The Entrepreneur DNA - Stop Being a LinkedIn Ghost and Build Real Connections | Bill McCormick
Episode Date: March 11, 2026Want to learn how to use LinkedIn the right way to build real relationships and generate business? Free LinkedIn Resources: Get Bill’s free LinkedIn training videos, profile checklist, and additiona...l resources here: https://bit.ly/allsellingissocialfree In this episode, I sat down with Bill McCormick to talk about why all selling is social and how entrepreneurs can use LinkedIn the right way to build real relationships, start better conversations, and create more business without coming across as spammy. Bill broke down why LinkedIn is such a powerful platform for B2B sales, how most people are using it completely wrong, and what best practices actually work when it comes to your profile, your network, your content, and your follow-up. This was a big one for me personally because I know I have not been using LinkedIn to its full potential, and Bill gave a clear roadmap for how to do it in a way that feels human, intentional, and effective. Complimentary 30-Minute Insights Call: https://calendly.com/bill-mccormick/30-minute-conversation The Social Selling Compass Video Course Special Offer: Use the coupon code 250off to purchase the course for $249 (Regularly $479) More info here: https://allsellingissocial.learnworlds.com/courses ---- About Bill: Bill McCormick is the Founder of Digi-Sales, a Digital Selling & Social Selling training company and Digi-Sales Academy an online video training platform where he shares his passion for helping professionals leverage the power of LinkedIn. Bill first started using digital sales techniques after he and his wife, Sue, started their own promotional product business. By using social platforms, especially LinkedIn, they were able to build a very successful business. Bill then began to help other business owners, entrepreneurs and sales professionals learn how to use LinkedIn to increase sales. Bill has conducted training for companies worldwide and specializes in helping to ‘make Linkedin Human’ - explaining the platform in easy to understand ways and this year launched the All Selling Is Social Podcast! Bill resides in Esperance NY with his wife Sue and their pets where they enjoy golfing, kayaking, snowshoeing and spending time with their kids and grandkids! Connect with Bill: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/billmccormick/ Website: https://allsellingissocial.com/ Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@Digi-Sales Free Resources: https://bit.ly/allsellingissocialfree About Justin: Justin Colby is the host of The Entrepreneur DNA and The Science of Flipping podcasts and a best-selling author. He is a serial entrepreneur with over and a seasoned real estate investor with over 20 years of experience. Driven by a passion to help entrepreneurs thrive, Justin created the Entrepreneur DNA community to support business owners in building wealth, systems, and long-term freedom. Through his podcasts, books, education platforms, and hands-on mentorship, he continues to help entrepreneurs scale with clarity and confidence. Connect with Justin: Instagram: @thejustincolby YouTube: Justin Colby TikTok: @justincolbytsof LinkedIn: Justin Colby Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What is up entrepreneur DNA family.
I'm very excited about this next guest because if you are in business, then you know you would
need to understand sales.
And if you understand sales, you know it is connecting to humans.
And connecting to humans is social.
My guest is the founder of all selling is social.
And he's leveraging LinkedIn as a human, creating actual connections versus just
collections.
Bill McCormick is here.
How are you, my friend?
I am great.
It's so great to be with you.
cannot wait for this conversation. We're going to have so much fun. Yeah, listen, all selling is
social. Like that is just your business, your company, your tagline, the brand. I mean,
you couldn't have hit it more on the spot, in my opinion. This is where you and I are in
direct alignment on. Talk to about just the concept of how you created that. Yeah. So my wife and I
started our entrepreneurial journey in 2013. We started our own print and promotional products
company. And she had been with another company. She left that company, left her email address.
Everything was there. She had to connect and find her old clients. And guess where she did it?
She did it on LinkedIn. I'd never heard of LinkedIn. She was the one that turned me on to it.
And being the salesperson in the company, I jumped in there. I began to learn about it. And, you know,
I was doing part. I was working. I was a 911 dispatcher. And I worked really strange hours.
So I always had two days off during the week and I would go out and sell. And I found that LinkedIn was where we could
find our clients. And so fast forward a few years later, I'm able to leave my job. I'm doing really
great. I'm using LinkedIn to find our clients, to connect with them, to convert them into,
from prospects to clients. And people began to ask me in my, you know, BNI groups and my networking
groups, hey, how are you getting clients? How are you, how are you doing this? I'm like, well,
I'm doing it with LinkedIn. They're like, oh, can you show me? And, you know, I did it a couple of times for
people. And then I'm like, wait a minute, I could charge them to do this.
And so I got involved in that.
And I, and you know, this is in 2017.
And in that time, between 2017 and about 2020, 21, social selling, the idea of social
selling really took off.
And I became part of the echo chamber of sales trainers and social selling trainers that
said, this is the only way you should do it.
This is the only thing that works because I wanted to sell you that.
