Sunday, February 7, 2021

ASMR White Noise Videos | 白噪音背景音樂影片

(中文在後面)

ASMR = autonomous sensory meridian response

Recently I'm addicted to certain types ASMR videos. Not the typical ASMR of eating, whispering, or objects rubbing sounds. I use them as white noise, ambiance sound, or background music almost all day now that I stay at home most of the time working or studying. 

My favorite begins with fire crackling sound. At first I listened to Spotify fire crackling songs while meditating. Then I discovered a built-in app in Apple TV for just this sound with a flame screen saver video. Then I found there were a lot on YouTube with HD quality for hours.



That originally brought me further to fireplace with snowing background, usually in high quality indoor setting, perfect to glance upon in this winter weather and brighting up the room.  



And then, I liked matching these videos to the weather, so some raining videos were discovered. At this point, I started to play cafe videos with typical coffee shop music. Now that coffee shops are closed, I do miss this vibe.



Later, I created a kitchen series for the morning coffee time. It's also nice to have fire cracking sounds in different settings. 



And then Christmas came. Hence this Christmas themed playlist. 



After a while, I collected more and more videos, so they were splitted into day and night, so to match different times of day. 






Finally a playlist of ocean scenery. I imagine there will be more added to this list when summer comes. 



I'm also looking forward to create more themed playlists like spring, nature, garden, library series. 


_________________________________________________________________________________

ASMR = 自主性感官經絡反應

自從三月開始社會隔離,在家上班的時候從一開始一片安靜,到喜歡上某種背景音影片。最愛的是木頭燃燒的聲音,最初是靜坐的時候播放Spotify上的火焰聲音當背景音樂,後來在Apple TV發現有火焰燃燒聲音的螢幕保護程式,接著在YouTube找到非常多高畫質、長達數小時的ASMR影片。

這些影片可能已經脫離ASMR的定義(吃東西、輕聲細語、摩擦物體的聲音),廣泛包含了背景音、環境音,我也從一開始只聽火焰燃燒聲,轉向與咖啡廳音樂交錯播放,還有配合當下天氣的各種主題。


Saturday, December 12, 2020

Corporate Leadership Changes

My company announced leadership changes, 4 days before a total solar eclipse... Not at all a coincident. 

Our new CEO-to-be commented: "This is my last promotion. No more promotion for me." 

Some words from our current CEO were noteworthy: 

  • We always have a plan for everything. 
  • We need to understand what the brief is, what actions to take, and then execute [on 2021].
  • As you go higher in the company, you do less work and rely more on others to do the work for you. 
While I certainly will miss the current CEO, I'm more of a fan of the CEO-to-be, whose sense of humor and simple words have won me over since 4 years ago. 

This and many other events have allowed me to peek into how a large corporation works. 

After the great mutation, I'm hopeful for 2021, a new year, new era. Changes are good. 


Saturday, November 28, 2020

Movies about Coronavirus | 冠狀病毒相關電影

(中文在後面)

Since quarantine in March, I've came across some movies about coronavirus, virus, or pandemic in general. It's alarmingly realistic the way these movies dipict the spread (or the concept) of a contagious disease, as if they predited 2020's coronavirus outbreak. 


Contagion (2011) is a movie inspired by the 2002 SARS-CoV-2 in China, the predecessor of COVID-19. The story began in Hong Kong and the cause of the bat-originated virus was due to human exploitation of remote forest. WHO in Geneva is involved here. 
It's interesting to watch this doctor re-watching Contagion in the context of this year. Also interesting to see in this film is CNN chief medical correspondent Sanjay Gupta, who now appear on TV often. 
And a word on COVID-19, this is a wildlife price list (menu) from a vendor in Wuhan seafood market. 



