Cheeky Logo
Ready To Get Hired?
Apply To Book A Free Call With Our Transition Specialist Team

Is Your LinkedIn The Cause Of Employers Ghosting You? 7 Techniques To Get Noticed On LinkedIn

I began my job search optimistic and determined. There was a job posting that seemed to be written specifically for me. I had all the qualifications, the work was extremely interesting. It was as if I had written exactly what I was looking for in a job and there it was on a job site. I spent all my time on the resume and did not touch my LinkedIn. I felt for sure I would get it, it was just too perfect. Finally, I hit “submit” and waited.

For weeks, I heard nothing but I was patient. Then I got it, my first rejection letter. 

So much time had been spent on creating that application it was crushing to get the rejection letter. There were no other prospects. It was time to change strategies.

I still needed a job, so I started playing the numbers game. Maybe it wasn’t about being perfect for the role but how many roles you can apply to. 

Over the course of several months I applied to several jobs. Uploading resumes endlessly to job sites and blind messaging people on LinkedIn. 

And for months I didn’t receive a single call back. 

Was this not a numbers game? If I uploaded enough resumes and blind messaged enough people, surely something would happen. I just needed to upload more resumes and apply to more jobs. 

I even started to apply to jobs I had no interest in and was completely overqualified for. Still nothing. I began to think my PhD was a liability. 

That PhD, at the end of my name or on my resume was deterring my chances of getting a job. I had played the numbers game, I had tried putting all my eggs in one basket. It just felt that my PhD was the thing that was holding me back. I was under a veil of dread, in a state of limbo; I felt I had lost my identity. If I couldn’t say I was a PhD, who was I?

I asked a former labmate who had transitioned successfully into industry, what was their secret? Did they remove PhD from their LinkedIn, from their resume? 

They said the secret to their success was their LinkedIn profile. 

I thought my LinkedIn was fine, I had a professional headshot, a headline; it was complete. 

But when she looked at it, she said there were many areas of improvement. I was shocked. Was this good advice? Should I make these changes?

Nothing else was working, so I figured I would give it a shot. 

The difference that these small changes made was astounding. A recruiter reached out to me and I started to have rapport with him. Soon enough I had interviews, offers and landed my first industry job. 

Here are the secret LinkedIn tips that changed my job outlooks from nothing to offers in just a few weeks. 

LinkedIn Is More Important Than Your Resume

Resumes are uploaded in bulk every day, hundreds of people apply for the same jobs. Meaning a job recruiter or hiring manager can spend very little time on each resume. Research shows they spend less than 7 seconds

Similar data show a recruiter will spend 10 seconds on your LinkedIn profile. This may not seem like a lot but if you look at it as a percentage, this is over a 40% increase in viewing time.

In addition, over 90% of recruiters are using social media to find new job candidates, the vast majority of which are using LinkedIn. But they are using a different LinkedIn version than what you see, this is called LinkedIn Recruiter. 

1. Turn on the recruiter button

This one is the most simple but is also the most crucial.

If you don’t click this button you will remain invisible no matter what you have on your LinkedIn. You’ll never show up on the search results. 

The button can be hard to find sometimes. But now that you know about it, you should be able to find it. Below your profile picture there should be a box that says “Show recruiters you’re open…”.

Click on this box and fill out the brief survey about what you are looking for, including locations and job titles. You can also change who can see this to hide this information from your current employer.

2. Your impressive technical skills don’t matter; keep it simple on LinkedIn

Recruiters usually don’t have PhDs, they are not searching for a biomedical microbiologist or a plant physiologist, they don’t care if you can do a western blot or RNAseq.

They are using terms that are much more general (ie. biologist, plant scientist, research, project management). In fact the three main search boxes on LinkedIn Recruiter are “Job tite”, “Location”, and “Skills.” 

So while you may possess very impressive technical skills, displaying them on your resume or LinkedIn profile may not help you. 

Instead, you need to understand how keywords work and sprinkle them throughout your profile. So, when a recruiter does a search to fill an open position, the LinkedIn algorithm ranks your profile high.

