restriction on your account, requiring you to enter an email address for all future invites. 9. Why is LinkedIn requiring me to enter an email address to invite people? It means youâve received too many declined invitations and LinkedIn has placed a restriction on your account. (See #8 above.) 10. How can I remove a restriction on my account? Itâs not uncommon for newbies to get overzealous with their invitations and get restricted, so LinkedIn has actually created a way for you first-timers to remove your own restriction. Simply go to this page, check the âI agreeâ box and click âOK.â Shazam! Youâre now unrestricted and back in action. (Just be more careful going forward!) Not your first restriction? Youll need to reach out to Customer Service and promise to be more careful with your future invites. 11. How can I tell if someoneâs marked my invite as IDK / spam? Hereâs a little ditty that I discovered a while back but this is the first time Iâve shared it with anyone else! ?? When you click on a sent invite (see #4 above), if the âResendâ box is missing, that means the person has archived your invitation (which does not penalize you in any way aside from taking up one of your 3000 allotted invites). If both the âWithdrawâ AND âResendâ buttons are missing, it means that the person has marked your invitation as Spam or IDK. (Note it could also mean that youâve already withdrawn the invite or theyâve already accepted it, so always delete a withdrawn invitation for record-keeping purposes and/or check to make sure theyâre not already a 1st level connection. You canât reinvite someone whoâs already connected to you!) 12. How can I prevent account restrictions in the future? Stick to those best practices outlined in #1 above. Only send an invite that youâre fairly certain will be accepted. Never roll the dice with an invite. Start the conversation elsewhere and only THEN send an invite to connect. Customize the invite, be clear how you know each other and let them know why youâre interested in connecting. These best practices will greatly increase your acceptance rate! Even better? Create a one-click invitation link that takes people directly to your invitation page on your LinkedIn profile. Feature this link anywhere that prospective connections might read it (your email signature, blog, website, Twitter bio, Facebook page, company website, About.me page, etc.). The best part? A one-click invite reaches a wide audience, puts the ball in the other personâs court to invite you (rather than putting them on the spot with an invite), doesnât use up any of your 3000 invites (since the other person is inviting YOU) and thereâs no risk of you getting declined as Spam or IDK (since youâre the one doing the accepting, not the inviting). Cool, huh? (Feel free to comment below with YOUR one-click invite link⦠you just might get an invitation!) Any questions I left out? Any additional tips or personal anecdotes youâd like to share? Let us know!
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