Inferno (2016) is one of the Robert Langdon series (why did I come to know about it only in 2020...). It's basically a non-superpower version of Thanos trying to wipe out human population for the sake of human survival on earth. WHO is also involved. 
This image of "Map of Hell" illustrated by Botticelli is fascinating, if you're a lover of Divine Comedy. 
The filming location, Basilica Cistern, in my opinion, is the most beautiful tourist attraction in Instabul, which I visited in 2017. Great to tour Florence and Venice with the characters during this quarantine time. 


Pandemic: How to Prevent an Outbreak (2020) was dropped in January 2020, almost prophetic when COVID-19 was just about to break out. Later in April came Coronavirus, Explained (2020), another docuseries to understand what's going on now. Some video clips here are from last year's series, Inside Bill's Brain (2019).

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最近看了一些病毒傳染病相關的電影影集,內容也太寫實了簡直是預言。


Contagion (2011) 『全境擴散』翻得很好,根據2020年SARS寫出的劇本。



Inferno (2016) 『地獄』很好看,是義大利觀光宣傳片。
第一次看到在伊斯坦堡地下水宮殿拍的電影,非常美的景點。



年初還沒多少人知道冠狀病毒的時候,Netflix推出了迷你影集Pandemic: How to Prevent an Outbreak (2020),現在看來真是神時間點。四月推出了另一部影集Coronavirus, Explained (2020),其中有些是從去年的比爾蓋茲影集 Inside Bill's Brain (2019) 剪來的片段。


Friday, August 14, 2020

Podcast | 播客

(中文在後面)

These days I've been keen to write something, but then I thought, why would it matter? My words are going to be buried in gazillions of pages anyway. 


Yet I really have something to share. A few things. If there's any one action taken by someone who see my words, then my opinion would finally manifest its destiny. 


The first thing I'd like to share is podcast I've been listening to since the quarantine. 

I usually finish 1 episode during shower. 


1. Scott Galloway 


The Prof G Show with Scott Galloway (2020)

A Conversation with Scott Galloway (2016)

Usually an episode is 1 hour and includes a monologue, an interview with a guest, office hours Q&A, and the algebra of happiness. 

I've been following Professor Galloway (Stern, NYU) since my grad school years in Boston. He's a genius, funny, full of content. 
There are only 3 episodes in his 2016 series. His new show was launched in March 2020 - new episode every Thursday. 
In addition to marketing topics, business predictions (winners & losers), and the "Big Four" tech giants (Google, Amazon, Facebook, and Apple), he recently talks a lot about higher edution (higher ed) reform in this podcast and on CNN with Anderson Cooper. 

2. Sam Harris


Making Sense with Sam Harris


While the full episode is exclusive for paid members, the free episode already shares a majority (often 1 hour) of content. 

I came to know Sam Harris through episode 10 on The Prof G Show. His extremely calm voice and manner and the depth of his words prompted me to start listening. Sam Harris is a philosopher and author. His audience are likely white elite middle to upper class in the US. This is implicitly reflected in his content. 
Usually an episode includes his conversation with a guest or, occasionally, his monologue. 
His conversation is not conversational - meaning usually he and his guest talk in paragraphs with words you read in books but not talk in a chat. This challenges me to be focused so I can follow his thoughts. It's like listening to a philosopher - well, he is a philosopher. 
The topics discussed are deep, including social economic issues, philosophical debates, reflection on current affairs, and more. His thinking, through the conversation, examines aspects of a topic, which really broadens my view of the topics.
I'm amazed by how he manages an interview (episode 212) with someone (a professor) whose publication critizes one of his episodes. 

3. The Documentary Podcast by BBC World Service


Each episode is about 30 minutes on a variety of topics and consists interviews or personal stories in different parts of the world. 

I selectively listen to episodes which interest me. For example, Covid-19, life in quarantine, traveling, and a recent episode "DNA and me" published on July 14th. 

4. 
Before Midnight

Language: Mandarin Chinese
A philosophical conversation between two young men in Taiwan, exploring various topics/aspects through their own life experiences. It's deep, healing, sometimes like a therapist session. I admire their courage to reveal this level of deep truth about themselves. Highly recommended. 