3. Transferable skills aren’t a plus, they are a must.

Recruiters and hiring managers are generally looking for candidates with strong transferable skills. These include skills like communication and project management. 

Technical skills are great, but they can easily be learned on the job. Being able to collaborate or manage time is a lot harder to teach and learn if you don’t already have these skills. 

In addition, in times of recession, you should adapt your transferable skills. Recession specific transferable skills are a must.

These are skills that show you are the least risky candidate.

In a time of pure uncertainty, companies need to mitigate their risk in hiring.

Words like “flexibility & versatility,” “change management,” “virtual”  “risk mitigation” and “risk management” show employers that you will work towards diminishing risk for their company and, as a PhD, you already have most of them. 

Finally, you should add the terms “technical literacy” and “technical communication” to your profile. All the scientific misinformation we are currently seeing comes from people without technical literacy; they do not have PhDs.

4. Be active on LinkedIn

On any social media platform, the more you connect with others, the more you are noticed. Connecting on LinkedIn can be a little different than on other social platforms. It is more of a professional setting, so your activity should reflect this culture. 

There are three main ways you can be active on LinkedIn. The first is to “react” to a post. This includes all the different emojis that LinkedIn has (i.e. “like,” “celebrate,” “love,” “support,” “insightful,” “curious.” This is the most basic level of engagement. It requires very little input and as a result doesn’t increase your presence that much. 

The next would be to comment on someone’s post. This would also include sharing someone else’s post and adding a comment. At this level, the author will likely see your name and read your comment, which will increase your visibility.

This is a great place to start if you feel a little insecure about posting your own content. It will make you more acquainted with the kinds of posts appropriate for this platform and who posts them. 

The final level would be to post your own content. This can either be a short post, a photo with a comment, a video, or your own LinkedIn article. Remember, LinkedIn is not Facebook, Instagram, or Youtube; the kinds of posts you create on LinkedIn need to be appropriate for the professional audience.

This does not mean publishing comments loaded with jargon.

It simply means you need to communicate at the level that you would at an office, or conference, and not at a bar with friends. 

Bonus activity. As a bonus, being a reference for someone is another way to be noticed. You should have 2 references on your LinkedIn but you should also be a reference to other people that you know. This typically does not take too long but will impact your LinkedIn score considerably.

5. Hide your competitors

Wouldn’t it be nice if you could just remove all the competition. LinkedIn has over 500 million users, that’s a lot of other people that have the same technical and transferable skills as you.

So, making all those users invisible would definitely increase your visibility.

You can’t 100% remove your competitors from LinkedIn but you can definitely limit them. On the right hand side of your LinkedIn there is a column for “Also Viewed.” These are people that are similar to you and your skills; these are your competitors. You can hide this “Also Viewed” section, so when a recruiter lands on your site the only profile they are looking at is yours.

6. You are ghosting other people

It’s well known that the fastest way to getting hired is through referrals. LinkedIn is a great place to start establishing these connections and creating rapport. Reach out to someone you admire or someone in a position you are interested in. Comment on their post, connect with them, set up an informational interview and continue the conversation. Eventually, you will build a relationship, even if you’ve never met in person, or you live on the other side of the world. 

You may see someone’s post and have a thought or comment but be too timid to post it.

Stop these toxic thoughts, you’re valuable, your PhD is worth something and you posting on someone else’s profile will only open doors as long as you are sincere, add value, and keep it professional.

7. Don’t be an aggressive interviewer

When you get around to scheduling informational interviews keep it light. Ask questions that will enhance your status, build rapport, and get the other person talking. You don’t want to immediately start an interview with questions about how to become more competitive or how you can get a job. Don’t be aggressive. 

Think of it more like a conversation. Try to get to know the other person. What do they enjoy about the job? How did they get into this career track? By making it about “them”, you still gain all the information but in a way that shows you are not only interested in you.

Keeping it informal will also make it more relaxed and less stressful. Being too aggressive during an informational interview is a sure way to lose a connection. 

