LinkedIn is getting to be as easy a target to hit as
the Military Channel as far as ridiculing public displays of illiterate self-promotion.
And I understand that when you deal with UGC
(user-generated content—a phrase that could only be a product of an industry
that has reduced professional communication to the very lowest common
denominator; “common” being the operative term), particularly in an un-moderated
global medium, you’re going to find bloopers.
But what I really love is people (or businesses
fronting themselves as people) putting themselves forward as trustworthy
dispensers of advice—in this case, career/job-hunt advice—when they’re
obviously devoid of any quality of either subject matter expertise (SME—another
great post-Internet term) or language.
And when you have two or more of these faux-humans
spewing the same illiterate appearance-of-content in the same group, well, that’s
just icing on the cake.
Examples from a recent posting—interestingly, in a
group for jobs in Europe:
Am I the only person who finds it odd that someone
thinks a forum for finding Euro jobs is an optimum place for posting how to
find US jobs?
Leaving aside, of course, the issue that no one is
likely to view an entity that concocts those sentences as a trustworthy source
of information on any subject.
I especially like the fact that “James Miller” not
only posted the “information”, but he “liked” it and “commented” on it.
That’s because on Planet LinkedIn you’re
told that you appear as a thought-leader (again, infobahn keyword) if you post,
comment, answer and otherwise put your name and face in multiple public
places.
Okay, fine.
Only, just a few pixels away on this forum, here’s
what I found:
Like “James Miller”, “Christine Stone” has also “liked”
her own post, which has been varied marginally from his. Her “comment” appears
to be some unrelated content—but in this universe what counts is that you post, not what you post.
Another very interesting coincidence, to me, is that
both “James Miller” & “Christine Stone” are located in…Pakistan:
And both work in the “airline” industry.
He cites UTexas (1990 MBA in “business education”) and she SUNY (1997 BBA in travel and tourism management) as responsible for their
education. I hope to
God neither school would have actually graduated someone (even in business) who
would scrape content from sources as ignorant and derivative as these two
have done.
But I could be wrong.
3 comments:
I wonder how people, for whom English is a second language, can understand these postings. English is my first language, and I can't.
I love "James Miller"'s job title. The heck with making CEO, I wanna be The Authoritarian Manager!
According to his LinkedIn profile, "James" moved up from The Proactive Manager at his last job to The Authoritarian Manager. Probably a not uncommon career path in Pakistan.
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