5. William Wei (WeiBird)

韋禮安跟你鳥鳥天 Season 01

Language: Mandarin Chinese

WeiBirs is a Taiwanese singer-songwriter. He went to the same department as me at university - we're 1 year apart. 
He began this podcast also in March 2020 - mostly interviews with music industry influencers in Taiwan.  


_________________________________________________________________________________


今年一直很想重新寫文章,但一直拖著。想寫的時候會反問自己,寫了有什麼用?也不過是網路上千萬網站裡又一張網頁而已。

可是有很多時候,很想紀錄什麼,很想跟這個世界分享什麼。如果有一個人因為看了我的文章而做了一個小改變,那我的思考就能真正活一次了。

首先寫最近聽的podcast,台灣好像翻成『播客』?其實就是非現場直播的廣播節目。從三月隔離開始聽一些廣播,通常邊洗澡邊聽剛好一集。


1. Scott Galloway 


The Prof G Show with Scott Galloway (2020)

A Conversation with Scott Galloway (2016)

這位鼎鼎有名的紐約大學商學院教授新推出廣播節目。我從在波士頓念行銷研究所的時候就開始追他的YouTube。

通常一集有獨白、訪談一位來賓、問答時間、還有新的小橋段『快樂的方程式(?)』。一集約一小時。2020年的新節目從三月開始每週四出一集。2016年的舊節目只有三集。
一樣風趣幽默的內容,很適合練英文聽力。
除了一直以來的行銷、商業話題、科技四大龍頭(谷歌、亞馬遜、臉書、蘋果),他最近經常討論美國高等教育改革,還上CNN跟安德森酷伯聊這個。

2. Sam Harris


Making Sense with Sam Harris


第十集The Prof G Show的來賓是Sam Harris,一位美國哲學家、作家、神經科學家。他的聲音非常平靜,講話很有內涵,我聽一集他自己的廣播節目就成了忠實聽眾。

一集通常一小時,全程訪問只有到他網站才能付費收聽,但一小時就非常充實。他和他的來賓深度討論話題的時候,通常講一句話可以講一分鐘以上才斷句,要非常專注才能跟得上他的思考,練英文聽力有難度,有些用字艱深(書裡才會出現的寫作用詞)我偶爾聽不懂。
他的話題非常硬,涵蓋社會經濟問題、哲學概念、時事分析,他通常從不同層面討論一個主題,我覺得對我的思考和價值觀有幫助。
他的聽眾大多是美國中高社會階級的白人(跟他一樣)。他的訪談方式跟氣度值得學習,第212集他訪問一位公開批評他某一集節目的教授,很難跟一個批評自己的人心平靜氣地討論一個困難的話題長達一個小時以上吧,他就做到了。

3. The Documentary Podcast by BBC World Service


BBC世界的廣播節目,每集約30分鐘,話題多樣,通常是訪問世界各地的人,或是某個主講人的個人故事。因為集數非常多,我通常只挑有興趣的,像是冠狀病毒、隔離期間的生活、旅遊,最近有一集討論DNA很有趣(2020-07-14)。

4. Before Midnight

朋友推薦的深談廣播,第一次聽的是Ep.12 用一生來療癒童年,立刻被談話內容的深度驚艷,不是沒準備的閒聊,更像是哲學性思考問題邏輯加上自身經驗的探索。能夠公開深度剖析自己,是一件非常勇敢的行為。大推。

講到Ep.12,雖然今年的韓劇『雖然是精神病但沒關係』( It's Okay to not be Okay) 也引用心理學家阿德勒說:『幸運的人用童年治癒一生,不幸的人用一生治癒童年。』,我完全找不到這句話的英譯或出處。可能這是中文翻譯他的思想的概要,不是他直接說過的名言。這麼說來,這位不知名的譯者算是非常成功。

5. William Wei (WeiBird)

韋禮安跟你鳥鳥天 Season 01

韋禮安,創作歌手大家應該都認識。他是我大學同系大一屆的學長,一直以來默默關注他,沒想到今年竟然也開了廣播節目。從批踢踢(其實還在用)到podcast,默默感嘆歲月如梭科技進步啊。


以上。



Sunday, May 31, 2020

All Lives Matter

My heart breaks at 1:44. 