These steps are not time consuming, they are not complicated but they do work. Applying these small tweaks to your LinkedIn profile could have a monumental impact on your career outlooks.

If you’re ready to start your transition into industry, you can apply to book a free Transition Call with our founder Isaiah Hankel, PhD or one of our Transition Specialists. Apply to book a Transition Call here.

Book a Transition Call
Get Free Job Search Content Weekly

ABOUT ISAIAH HANKEL, PHD

CEO, CHEEKY SCIENTIST & SUCCESS MENTOR TO PHDS

Dr. Isaiah Hankel is the Founder and CEO of Cheeky Scientist. His articles, podcasts and trainings are consumed annually by millions of PhDs and other professionals in hundreds of different countries. He has helped PhDs transition into top companies like Amazon, Google, Apple, Intel, Dow Chemical, BASF, Merck, Genentech, Home Depot, Nestle, Hilton, SpaceX, Tesla, Syngenta, the CDC, UN and Ford Foundation.

Dr. Hankel has published 3X bestselling books and his latest book, The Power of a PhD, debuted on the Barnes & Noble bestseller list. His methods for getting PhDs hired have been featured in the Harvard Business Review, Nature, Forbes, The Guardian, Fast Company, Entrepreneur Magazine and Success Magazine.

Isaiah Hankel, PhD

Here's What Others Are Saying

"I finally signed my contract and will be starting soon! I am very happy with the compensation package they have offered me and it meets my expectations."

Indrani Mukrajee

Indrani Mukrajee

Product Manager

at Miltenyi

"Extra thrilled...I now have a full-time job lined up before I even graduate. Yay! Cheeky Scientist helped me get my internship, 3 offers, and the offer I wanted at a competitive salary because I had other offers to leverage. All before I even graduated."

Srishti Dasarathy, PhD

Srishti Dasarathy, PhD

AI Research Engineer

at Lockheed Martin

"Good news...I've secured a job! Thank you for your support during the job search process and for giving me the courage to transition from academia to industry."

Marlyn Brookins

Marlyn Brookins

Regulatory Submissions Coordinator

"Hi Isaiah - I just want to inform you that I've accepted a job offer from Sandoz, Inc. I want to say a special thank you to you and your dedicated staff for all your help and support throughout the job search stage."

Odeniel Sertil

Odeniel Sertil

Manager, Regulatory Affairs Biosimilars

at Sandoz, Inc.

"I am thrilled to be starting my position as a Scientist at bioMeriuex! I will be joining the device validation team to bring #invitrodiagnostics to the market!"

Alec Vallota-Eastman

Alec Vallota-Eastman

Scientist

at bioMeriuex

"I got a job offer from a pharma company, which I am going to accept..thank you for your amazing support!"

Gonzalo Rosso

Gonzalo Rosso

Formulation Scientist

at Coriolis Scientist

"I am happy to share I am starting a new position as Principal Fatigue Specialist at Qantas!"

Gemma Paech

Gemma Paech

Principal Fatigue specialist

at Qantas

"I'm happy to share that I'm starting a new position as Founder at Relearning Earning!""

James Wadsworth

James Wadsworth

Founder

at Relearning Earning

"I am happy to share that I'm starting a new position as a Research Scientist at Cellecta, Inc.!"

Chaitali Saqcena

Chaitali Saqcena

Research Scientist

at Cellecta, Inc.

"Thrilled to announce that I have joined a new role as a Research Associate at HJF to work at the WRAIR. Very excited to join a dedicated and brilliant team working to eradicate HIV. Thanks to my family, friends, and fellow Cheeky associates for their support in my job hunt journey.""