So it, but what happened is I got on and had actual conversation.
with people who were using cold calling effectively,
who were using in-mail effectively and mass outreach effectively.
And every time I would say you shouldn't do this,
I had people telling you, but wait, we're doing this and it makes sense.
And I realized when I got away from the echo chamber that, wait a minute,
you know what, there's a social element to every sales methodology,
hence all selling is social.
And what's really interesting to me is on a social media platform like LinkedIn,
we see some of the most antisocial behavior.
And so that's kind of what launched it.
I'm like, yeah, we need to be better.
We need to be more social on social
so that we can make connections with people
and we're just not collecting, you know, these followers.
And we think that that makes us successful.
Listen, Bill, I need to lean into my own personal issue.
Okay.
And I think it's probably a lot of entrepreneurs personal issue.
To your point, it's a social media platform that is like kind of not
social. People don't treat it in a way
to be social. Help me lean into how to
utilize LinkedIn. And I know we'll go deeper,
but like, how can I better use it? I'm so used to,
just like so many entrepreneurs these days, the other
platforms, videos, reels. And I know there's a component that you can
still do that. Help me learn what is best practices for
LinkedIn. So first to understand is what your goal
is for using the platform. Because, you know, we say it's a
social media platform, but it's actually several different platforms. And what I like to say is
LinkedIn is a lot like an American football team. An American football team isn't one team. It's one
large team that's comprised by a number of different teams, right? So we know the normal ones of
offensive team, defensive teams, special teams, but we forget there's a coaching team. There's
a physical therapy and medical team. There's a back office team, a sales team that sells tickets.
There is a stadium team that sells hot dogs and pretzels and beer and soda and all that
stuff, right? So LinkedIn's much like that and that it's one large platform, but it works in several
different ways, right? So it started out as a quiz time. Do you know how LinkedIn got it start,
what it was meant to do? No. Okay. So Reed Hoffman, 2006 in his garage, I believe, he wanted to link,
he wanted to take recruiters and companies that were looking for for talent and link, get them link in
together to find talent.
And then people would come on the site.
They would create their profiles and the recruiters could find them and introduce them to
companies.
And so that's how it got started.
In fact, to this day, it still heavily kind of goes back to that resume type of thing.
But it's also a marketing platform, you know, for your own personal brand as well as
your company brand.
It's a sales and business development platform.
And if you don't believe that, just look at your inbox.
I'm sure we help companies just like you.
is all over it. And then it's a networking platform. And that's what I like to really highlight about it.
It's a networking room of a billion users that is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. And what makes
it so powerful is people will usually update their LinkedIn profile before they update anything else
when it comes to their professional world. So first figuring out why you want to use it. And for you,
it's going to be sales, business development, marketing, and networking, all those things.
So how do you use it most effectively?
Well, first of all, there's four areas that I help people with LinkedIn.
And the first is always profile, right?
Mark Hunter, my friend Mark Hunter, the sales hunter, he says, our reputation arrives before us.
And you can better believe that, you know, when I received an email from, from you about
being on the podcast, guess what I did?
I went to LinkedIn.
I checked out this Justin Colby guy.
That's what I do.
That's what people do.
People are doing research on you and finding out about you.
And so what are they seeing?
Do they see a profile that says, hey, I'm the best at everything I do?
You should believe that, but nobody else is going to believe it.
You know, when we say we have the best product, we have the best solution, we have the best company, we have the best customer service,
it ends up not meaning anything because guess what?
Everybody says that.
Yeah.
Justin, if you think about the last bad experience you had,
with a company, with a product, with a service.
You go look at their website.
You'll see they've gotten awards
for the exact thing that you didn't get from them, right?
Because everybody has a different experience.
So starting with your profile,
what you wanted to do is create a value-centric profile,
a profile that highlights and spotlights
the value that you provide your current clients.
So that when somebody reads it, they go,
oh, yeah, that's what I need.
Right?
So profile is first and foremost.
then you need to build a quality network and you need to build it in the right way and that doesn't
mean you slip you you pitch slap people that's what so many people are doing now but you connect on
purpose and for a purpose having some context developing relationships right so you want to build a
quality network and so those are the two things that i see people doing wrong the most that need to be
changed as well as utilizing all features i sent you a video you're your your
premium subscriber from LinkedIn.
And LinkedIn about 18 months ago started moving really into this pay-to-play model
where if you're paying for a subscription for LinkedIn, we're going to give you more features
than we're going to give free users of the platform.
And among those are being able to send everyone that you connect with a personal message,
which is so important.
If you're using the basic.
For clarity, I can video you because I'm a premium member, so I have a premium.
them I pay for it and I forget what I pay.
And I can literally say, Bill, what's up, man?
That was a great podcast.
And I can send that as a message where if you aren't on premium, you can't.
So no, you're close, but not quite.
So connection requests.