Most people by now would have watched the original videos of George Floyd and Christian Cooper - if not, they're available on YouTube and Twitter. It rendered me angry in tears to imagine what this man had been through in the last minutes of his life. In light of recent global awakening triggered by tragic events, I think it's ok taking a moment to have hard/heavy conversation about racism, plus these events have triggered me to remember several encounters which live at the back of my head.

This week I've been thinking about how to appropriately be a voice in support of erasing racism. I care for many causes but most strongly about human rights (a topic for another time). IMO racism is part of the wider human rights domain. While all lives matter, now is the time to focus on Black Lives Matter. Why? Because racism has long been in our lives, to all POC, major or minor racist behaviors. Now more than ever the lives and human dignity of the African Americans are in danger. I believe through advocating for them now, other causes (e.g. gender equality, LGBT, human rights) will as well benefit from its awareness and progress. All men and women should be treated equal. With way less racism weight on my shoulder than on the African-ethnic people, I hope sharing my own experiences as a normal Asian person can provide some perspective on this subject and support the movement we're seeing today. Racism is not just in the US. It's in all countries. Here in Switzerland, too.

As an Asian POC in the middle of the skin color spectrum, sometimes I receive racism treatment from both ends. Most of my non-Asian friends and people I encounter treat me fine - as in, I feel equal and respected. Most of the time I mind my own business and avoid causing problems/scense in any situation, subconsciously with the idea of trying to be safe at all times - also partially because afraid of leaving records that would jeopardize my visa, given I've lived as an expat in the US, Ireland, and Switzerland for 9 years. 

I consider myself normal as any other person, I'm content with where I am in the society, and I'm grateful to where life has led me and the people I surround myself with. Putting aside the experiences with people who I know, I'd say experiences with strangers/people who I don't know can best encapsulate the racism treatments, because one's literally deciding how to interact with this person purely based on appearances, i.e. race, gender, language, outfit, etc. And in these situation, I don't want to victimize myself as in a stereo-type racism situ right away, so I always wonder: what if I was a man or a Caucasian, what if I was with a male companion, what if I spoke better English, what if I spoke French - would I have experienced what just happened to me? 

So what happened? Below are some disturbing ones.
  1. the middle-age Caucasian woman in Lavaux 
  2. the African-ethnic teenager who stoned my forehead, in Lausanne
  3. my previous apartment concierge, a middle-age Caucasian woman, in Lausanne
  4. the middle-age Caucasian man on Aer Lingus flight from Geneva to Dublin
  5. the young Irish security check woman at Dublin Airport who took my slow response, at 5am, as a hesitated yes, to her question "any weapons in your luggage?"
  6. the young/middle age Caucasian/Hispanic cleaning woman in the building next to my previous apartment who prevented me depositing a properly bagged trash, in Lausanne
  7. the Irish taxi driver, my 1st encounter in Ireland, who scammed me, in cash, double the price of normal fare from Dublin Airport. I was with 2 large suitcases, he didn't help me load them in to the car.
  8. the African-American man who hit a Caucasian man whose head then smashed the back of my head on a NYC subway
1. 
In mid-March in Lavaux, Vaud, Switzerland, a time when China and Italy were heavily hit by coronavirus, and just before the Swiss government announced nationwide quarantine. 
My Caucasian friends and I walked up some stairs by the vineyard. Two walked in front of me with a dog and two behind me. There was huge gap between each of us as we were tired so the total distance from the 1st person to the last person was about 10-15 meters. The stairs were about 1 meter in width, enough for 2 people to pass by with space inbetween.
A middle/elder-age Caucasian couple (man at front) walked down the stairs toward us from the opposite direction. The woman raised her jacket as a cover against me as she passed by me, only me, not before me, and not after me. 
I should have called her out and saying "I'm not coronavirus" or something at her, but anything I said would sound stupid and make a scene, which I tried to avoid in any situation, plus she might not understand English. I just discussed with my friends what happened.