 Lakshmi Rani Iyer

Lakshmi Rani Iyer

Research Associate

at HJF

"Thanks to Cheeky Scientist, I now have an offer letter in my hand and a new career in the industry, which makes me incredibly happy and excited for the future. The training Cheeky Scientist provided was successful since it helped me to carefully consider my skills and improve how I approached my job search. I gained more confidence talking to recruiters and engaging in on-site interviews thanks to the many training modules and live sessions Cheeky Scientist offered. I had a lot of back-and-forth interactions with prospective employers as offers came in, and Cheeky Scientist helped me be a good negotiator. Through Cheeky Scientist, I could ultimately search for, negotiate, and select my best career route."

Vishnu Modur

Vishnu Modur

Clinical Trial Associate/Manager

at Medspace

"I proceeded with the offer we were discussing and i signed the contract a few days ago. I would like to thank you so much for your support throughout this process. it was really helpful and beneficial!"

Samir Tohme

Samir Tohme

Project Engineer, Optical Development & Simulation Expert

at EDL Rethschulte GmbH (FEV Group)

"The made an offer and I accepted it. I am excited and nervous to start a new job and leave academia!"

Valentina Dallacasagrande

Valentina Dallacasagrande

Sr. Scientific Advisor

at reVision Therapeutics, Inc.

"I aced the interview, I signed yesterday and begin next month!"

Sinduri Vuppala

Sinduri Vuppala

Field Application Specialist

at Bruker Daltonics

"BIG NEWS!! Lufthansa offered me the gig!!"

Marco Milesi

Marco Milesi

at Lufthansa

Similar Articles

Why Hiring Managers Often See PhDs As Desperate (& How To Avoid It)

Why Hiring Managers Often See PhDs As Desperate (& How To Avoid It)

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

Recently, I spoke with an absolutely brilliant physicist. She had a decade of groundbreaking research under her belt, was well-respected and well-known in academia, and she was ready to make the move to an industry career.  And she was stumped.  She couldn’t understand why her job applications had been hitting a brick wall for the last few months. Despite her impressive credentials and numerous publications, she hadn’t received a single interview invitation in months.  The worst part? She’d already stepped away from the research and teaching that had been sustaining her financially.  When she doubled back, thinking maybe it just…

4 Ways To Give Your Social Selling Index A Big Boost

4 Ways To Give Your Social Selling Index A Big Boost

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

Growing up, my parents had an adage for everything. And there was one I heard more than any other by far: Nothing worth having ever came easy. These words of wisdom were a lousy rebuttal for the injustices of childhood, but they became the mantra that got me through graduate school.  Maybe that’s why I regarded anything “easy” as weak, lazy, and average – all dirty words in my book. And, without knowing what LinkedIn was really about, I wrote it off as just that: an easy way for lazy people to try and find a job. It was, I…

What To Do When You Feel Invisible On LinkedIn

What To Do When You Feel Invisible On LinkedIn

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

LinkedIn is unlike any other social networking platform.  The similarities are hard to ignore: you post updates – sometimes pictures –  share your opinions and comment on posts others make. But at its core, LinkedIn is very different than Facebook or any other friend-finding, video-sharing, community-connecting network.  LinkedIn is designed specifically to introduce professionals to other professionals. The site’s primary mission is to remove the barriers that make it difficult to connect with peers, your target companies, and the right opportunities.  What kind of opportunities, you might ask? What’s so great about having connections? As a PhD transitioning into industry,…

Here's The Formula To Hack LinkedIn Recruiter's Algorithm

Here's The Formula To Hack LinkedIn Recruiter's Algorithm

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

LinkedIn is not for academics. This is what I heard over and over again in the latter stages of my PhD program.  If anything, you should have a personal website to share your published papers and research.  And it made sense to me. If I was going to go into academia, shouldn’t I be creating content for other academics? So that’s what I did. And then I dusted off my hands and kept working toward my PhD. I was so committed to the idea of succeeding in academia and becoming a professor. In my mind, there wasn’t really any other…

