Social Media and Work
I
Lead in.
A.
Take 1 minute to write down your associations
with the word ‘social network’.
B.
Compare your list with other students. What similarities
and differences do you have?
C.
How can
social networks be useful to people looking for a job?
D.
How can employees use social networks to
advance their careers?
E.
What are the professional social networks employees
can use?
II
Match the words to their definitions. Use four words in your sentences.
1.
|
to
get sucked into something |
A.
|
to
intensify |
2.
|
to
enhance |
B.
|
a flight scheduled to depart at night and arrive the next
morning (a flight on which a passenger cannot expect to get much sleep) |
3.
|
to outnumber |
C.
|
able
to understand how someone else thinks |
4.
|
slick
|
D.
|
without
any expression |
5.
|
empathetic
|
E.
|
to become
involved in an activity that you do
not want to be involved in |
6.
|
trivial
|
F.
|
to
prepare in writing |
7.
|
to
draw up |
G.
|
making
you feel very embarrassed |
8.
|
deadpan
|
H.
|
not
showing feelings or emotions |
9.
|
matter-of-fact
|
I.
|
a relatively insignificant position from which
further progress may be made |
10. |
to
accost |
J.
|
having
little importance |
11. |
cringeworthy |
K.
|
smooth
and effortless |
12. |
innocuous
|
L.
|
to
approach and address someone aggressively |
13. |
toehold
|
M.
|
to
be greater in number than something |
14. |
red-eye
|
N.
|
completely
harmless |
III
Read the text and fill in the gaps with the words from the list. Use all the
words.
Social media and
career development typically don’t mix. Scrolling 1) _____ or getting sucked into the latest TikTok craze do not exactly
enhance your work prospects. Unless, that is, the social network in question is
LinkedIn. Founded in 2003 in Silicon Valley as a platform for 2) _____, and purchased in 2016 by
Microsoft for $26bn, it has become a fixture of corporate cyberspace, with more
than 800m registered 3) _____
worldwide. Its 171m American members outnumber the country’s labour force. 4) _____ students are creating profiles to
include with their college applications.
The chances are you probably have one, too. How do you make the most of it?
For those who have
yet to link up with LinkedIn, the first, critical, step is fashioning your
profile. First, choose a slick photo: think visionary resolve meets empathetic
authenticity. Next, list your educational and 5) _____ history. Remember, nothing is too trivial. Went to a
selective kindergarten? Say so; it 6) _____
that you were a winner from a tender age. As you draw up your list, make sure
that it reads in the most deadpan way possible: no adjectives, no personal
touch. The mechanical and the matter-of-fact is at a premium.
Armed with your
profile, you can get down to business and begin creating your 7) _____. You need to have 500 or more 8) _____ in your profile to be taken
seriously. To achieve this, you need to step out of your 9) _____ and accost complete strangers. Do
not treat it as you would inviting classmates you do not know to your birthday party,
which in real life makes you look desperate. On LinkedIn, cringeworthy is
not part of the lexicon. People can
amass 6,315 connections, of whom they actually 10) _____ maybe 300.
Remember that
cousin Dimitris your mother always mentions on the phone, who works at Bain
Capital in Boston? What better way than an innocuous LinkedIn invite to 11) _____ —and get a toehold in his
private-equity network. And that man who sat next to you on the red-eye back
from Chicago? Even if you recall only his first name and the 12) _____ he works at, LinkedIn’s algorithm
should be able to let you track him down with relative ease.
IV
Match the words to their definitions. Use four words in your sentences.
1. |
to
strike gold |
A. |
a person who is successful or dominant in their field |
2.
|
top
dog |
B. |
to make something less severe |
3.
|
to
flaunt |
C. |
to put a lot of effort into making something successful or
strong |
4.
|
fashionista
|
D. |
to
find or do something that brings you a lot of
success |
5.
|
to
mitigate |
E. |
pleasure |
6.
|
humble-bragging
|
F. |
to
show something you are proud of to get admiration |
7.
|
poised
|
G. |
having
gamelike elements
that encourage participation |
8.
|
unflappable
|
H. |
to
accumulate |
9.
|
to
rub it in |
I. |
a devoted follower of fashion |
10. |
to
forge |
J. |
letting people know about
something you are very proud of in a way that makes it appear as if you are
complaining or embarrassed |
11. |
to
rack up |
K. |
having a calm and confident manner |
12. |
gratification
|
L. |
to make someone feel worse about
something the person already feels embarrassed about |
13. |
gamified
|
M. |
able to stay calm in a difficult situation |
V Look through the text. Eight
sentences and sentence fragments have been removed. Read the text and choose
from the sentence fragments (A-K) the one which fits each gap (1-8). There are sentence
fragments that you do not need to use.
B. Your
network will explode
C. that I
was invited to participate in the Innovation Leaders panel
D. connect
with every analyst in JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and UBS
E. to
looking for your new role
F. If you
want everyone to know
G. Take a
moment to recognise one year of being connected to your co-worker
H. attract
recruiters, and even land you your next job
I. Ignore
automatically generated prompts
J. LinkedIn
is a great source for salary data, learning new skills, and can even be a
platform for marketing your products and services
K. and
motivate you to be more ambitious
If you are an
analyst at Goldman Sachs, 1) __________.