2. 
It was after I landed from Geneva Airport back to Lausanne Gare seeing a Caucasian man helping a Caucasian mother getting off the train with a stroller that I thought how nice and friendly Lausanne is to live and to raise a family.
And then, as I walked home via an ally along the railway, someone stoned my way. Given it was evening, I didn't have sunglasses on and originally thought the stones were some insects, until a 4-cm big stone hit my forehead, which immediately swelled in a 5-cm-ish circle. It would have hit my eye in 1 degree away.
There were some African-ethnic teenagers giggling behind two windows in an apartment building. One of them threw the stones at me, for no reason, just for fun. I dragged my luggage and confronted one of the teenagers at the window. He kept saying in French it wasn't him. I waited at the gate, a Caucasian guy came out, I explained, he said "I can let you in if you'd like to find them, but don't get me involved." So I called the police. 
The police went checking the house while taking my information. They proposed 2 possible solutions: 1) they will take the teenagers to court and they may get community service as penalty, but I'd need to be followed up and hence leave a record, or 2) they just went checking on the teenagers as a warning. Ofc I didn't want any issue for myself or any court records for the teenagers. It was about to pour so they asked me to go home. I didn’t hear from them since. Again, what if I was male/Caucasian?

3. 
One or two weeks after I moved in to a previous apartment in Lausanne, I didn't fully cleaned up the air bubbles in one of the cardboard boxes before throwing them away in my apartment's trash collection carts. On the next day, 3 things appeared in front of my apartment door: 1) the cardboard box with my recipient label, 2) a car tire (not mine), 3) a toilet seat (not mine), and a note from my middle-age Caucasian concierge woman.
The note said I shouldn't dispose the air bubbles in the paper cart, and that there are trash regulations in Switzerland blah blah. Ofc I did all I could, I went to her, I called/emailed the management company, I called my lease agent, etc.
They remained there for more than one month.
These tire and toilet seat may belong to my neighbors who passed by my door or to anyone who threw them in my building's trash carts which were accessible to all.
One night I kept thinking about the what ifs: what if I was male/Caucasian and/or I spoke fluent French, would this woman treat me like this? Then I went to confront her that night. In 5 minutes, she came up and removed these things.

4. 
When I boarded my Aer Lingus flight, the overhead luggage cabins near my seat around row 12 were full, except a space occupied by a plastic bag of the size of a laptop. A middle-age Caucasian couple sat in a 3-seat row: man at window seat, woman in the middle, behind this cabin I was cheking at. There was a full queue behind me.
The couple were looking at me as I looked for space to store my carry-on, so I asked them "is this plastic bag yours?" The man mumbled, so I thought it wasn't theirs. I moved the plastic bag to the side and, as I pulled my luggage up to the overhead level, he stood up and grabbed my arm and scolded me "don't touch my things" to prevent me from lodging my luggage. 
I just replied to him "you don't need to touch me", and walked to the end of the plane with my luggage, and sat on a random empty seat after checking with some flight attendants. 
Everyone watched, but didn't speak/act.
I fell asleep immediately, as I woke up 1 hour after, a flight attendant approached me to confirm what happened and said she already reported this passenger to the airline for the record. Afterwards, a middle-age Caucasian man, who was a witness, came to the back to check on me and said he reported the incident to the flight attendants. 
I was grateful to him, and thought I should have acted differently, I should have stood up for myself to confront this man from the couple, but again I didn't want to cause a scene. There’s also news about people who caused delays/troubles in a plane being kicked out, and I couldn’t afford that because I had to catch that flight. I as many Asians would probably do the same again - just said minimal and walked away.
Again I kept thinking, what if I was man/Caucasian, or what if I was traveling with a male companion, would this man treat me this way? 