When you send an invitation to connect with someone, if you're a free user,
you're only allowed to send three personal messages that says,
hey, Justin, just scheduled to be on the entrepreneurial DNA podcast,
thought it made sense for us to connect, take a look at my profile, and let's connect.
Yeah. Once we're connected, anybody, once you're connected, anyone can send a video message,
and they're very highly effective, right? But another thing is your banner image, that area that's
behind your profile picture, I call it your billboard. You know, if you're in the Miami area,
I'm sure there's a big highways down there, lots of billboards. And if the billboard company came to you
and said, hey, Justin, we're going to give you a free billboard. You put anything on it. You wouldn't
leave it blank for long, right? You'd be, right, but how many people have a blank?
billboard behind their page on LinkedIn.
But listen, if you're a premium, business premium above for LinkedIn, you can have a scrolling
billboard.
That would be like the billboard company coming in you and say, we're giving an electric
billboard that can have five different messages on it, right?
Because that's how many you can have five different slides on it.
And I talked to so many people that they have no idea that they're able to have that.
So making sure you're using all the features that are available to you is also a huge point
of Link. You know, it's funny. Just in transparency, I'm getting so much out of this first
10 minutes. I'm literally looking for a pen, looking for a pen to be able to give the notes of,
hey, are we checking these things to my team? Like, hey, have we updated? Like, yeah, this is so great.
So, Bill, what are some of the bigger, I want to lean into what people should be doing.
I also want to lean into, and I want to understand, how are people using LinkedIn incorrectly?
So they're seeing it as another scaling automation and mass outreach opportunity.
And one of the things I'll tell, and I tell all my clients is if you're doing something on LinkedIn that's working for you, keep doing it.
Don't stop doing it just because I say you shouldn't do it.
The only exception to that is when it comes to automation, you should really check to make sure your account's not going to get restricted.
Because most automated software that connects to LinkedIn, the software is, the software is,
okay to is legal for them to create it they it's illegal when or not illegal you it causes you as a
user to violate LinkedIn's user agreement so be careful of that but what we've seen probably since
about 2018 or 19 and especially ramped up during the pandemic was people you know we had we had cold
calling right and then we had email and spam email and now they see LinkedIn is this place where we can
find people we can do a search of titles find all the
people that are podcast hosts. And if I do podcast, video editing and promotion, I can send you a
connection request, a mass connection request that says, hey, Justin, we just checked out the
entrepreneurial DNA podcast. You're killing it, man. We help companies just like YouTube do.
Da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da. And that's transactional. You know, they're just trying to
sell a service. And yeah, that may work with one person out of hundreds.
Sure. Because you have a team that's doing that, right? They reach out to me all the time about growing my podcast. I'm not trying to grow my podcast, right? So that's not really working. And one of the things I say all the time about scaled outreach on LinkedIn is there's a return on missing, right? An ROM rather than an R-O-I. And, you know, the thing when you call me, I see a phone number. I don't pay attention to it. I ignore it. When you send me a mass email, it either go to it. You know, you, the thing when you call call me, I call me, I see a phone number, I don't pay attention to it. I ignore it. When you send me. When you send me a mass email, it either go
in my junk folder or I look at it and I delete it. It doesn't have an impression on me.
But when you reach out to me on LinkedIn with a spam message, I see your picture, I see your name,
I see your company. I probably look at your profile. Even if spam, you're still looking me up,
right? So if I spam you and say, hey. On LinkedIn. Absolutely. Sure. And then based around best
practices, which we'll get into here shortly, Bill, but like then you say, ah, who's this Justin Colby?
And all of a sudden, my profile is built the right way, it's robust.
It clearly defines what I do and how I do it.
And you might say, okay, he spammed me, but it might be worth engaging with him.
He actually is the real deal in one, two, three ways, right?
Yeah.
Or if I look at your profile and you only have 20 connections, you know, and there's not a lot there.
I look and go, is this even a real profile?
Because there are bot profiles on LinkedIn.
LinkedIn's trying to battle that.
But it happens.
I was just, I'm part of a LinkedIn training group that I pay to be a part of.
And we help each other out.
We're global.
And so I was reaching out them today because I got connection requests from three people from
the same marketing agency all with the exact same message.
And with very few connections, and I'm pretty sure that they're, that their robot connection.
I'm going to report them later.
But what was really weird is they referenced, they said, we saw the recommendation that Karen gave
you for the website you've been.
built her. Justin, I can guarantee you that if I built a website for anyone, there's no way
they're recommending me, right? Because I don't do it. The thing is, is that Karen built my website
and I wrote a recommendation for her. So they're using some kind of automation or AI that got the
wires crossed. Sure. Right. And so there's the problem, too. You don't have a human doing it.
And when I replied back to them and said, hey, this is confusing, nobody replied back, right? Because
the robot doesn't care. The automation doesn't care unless I say, yes.