Make A Future-Facing LinkedIn Profile That Employers Find Easily

Make A Future-Facing LinkedIn Profile That Employers Find Easily

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

When I began my job search, I was optimistic. I’d even go so far as to say I felt pretty confident.  Right off the bat, I found a job posting that seemed almost like it was written specifically for me. I met all the requirements for the role, and the work sounded genuinely interesting.  I’d heard that you should update your LinkedIn profile before applying to jobs, but I didn’t think that applied to me. Not without any job experience to add. I had worked on that right after graduation and felt like it was professional looking – pretty complete,…

7 Things PhDs Should Always Do When Networking Online

7 Things PhDs Should Always Do When Networking Online

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

If you want to get a PhD-level industry position, you need to set up a networking strategy and invest in your professional relationships. You can build rapport with someone else by networking in person, either at networking events, or over a cup of coffee. However, online networking is another powerful tool you can use to reach out to industry professionals and start a conversation. Do you know how to turn a LinkedIn connection into a job referral? If you don’t, you’re in trouble and are probably missing out on some great opportunities. Take for example the following story a member…

How To Supercharge The Search Ranking Of Your LinkedIn Profile & Resume

How To Supercharge The Search Ranking Of Your LinkedIn Profile & Resume

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

You probably know that you should always target your resume when you apply for an open position and that you should add keywords related to your desired position throughout the sections of your LinkedIn profile. But do you actually know what targeting a resume or LinkedIn profile involves? Most PhDs think that they just need to look at the skills mentioned in a job posting and sprinkle a couple of them throughout their professional profile. This is the bare minimum.  If you want to ensure your LinkedIn profile always comes at the top of searches and your resume always makes…

Top 10 LinkedIn Sections Every PhD Must Complete To Get Hired

Top 10 LinkedIn Sections Every PhD Must Complete To Get Hired

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

You probably know that a LinkedIn profile is important if you want to transition out of academia and find your dream industry position. But did you know that your LinkedIn profile is actually more important than your resume? Everyday, I see PhDs lose great opportunities because they don’t understand the importance of their LinkedIn profile. You can use LinkedIn to find jobs, connect with people, and get job referrals.  If you find a job opportunity through means different from LinkedIn, chances are that the hiring manager will take a look at your profile. Never underestimate the importance of taking the…

If You Don't Know These 5 Things About LinkedIn, Your Job Search Is In Trouble

If You Don't Know These 5 Things About LinkedIn, Your Job Search Is In Trouble

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

There is no way to deny that LinkedIn is a must-have tool for every PhD who wants to transition into industry. Positioning yourself on LinkedIn is one of the most powerful ways to get noticed by and start growing your network of industry professionals. LinkedIn gives you the opportunity to reach out to people working in your target companies or locations, connect with recruiters and hiring managers, and participate from groups of like-minded professionals. I have seen many PhDs get hired by leveraging the power of LinkedIn. Take for example the following story of a member I was recently talking…

Our Members Get Hired At Top Industry Companies

Top Industry Career eBooks

63 Best Industry Positions For PhDs

63 Best Industry Positions For PhDs

Isaiah Hankel, PhD & Arunodoy Sur, PhD

Learn about the best 63 industry careers for PhDs (regardless of your academic background). In this eBook, you will gain insight into the most popular, highest-paying jobs for PhDs – all of which will allow you to do meaningful work AND get paid well for it.

Industry Resume Guide for PhDs

Industry Resume Guide for PhDs

Isaiah Hankel, PhD

Learn how to craft the perfect industry resume to attract employers. In this eBook for PhDs, you will get access to proven resume templates, learn how to structure your bullet points, and discover which keywords industry employers want to see most on PhD resumes.

AI & ATS Resume Filters

AI & ATS Resume Filters

Isaiah Hankel

In today's competitive job market, understanding the impact of AI is crucial for career success. This involves ensuring your resume stands out in the digital realm, mastering your online presence, and being aware of how AI assigns reputation scores. Discovering how to leverage AI to your advantage is essential, as it plays a pivotal role in shaping professional opportunities.

Complete LinkedIn Guide For PhDs

Complete LinkedIn Guide For PhDs

Isaiah Hankel

The LinkedIn tips & strategies within have helped PhDs from every background get hired into top industry careers.