I asked the flight attendant only one question: is he Irish? She said no. Another day for topic Ireland.
Too much to say about 5. 6. 7. let's skip them for another time. 

8. 
I'm forever grateful to people offered to help after I posted a photo in 2015.
An African-American man hit a Caucasian man, whose head then smashed the back of my head, on a northbound NYC subway, just before entering Grand Central. The African American man did so because he considered the Caucasian man, who stood in front of him, was too close to him, in a crowded evening-commute-time express subway cabin which was shaking in high speed. This was purely an accident to me, I was shocked, hurt, scared then.
The immediate aftermath was that I recovered feeling normal a few days after. My head didn't have any issue.
And then, in the end 2017, I discovered a new 4cm-ish bump on my head, couldn't recall any accident/injury, thought it was a tumor, went to a doctor and was told: your head can grow anything it'd like. As tumors should be inside the head, rather than outside, I didn't investigate further.
It wasn't untill the end of 2019 I found the medical cert of injury, that I realized how the bump developed.

When I look at these individual encounters separately, it seems random and minor, in addition to many other encounters on the street when someone just taunted me by saying “ching chong chang” or something alike. One may argue whether it's racism or gender discrimination or something else. When I put them together, however, and they are my real life experiences, not fictional stories, they speak volume of collective racist/discrimination experiences to me. Yet I'm already a fortunate person who can make it where I'm today, given my background. I'm ok now and have become resilient through these experiences. While I don't forget these, I don't remember / recall them often. I feel safe most of the time and have hopes on humanity as most people are normal for most of the time. 

What's next then, what can we individuals do? The usual: raise awareness, talk about it, donate, sign up petitions. I believe what happens/progress made in the US have ripple effect in other countries in the development of diversity and inclusion. 

Peace.


在美國學到的十件事情


原文寫於Jan 13th 2016,不知道為什麼當初沒有發文⋯⋯四年前的文章,現在可能有些有些情況改變了。
以後的目標是把自己的文章翻譯成英文,有空的話。

_________________________________________________________________________


1. 移民撐起美國
由衷敬佩這群人(通常是墨西哥裔),他們的勞力、工作、工時讓紐約的一切變得可能。Seamless騎著腳踏車外送的人是他們,逢年過節還在開店的也是他們,餐廳內場也是他們(日式拉麵店廚師也是他們),在路邊擺花攤24小時的還是他們。他們的家庭觀念跟華人、義大利人有得比。

2. 文化差異
一直都不覺得美國就是什麼都好(那是父母的想法),不過大環境的確是比較好。這邊有內向害羞的美國人,有loser美國人,有勤奮工作的美國人,也有(比較多)opportunitist美國人。就算做一樣的工作內容,這裡待遇高、環境好,但我覺得很難找到懂得我的文化價值觀的美國人,有,但是很少。

3. 善用批踢踢和微博
批踢踢城市生活、旅遊版很好用,但是只有大城市(紐約、倫敦等)。微博上面可以自創following群組很方便,更新也比批踢踢多。話說如果Twitter也能設定following groups就好了。

4. 紐約限定:Gothamist 和 NYDetour
比TimeOut還即時。噢對了TimeOut每週三出刊免費。另外,舊金山比紐約貴。

除了生活上的心得,很多學到事情來自剛離開的廣告公司。我公司的客戶主要有幾個Google品牌、YouTube、韓國最大手機品牌,全部是社群媒體客戶,因此同事非常貼近網路新聞,看娛樂新聞也是職務內容。