Right. So that's a big mistake, I believe, is trying to use LinkedIn as a scaled outreach tool when it's really more about one one networking and connecting the right way with people.
Well, selling is human, right? I mean, that's, and so social, your brand is selling your social. Like, in old days, let's remove social media for a second, right? You and I have enough gray. Well, I don't have any left, but it's gray if it was up there. You're smart. You got good.
And so, you know, it used to be networking meetings.
You talked about being up, right?
B&I was kind of the first, at least what I think, would be kind of the first business networking type meeting.
Now meetup.com came around and people have created all these social in-person meetups.
That was the only way, essentially, to engage and to have prospects and sell your prospects is belly to belly, face-to-face, he and in combat, I call it, right?
Now we have these amazing platforms.
and LinkedIn to me,
I personally am
statistic.
Like, I just don't use it efficiently.
I'm there.
I don't even know how many.
I'm sure I have thousands of whatever,
but like,
am I leaning into it?
I'm not.
And that's why I'm personally interviewing
is like, all right, team,
I'm looking for pens.
I'm like,
we got to lean into this because you're right.
Like it creates a,
like I don't like automation
within social media.
I have an in-person team.
I write my own copy.
I create the videos.
It is me.
this is not, you know, AI, and I know that's a big subject, but because I believe in the same
thing you believe. If I need Bill to be a client of mine, I need to go talk to Bill. Now, I have a new
platform called LinkedIn or Instagram or tick. There are platforms now. I can directly communicate
with you, but I'm going to do it. Yeah. Right. Anyway, I just. Well, and so, and so let me,
lean into that because here's the thing. You've got a team, but most entrepreneurs, they're all alone.
And so they're like, but wait a minute, I don't need another platform.
And so my question is, where are you being the most effective?
Right?
Because listen, if you're in B2B sales and your customers, customers, right, who they sell to,
if they're B2B also, they're going to be on LinkedIn.
It's a great place to find them.
But if you're B2C, then it's probably Facebook.
It's probably Instagram.
Maybe it's TikTok.
It's someplace else.
You have to spend your time wisely, and I get that.
I know that totally.
And so I always tell people, listen, you have to be where your clients are.
And then you have to engage them in the right way.
You're familiar with the Craig Rochelle Leadership Podcasts.
Craig Rochelle is the senior pastor of Life Church in Oklahoma.
Right.
So he has a huge following.
So I do some consulting for them.
And when I started working with them for the Leadership Podcast LinkedIn page,
it was at like 7,000 followers, which is not bad.
Well, we've grown it to over 56,000.
and followers, right? I say we. They've done the work. I've just kind of given some advice here and
there. But here's the thing. That's small, that's small things to Craig Grichelle. Craig Grishel's
started his TikTok page only probably about four or five years ago. He's got over a million
followers. He's got 1.2 million on Instagram and three quarters of a million on on Facebook. Guess
what? LinkedIn's not the priority, right? So you have to figure out, and that's where I come back to,
you know, what's going to work for you?
What's your goal?
And then if you figure out, yes, LinkedIn's it.
You don't have to stay all day on it.
You know, like, I'm on it all day, but that's what I do.
Right.
But have you ever read Atomic Habits by James Korse, top five?
We don't rise the level of our goals.
We fall to the level of our systems.
So you can have a goal to use LinkedIn more, but what's your system?
And so that's one of the things I help with.
And the great thing about you not having a pen to take notes is there's a
free resource link that's going to be in the show notes that's going to take you to a video
that explains the features for LinkedIn premium. A video that's going to be for small business
owners and entrepreneurs on whether they should be on LinkedIn, right? It's basically the three
levels of LinkedIn use and also a video for sales leaders and how I can help their team better
leverage the platform. There's also going to be a DIY checklist for your profile to make it more
value-centric. So, you know, I love to give away resources because I just want to help people.
If I make some money doing it great, but what I want to do is help people with this platform because
it's being used, it's being misused so much. You know, there's so much anti-social stuff happening.
Let's make it social again. You know, let's start. My friend Larry Levine wrote the book,
Selling from the Heart, and he talks about the trust formula and that we can develop trust when we do
two things, build authentic relationships and provide meaningful value. If you can do,
those two things, you build trust with people. LinkedIn is a great place to do that, but you have to be
authentic when you're building those relationships. Another big thing I see with people is they send
the same message to everyone. I can't tell you how many times they get a message that says,
oh, hey, Bill, I love your content. It's so great. I think we should connect on LinkedIn. And I'll go
back and look at my content. They haven't given it a thumbs up. They haven't commented it. They haven't
done anything. And I'll go back and say, what about that? And I never hear from
them, right? Because they say that to all the guys, right? They say that to all the coaches, right? You have to
make it more personal. And yes, that takes more time, but guess what? You'll be more successful when
you do that. What I say is people come in with judgment rather than curiosity. And what I mean my
judgment is they assume, and you know how that breaks down when you assume something. They assume that
my content's good. Or they assume that I need their help doing X, Y, and Z rather than coming in and
asking questions and being curious because then that makes it about the other person.
