But it's most useful for professionals who use
traditional resumes and want office jobs.
It recently launched a feature that lets its
users upload a few samples of work, but there's no way to make a resume truly
show off someone's talent.
Now there are a slew of startups scrambling to
fill LinkedIn's gaping hole. They're trying to become a professional solution
for people who don't have desk jobs, from athletes to artists.
A few promising solutions:
·
Behance. If
you're a designer, photographer, advertising creative, or film maker, the most
important things you can show potential employers are samples of your work. Scott Belsky and his team at Behance have built up a big business giving these
professionals a more creative solution than LinkedIn (see an example of a Behance resume below).
·
Contently, a
database of freelance and aspiring writers, recently released Contently Portfolio, a way for
journalists to showcase their most impressive articles. LinkedIn allows you to
link to your blog, but this is a more visual, all-encompassing alternative that
can be sent to an employer along with a LinkedIn resume.
·
QFive is a new web and mobile app that allows athletes
to immediately upload clips and articles to their professional profiles so they
can show a single link to recruiters. It's still in beta, but dozens of sports
programs and thousands of athletes are registered, and the company is targeting
rising high school stars who are just beginning their sports careers.
There are plenty of other creative jobs that
still need filling too: chefs, singers, and anyone whose talent needs to be
experienced rather than read. If LinkedIn wants to stay ahead of the curve, it
might want to consider gobbling some of these startups up.
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