A friend sent me this today and it really hit home for me on so many levels.
She said “You fall, you rise, you make mistakes, you live, you learn.
A friend sent me this today and it really hit home for me on so many levels.
She said “You fall, you rise, you make mistakes, you live, you learn.…
Jenn Klyse runs a successful technology consulting practice from Chicago, and she’s the latest Woman Who Wows.
I met Jenn while working together on the planning committee of LMA Tech…
We have entered an unprecedented time with the recent coronavirus outbreak. Many are wondering: it is still appropriate to market myself and my firm during a time when uncertainty is…
It goes without saying that we are in uncharted waters. The COVID-19 crisis is impacting law firms, their employees and, of course, their clients. Events are being cancelled. Schools and…
Hashtags are great tools to help your content become discovered and to build your brand and business (especially on LinkedIn), but only if you know how to use hashtags and you use the right ones.
If you’re writing about the coronavirus on LinkedIn, you should be using hashtags so your content can be amplified and have a stronger impact.
But first off – what is a hashtag? Just like on Twitter or Instagram, a LinkedIn hashtag is any combination of letters, number or emoji that follow the # symbol such as #coronavirus. Any spaces or symbols used within the tag will break the link, so that means you can’t include apostrophes, commas, exclamation points or hyphens in your hashtag.
Hashtags help users find content on a specific topic. If you add hashtags to your posts, they’ll help you get discovered by other users, including those not connected to you (2nd and 3rd degree connections). This is because individuals now search for content under hashtags and click on the hashtags in posts. In addition, you can follow hashtags on LinkedIn, meaning that posts containing the ones you have selected will appear in your news feed.
We are going to be okay. Really. Even though many of us are sequestered at home, life will go back to normal – it just will likely be a new…
Everyone is stressed right now over the coronavirus outbreak, which is totally understandable. I live in New York City where all restaurants, gyms and schools are closed for who knows…
There are countless studies that talk about the health benefits of having a pet, but I don’t need to show you data to confirm what many of you already know.
In this installment of Women Who Wow, meet Wilmington-based Jennifer Smuts, the Chief Marketing Officer at Connolly Gallagher. Jenn has been a longtime volunteer of the Legal Marketing Association and has held various leadership roles in the organization. I met Jennifer through the LMA, and we clicked right away. I admire her for many reasons, including the fact that she truly is supportive to other women in the industry and is one of those people who gives to others without expecting anything in return.
Recently, Jennifer joined 2020 Women On Boards, whose overall goal is to educate women about how they can navigate their own contacts to get on corporate boards and be a part of the larger national conversation, an incredibly worthwhile cause to give women a seat at the table (you can read more about her work with them below).