And that's what you want to do.
I'm curious.
I don't want to assume.
What are the best practices specifically for LinkedIn?
Who would in all your experience, who's the right business avatar to utilize this?
Because I actually believe, by the way, and I'll reframe the question.
I actually believe all platforms are built slightly different.
There's similarities for sure.
But like depending upon what you're actually trying to achieve.
I think there are better platforms for one than the other, right?
So let me ask it that way.
What are the best practices specific to LinkedIn?
So your clients have to be B2B.
You have to be in the B2B space.
And what I say is T and you're probably not that platform.
It's not going to, I mean, yes, your clients are all probably there,
but you're not able to reach them at that level.
You know, that's your Facebook, your Instagram, that kind of thing.
but even your and then your referral partners should also be on on LinkedIn.
In fact, the video I have in the free resources are three levels of LinkedIn
use for small business owners and entrepreneurs.
If your clients are on LinkedIn, yes, you need to be there.
If your referral partners are on LinkedIn, that's another great.
That's the second level because you can reach that.
So that's the thing is they have to be there.
But not only do they have to be there, but their clients should be too.
So I have a friend that does a lot of work in the food service industry.
Food service industry is B2B.
but the businesses they sell to are B2C, right?
They're client.
They're not on LinkedIn, right?
What's another good?
Companies that do payroll or do credit card processing services for restaurants.
And I call them door pullers, right?
They walk through a main street and they're going to pull doors and go in and talk to them, right?
They're B2B, but that business they sell to is strictly retail.
They're selling the customers.
So that doesn't work for them.
So if your clients are on LinkedIn, then yes, you should be there.
You know, that's the best place because they're going to be there and you're going to be able to reach them.
How you reach them, that's the key.
You know, so some best practices.
And I said there's four areas I train on profile, building a quality network, using content effectively and then conversations.
So I'll kind of just take you through those.
We've already talked about profile a value-centric profile.
A profile doesn't say, hey, I'm the best.
I'm so great at what I do because nobody cares.
But hey, here's the value that my clients get for working for us and making it human.
Using your about section not to tell your whole life story because, again, nobody cares.
But what are the challenges your clients face?
What's going to resonate with them?
When I read that, I go, that's me.
I want to know more, right?
Using your experience section to not do your climb up the corporate ladder.
Because, again, unless you're looking for a job, who cares?
but using your experience section for your deliverables for the things that you offer.
If you go look at my experience section, it shows me owner and founder.
I tell a little of my story.
And then I have my video courses and my podcast and the trainings that I do.
My complimentary webinar I offer for sales teams, right, using your experience section that way.
So when people read that, they get a better sense of what you do.
So that's the first thing.
We talked about building a quality network.
You want to reach out the right way to people.
But here's the key, then don't ignore them.
Right?
If somebody accepts your connection request, actually go back and thank them.
Actually send a note.
Right.
It's being social.
You know, here's what happens on LinkedIn.
You connect with somebody and that's it.
And that's like me walking up to you in the networking room and say, hey, Justin, I'm Bill McCormick.
And you say who you are and I turn around and I walk away.
And you're like, that guy is rude.
Well, that's what we're doing at LinkedIn.
We're just ignoring people, right?
Have a follow-up message.
Have a next step to take with.
them again be curious want to know more right so so that a lot of people don't know you can actually
download your first degree connections on lincoln um and i'll throw that in the um i can add that to
the resources i'll do that because then you can look at the last 10 are these clients are they prospects
what are they how can i reach out how can i connect with them content all right got to slow down i get
excited this is um so when we talk about content two i always get the same questions i don't know what to post
so I don't have time to post.
Okay?
You need to make time.
It comes down to a system.
But listen, what are the problems that your current clients are facing?
That makes great content because if they're having that problem, other people probably have that problem.
You know, curate content.
Use content from another source.
But listen, just don't repost it.
Put your own thoughts there.
Show that you have a brain and that you use it and that you're a thought leader in your area.
Get that content in front of people.
Don't just wait for the algorithm to do it because the algorithm all.
always changes. But think about people who may benefit from that content and send it to them.
Use it in blog posts on your website. Repurpose that. But the fourth thing is the most important
thing, and that's conversations. If your LinkedIn activity isn't leading to conversations,
what I say going from the digital space to the face to face, then you're just spinning your
wheels or you're performing for vanity metrics. It's not moving the needle on your business.
You have to have conversations.
And that's an art.
It's one of the things I train.
You know, one of the things, one of the least used areas I find for people in LinkedIn is the My Network tab.