Don’t worry, they are thinking the same thing, so are likely to oblige. While
you are at it, you might as well approach everyone with a pulse at Goldman,
too. If a higher-up—best of all, the CEO— happens to accept, you have struck
gold. The boss’s existing connections will treat you as more of an equal; those
desperate to get one degree of separation closer to the top dog will come
begging. 2) __________.
Next, flaunt your
every success. LinkedIn is to white-collar workers what Instagram is to fashionistas:
3) __________. “Deeply honoured to
have been ranked in the Global Elite category of Thought Leaders by [insert
name of obscure organisation which hands out random titles].”
4) __________that you were a speaker at
the Bloomberg Global Regulatory Forum, attach photos of yourself on the
podium—and own it. Posting is, in essence, showing off, so any attempt to
mitigate invariably comes across as humble-bragging: “I was told by colleagues
I should be sharing my successes. So I am proud to announce 5) __________.”
While you are
feeding the app your achievements, do not pay too much attention to those of
others—that will allow you to appear poised and unflappable, not envious. 6) __________like “Congratulate Dimitris
on starting a new position as co-head of European Private Equity at KKR”. These
are designed to rub it in your face 7) __________.
You need to play it
cool so disregard all automatic prompts such as “8) __________”. That time is better spent forging fresh connections to
rack up the numbers—which, in the gratification-seeking, gamified world of
social-networking, is ultimately a big part of what LinkedIn is all about.
According to the latest notification, “You appeared in 178 searches this week.”
So you must be doing something right.
VI
Match the words from two columns to make collocations used in the text. Use five
collocations in your sentences.
1.
|
career
|
A.
|
out
of your comfort zone |
2.
|
enhance |
B.
|
the
most of |
3.
|
social
|
C.
|
it
cool |
4.
|
labour
|
D.
|
essence |
5.
|
high
|
E.
|
and
professional history |
6.
|
create |
F.
|
worker |
7.
|
college |
G.
|
down |
8.
|
make
|
H.
|
relative
ease |
9.
|
educational
|
I.
|
across |
10. |
personal |
J.
|
application |
11. |
get |
K.
|
network |
12. |
to
step |
L.
|
work
prospects |
13. |
private-equity
|
M.
|
force |
14. |
track
|
N.
|
off |
15. |
with
|
O.
|
touch |
16. |
white-collar
|
P.
|
school
student |
17. |
hand |
Q.
|
generated
prompt |
18. |
in |
R.
|
down
to business |
19. |
showing
|
S.
|
network |
20. |
comes
|
T.
|
development |
21. |
automatically
|
U.
|
connections |
22. |
play
|
V.
|
out |
23. |
forge
fresh |
W.
|
profile |
24. |
rack
|
X.
|
up
the numbers |
VII Comprehension check. Read the texts
in Task III and Task V. Mark the sentences as True (T) or False (F). Correct
the false statements.
1. Social
media and career development typically are not connected.
2. LinkedIn
is a social network that can enhance your work prospects.
3. LinkedIn
was founded in 2016 by Microsoft as a platform for professional networking.
4. LinkedIn
has still to grow in popularity for professional networking.
5. The
number of America members on LinkedIn is
lower than the number of Americans who are either working or actively
looking for work.
6. Only
college graduates can use LinkedIn.
7. For
new LinkedIn users the first, critical, step connecting to people.
8. It
is recommended to choose a slick photo for a LinkedIn profile.
9. It
is important to list only the most recent details of your educational and
professional history.
10.LinkedIn
profile should use no adjectives and have no personal touch.
11.You
need to have 1000 or more connections in your profile to be taken seriously.
12.To
achieve the necessary number of connections LinkedIn users can connect to
strangers.
13.If
you are an analyst at Goldman Sachs, it will be difficult to connect with every
analyst in JPMorgan Chase, Morgan
Stanley and UBS.
14.If
the CEO accepts your invitation, your network will grow very fast.
15.It
is recommended to be modest about your achievements on LinkedIn.
16.Showing
achievements on LinkedIn and Instagram has different purposes.
17.LinkedIn
helps white-collar workers present the most envy-provoking version of what
themselves.
18.It
is better to share achievements on LinkedIn without additional comments or
explanations.
19.Not
paying too much attention to the achievement of other LinkedIn users will make
you appear envious.
20.Ignore
automatically generated prompts on LinkedIn.
21.like
“Congratulate Dimitris on starting a new position as co-head of European
Automatically generated prompts on LinkedIn are designed to help you reconnect
with your network.
22.Do
not ignore automatically generated prompts on LinkedIn designed to help you
reconnect with your network.
23.LinkedIn
is all about forging fresh connections to rack up the numbers.
24.You know you must be doing
something right if you appear in few LinkedIn searches.
VIII Vocabulary focus. Follow the link below. Study the words and word combinations
using flashcards, check your understanding. Take a test and check your knowledge. Play matching vocabulary game (match words to their definitions to make cards
disappear).
IX OVER TO YOU. Discuss
the questions with other students.
A) Is LinkedIn used by many employees
in your country? Why or why not?
B) Is LinkedIn used in the industry
you work in/would like to work in?
C) Which recommendations in the
texts surprised you? Is there any advice that you disagree with?
D) Which of the tips for LinkedIn
users will be the most useful for you or people working in your industry?
E) Which two
tips can you add to the list of recommendations given in the texts?
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