If you go to My Network tab, there's two, there's your incoming invitations, but then there's something called catch up.
And no, it's not the condiment.
Catch up, catching up with people.
And it gives you all the changes of people in your network, new job changes.
What a great time to reach out to someone.
Right? They change companies. There may be another opportunity there. But just to say, hey, congratulations. I want to hear more about that. Right. Looking for opportunities to have a face to face, whether it's on Zoom or in person or on the phone, conversation with someone and find out more about them. Right. Because if you're not having conversations, then you're just spinning your wheels and you're probably doing random acts of LinkedIn, which gives you random results and get you bored real quickly and then you're on to the next shiny thing.
Yeah, what about the people who say, like, I'm not the most social.
I feel like it's awkward.
How do we get the people that don't really understand the power of what you're talking about?
How do they start taking action?
What would be their first handful of steps?
Yeah, so first of all, go search some people in your industry,
especially people who post content about your industry and just go into the comments section
and make some comments, make them authentic.
You know, you know, really read the content and give some thoughtful interaction.
And you'll be surprised how many people will actually respond to that.
But even from that, then you can reach out to that person.
You know, hey, Justin, I just read your post on the real estate market.
And I found it really insightful.
I thought it made sense for us to connect.
And one of the things I throw out there all the time to people is, hey, take a look at my profile.
And if you think it makes sense, let's connect.
Right.
Then you put the ball back in their core.
You know, be bold, but don't be so bold.
Be curious.
You know, be bold and curious.
You know, taking small steps.
You're behind a screen, right?
You're not, it's not like you're front and center with somebody.
You have to go up and talk to them.
You know, you probably remember when back in my day, you know, we didn't send girls text messages.
We sent them notes.
It was much easier for me to write a note and ask a question and hand to somebody.
You know, do you like me?
Yes, with a check mark, no, with a check mark.
and give that and wait for the answer,
then then we go up and ask the girls right in front, right?
So it's easier, I think, digitally to do that,
but here's the key.
We have to treat the people on the other side of the profile,
on the other side of the screen,
the same way we would treat them
as if they were on the other side of the table with us.
And that's that, this is the weird dichotomy here
because it is easier to comment and do these things.
It's also easier to be inauthentic
because we're not, you know,
we tend to see people, oh, they're a prospect, they're a dollar sign in my CRM or a dollar sign in my
quota. No, no, no, they're people. They're human. We need to treat them that way. And they'll
appreciate that a lot. Yeah. Best practices for posting. I think most people, at least what I see,
most people lean into trying to go viral on Instagram and TikTok and things of that nature.
I don't believe that's even a thing on LinkedIn.
What would be your best practices for your first, you know, 10-day commitment?
I'm going in, Bill, I'm listening to you.
I'm going to go, let's say, a 30-day run at LinkedIn.
What would be your starting point?
What are the sequences?
What are the best practices that you would suggest?
Like even what, whether it's a photo or a written post or a video, what would you suggest in that say?
So I'd say don't do, don't do every day in a row.
You know, keep it to two to three times a week.
Because listen, if you're not posting on LinkedIn now and you say, I'm going to post every day, you're not.
Right?
You're not.
You're going to do it once or twice and then you're going to be like, whatever.
You know, and calendar it.
Monday, Wednesday, Friday.
Yeah.
Right.
Make the post short.
You can, you know, change it up.
Do a text post.
Put a video out there.
Do a picture.
You know, I don't know if you've seen the new chat cheap PD cartoon characters of people.
All right.
So I did mine today and I look like.
Tim Walls, which is really weird. I look like his brother. I'd say younger brother, but I think
I'm older than him. It's just strange. But I posted that. I wasn't going to do it, but I'm like,
hey, you know what? Because they really captured all the, all the wording around it really
captured what I do. And so I was, I like that. So look for things like that to do, but don't,
don't try to hit a home run your first time up at bat. You know, you're not going to go viral on
LinkedIn, right? Some people do, but, but, you know, I mentioned, I mentioned the Craig Rochelle
Leadership Podcasts and we'll do posts and they'll get 15,000, 20,000 impressions. That's pretty good,
but so, you know, an impression just means somebody saw your post. They scrolled past it,
you know, you know, but it's all LinkedIn gives us. What you want is conversation. You want
conversation in the comment section. So what I say is your post is a lot like your house on your
street. Right. So your house is your post. The street is your news feed. And the cars that drive past and the
people will walk past, those are the people on your news feed. And if somebody drives past your house,
it's an impression. Did it really make an impression to them? No. If they wave to you, that's a like.
You know, they gave a reaction. But if they pull over to the curb and they get out and they knock on your
door or they come to your porch and they sit with you and have a conversation, that's a comment. And that's
really what you want to go for. Right. So look for ways to ask questions in your posts.
that you want to know the answer to.
So that gets people in your comments commenting and answering the questions and figure out
what you're trying to do on LinkedIn.
So what I want is I want to have conversations with people.
So if I do a post and it only gets 500 impressions, but a number of people have commented
on it and some of those people are second degree, which means I'm not connected with them
and I can reach out to them and say, hey, Justin, thanks so much for your comment on my post.
I thought it made sense for us to connect.
and you connect with me.
And then I send a thank you note that says,
Hey, Justin, thanks so much.
Hey, I was checking out your profile.
And I really like X, Y, and Z that you're doing.
I'm just curious if you're open for a 20-minute networking goal,
just so we can get to know each other a little better.
Easy peasy.
You say yes or no.
You say, no, I go to the next one.
You say, yes, we schedule it, right?
So figure out what am I trying to do on LinkedIn?
Right.
You want to be a thought leader.
You want to put out educational content.
and make sure it's educational.
It's okay to put some sales stuff out there.
Like, you know, you're launching a new community.
It's great to put that out there.
That's fine, right?
But just don't make it that all the time.
I know people, so I do some training in the promotional products world
because that's what I came out of.
And that's I use LinkedIn to build our promotional products business.
And, man, people, all they do is post new products and new this.
And you look and nobody's commenting.
Nobody's looking at it.
Nobody cares.
Yeah.
Right?
So, you know, there's no real easy answer to this, unfortunately.
But you have to experiment.
You have to try different things and you have to be in it for the long.
You know, content on LinkedIn is the long game.
Don't expect that you're going to post something and somebody's going to reach out and then you're going to get business, right?
Networking on LinkedIn is the short game, right?
So let's say that I sell to, well, I do.
I sell the sales leaders, right?
You and I are connected on LinkedIn.
I can now go into your connections
and I can search them for all the sales leaders
and I can see who you know that I want to know.
And then I can have a networking call with you.
I can share my screen and say,
Hey, Justin, I was looking through your connections.
There's 15 sales leaders that you know
that I think would be good introductions for me.
Can I take 10 minutes just to review this list with you?
Because let's face it, out of 15,
you may only know
three or four or five.
Right.
But, hey, that's great.
That's three or four or five more than I had before.
Yeah.
And then of those three or four or five, I can say,
Justin, are you comfortable introducing them to me?
And if you're not, that's fine, okay, great.
Can I reach out to them and say that you and I were talking?
And I asked about them and they said it made sense for,
you said it made sense for me to connect with them.
You're going to say yes,
that all day long.
But make sure, I have to make sure I have your permission to do that.
I just don't want to do that.
Right. And so that's the short game.
If you just go out there to do that, then there's not connectivity.
You know, how many times people say to me, hey, Bill, I see we have some mutual connections.
So did you look at the mutual connections? And sometimes I'll look at that and they'll say it plural.
And we have one mutual connection and I have no clue who the person is. And I'll come back on them and say, yeah, we have one mutual connection.
And it's somebody I don't even know. Your point is and they don't reply. They don't respond to me to that because I caught them.
You know? So, but if I can say, hey, I see.
you're connected to Justin and him and I were talking this morning and he thought it made sense for
us to connect. If somebody comes back with a connection on lipcross like that to me, I'm going to accept it
all day long, right? Because I know you. I know them. Of course I'm, or I don't know that, but I know you.
Of course, I'm going to accept that. So that's the short game on LinkedIn, connecting to people,
but then you have to move it into your sales process. And that's the hard part, you know,
and that takes some finesse. And that takes some curiosity. It doesn't say, it doesn't take, oh,
Hey, Justin, so, you know, Leah said that we should connect.
And so we connect.
I say, hey, I want to really help you with LinkedIn.
Let's get on a call.
I can tell you how I can help your team and you.
And you're like, wait a minute.
Who said I was interested in that?
Where rather, I can say, hey, I'd love to hear more about what you're doing with your community.
And I took a look to your LinkedIn profile.
And I'm happy to give you some free insights on that.
If you're interested.
What I really want to know is more about you.
That's what works.
People want to know you're interested.
Exactly.
Let's say you being interesting, right?
And that's key.
I'll tell you, I fall for that all the time.
I'm a natural salesperson, but when someone inquires about me, it's my favorite subject matter.
So I'm going to start leaning into it, right?
It's everybody's, you know, and typically it leads to them asking about you.
And it might not be on that call.
And that's why you have to go slow to go fast.
You know, I think it was Covey who wrote the sales at the speed of
or sales at the speed of trust.
Trust at the speed.
I don't know.
I can't remember it now.
Somebody's going to bash bringing the comments.
That's okay.
But that's it.
To build trust, you have to go slower.
Take time.
Until it gets faster.
And, you know, people want that easy button.
And they want to send out that one email that goes to 10,000 recipients and they want to get
hundreds and hundreds of replies back.
And usually they get two or three.
But, and because that's a.
easy, but is it really? It's easy, but is it effective? That's the real question. And so,
you know, by slowing things down and making 10 quality connections a week, then having five
quality conversations from there, usually you can come up with a good couple of opportunities
that come out of that. Your suggestion for anyone in sales, and I think it's a vertical
agnostic, but if you were in sales and your sales is B2B, LinkedIn is the place that
you need to be. Absolutely. A hundred percent, my guess is your company has a LinkedIn page and they're
producing content on a regular basis. That's probably pretty good. Maybe it's not, but most companies
produce really good content. So that's a good place to start reaching out to your marketing director,
say, hey, I need help with LinkedIn. Usually they can help to do that. Or if you're a sales leader and
you have a sales team, I offer a complementary LinkedIn for humans webinar where I teach some of what I'm
now so that they get some value from it. Again, complimentary just to see if your team is like,
okay, yeah, this is really good. You know, I did one for a team and they came back and said,
yeah, this is okay, but we just don't see it working for us. Great. I don't want to train you because
you're not going to use it and then I'm going to get a bad name, right? So really, if you're in
B2B sales, you really should have a presence on LinkedIn and you should be creating some
opportunities there. Again, by being curious.
And it's an art form.
You know, it takes time and it takes practice to do that.
But I'm here to help.
I'm like a coach.
Yeah.
And everyone go.
Where do we want to have them sign you?
Yeah.
So we'll put the link in, but it's a bitly link.
It's bit.
It's bit.com.
And I wrote on my whiteboard, all selling is social free.
All selling is social free.
Not that it's social free, but the content is free.
And, you know, you can sign up.
Therefore, so that's a free course that I have on my website that just has, again, it has a
DIY checklist for your profile to create a more value-centered profile.
It has a number of videos.
It has a link to my podcast, all selling is social, which I've had some great guests.
I mentioned Larry Levine.
I mentioned Mark Hunter.
They've both been on it.
You know, there's a number of, there's a couple of slide decks in there, some videos.
And also in there, I've got a 40 video paid page.
course on everything I talked about. It's a DIY course. It's normally $499. I'm giving your
folks, your listeners, a coupon, so they're only going to pay $249 for it. And so that'll be in there,
too. I'm happy to do that. And also a link to my calendar for a 30-minute complimentary
insights call with me. Again, I'm not going to sell you. But if you want to ask me some questions about
your profile, if you want to know of premiums for you, if you're thinking about we didn't
touch on sales navigator and the powerhouse that that is.
I'm happy to answer those questions and just help you on your LinkedIn journey because that's
what I want to do.
Is there a fast pass to get to you?
Can they just go to your LinkedIn profile and actually connect with you?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just connect with me.
And again, send a note if you're able to, right?
And just say, hey, I saw you on entrepreneurial DNA with Justin.
If you can't send a note, be ready for me because I send a message to everyone that sends
to me a connection request.
without a note telling me why they want to connect.
So my suggestion is all of you.
Go connect with them on LinkedIn.
Yeah.
This is interesting.
Which is shouldn't I ask.
This is damn interesting to me, right?
Yeah.
So when I ask you, you know, where you found me, tell me here and I'll connect with you
and we'll get a call and I'd be happy to, happy to do that.
So the website all selling is social.com forward flash free.
Is that correct?
So it's a bitly link.
Bit.
Bit.
slash all selling is social free.
Bit.
Dot Lee
for all selling is social.
Free.
For in the end,
go find him on LinkedIn.
Bill McCormick,
M-C-O-R-M-I-C-K.
Correct with him
and he will actually send you a message back
and inquire more about your business
who you are.
Guys and gals, LinkedIn is something
I personally also can say
I'm not utilizing at the use case I should be.
If you're serious,
about sales if you're serious about your business i have bill on here as a resource for you so
and lastly if you're not a part of the entrepreneur dna community on school if you go to school and
just look us up go to school sk oll dot com forward slash the entrepreneur dna join that right now it is
twenty five dollars a month every month for the lifetime of your membership and that is going
to double here shortly but you're going to be able to directly connect to bill because bill is
knowingly or unknowingly going to come in and teach this at a much deeper level uh
for you guys. So again,
and I'm going to our farm,
the Ongenor DNA community.
Yeah, I'm already a member.
I joined over the weekend so you can connect with me there too.
There you go.
And make sure to reach out and Bill,
you and I will do a great training.
If you guys think there's some people you know
that need to lean into LinkedIn
and they need to hear this,
make sure you share this with the least two-year people.
I'll see you guys in school.
I'll see you in the community.
Bill, this has been great.
That's Bill McCormick.
I'm Justin Colby.
This is the entrepreneur DNA.
We'll see you on the next episode.
Thanks so much.
Thank you.