5. 每天早上Broadsheet
這是Forbes針對女性出的每日晨報,幾則女性相關的頭條要文,以歐美新聞為主。關於台灣女性職場話題的有Careher不定期出刊,他們會在臉書分享新文章。

6. 訂閱Google Alerts
設定自己的名字,有新的search results的話就會收到通知。

7. 廣告業一樣操
但職場文化還是比其他職業好一點,也比亞洲好。通常我禮拜一二都加班到10pm(當然沒加班費,可以搭計程車回家),有時候拜三四也要留晚,主管從來不會開口要人加班,但是責任制就是得把事情做完。進公司一年多幾乎每個週末都在家工作,因為reporting通常在禮拜一,先處理部份事情。
這只是我(analyst)和幾個其他部門(account management)同事的習慣,也是有同事每天晚到早歸。

8. 留下來的三個條件
當年一位Emerson學長回台灣前,聊到想要在研究所畢業後長期留在美國有三個條件:
  • 英文好
  • 有決心
  • 可以自在地跟外國人social
除了這三個條件,我還想再加一個:好律師幫你辦簽證(#&^*$%NV#JN1G****^Ds*#$)。

9. 在紐約什麼都奇怪也就不奇怪了
『空氣裡有自由的味道。』完全同意,judge-free zone,沒有亞洲那種同質性高的社會觀感。當然這只是在紐約,中西部或南方就不同。趁年輕的時候來紐約待一下子最適合了。

10. 心理成本
心理成本除了想念亞洲家人朋友,還有在美國必需面對的玻璃天花板,天花板第一層是簽證,人生一直隨著簽證走,沒辦法安心好好生活。第二層是升遷,亞洲人+外國人+女性的身分的確多少有限制。對現階段的我來說,相較於我很重視的職場文化和公平待遇,這兩層是可以暫時克服的困難,但以後就不知道了。


Tuesday, January 12, 2016

LinkedIn 十二項使用心得


從2011年加入LinkedIn到現在剛好五年,大頭照換過兩張,去年底才默默破500個connections,應該算增加得非常慢。

它不像臉書用來按讚,怎麼說,比較像是讓人看見也看見專業經歷的地方,不求即時(real-time)互動,也不是拿來交朋友,這裡更重質不重量。這兩年LinkedIn進軍亞洲,網路上應該有蠻多使用方式討論(吧),我沒用過中文界面,下面是一些個人的使用習慣筆記。

1. 用詞要正確
不管是中文選字或英文拼字,太多錯字就表示…工作上很可能也會用錯字。

2. 不要亂加人
很不推薦看到2nd/3rd connection就加,究竟是為什麼呢?見過面的人或是有email通信過再主動加比較好,網路上跟現實生活裡的互動模式其實很像。

3. 加陌生人要表示誠意
不管是加2nd/3rd或根本沒有交集的人,LinkedIn可以讓你自由修改罐頭invitation的內容,請直接有誠意地說明來意。很多獵人頭公司都會主動加人,才好繼續message,通常我會接受。
對方兩次沒回信就不用試了兩次都沒回一定有對方的考量,如果還更進一步直接跑去臉書上找人,我覺得超沒禮貌(對,我有遇過)。

4. 好像有些老闆會翻臉書
幾年前臉書開始紅起來的時候,的確是這樣。不過那是LinkedIn還沒普及之前,現在老闆一定會翻LinkedIn,至少在歐美廣告業一定要有個帳號。

5. 可以參考改履歷
去看看想要的職位的人是怎麼寫工作經驗、有什麼樣的工作經驗,非常有幫助。

6. 附加外部連結
三年前我有infographic resume,去年換成個人網站。這些可有可無看個人需求,譬如設計師一定會有。

7. 隱私設定:公開資料
這個會在Google search裡面被搜到,同時也是非connection在登入LinkedIn會看到的資料(例如獵人頭公司或對你有興趣的淺在公司)。這個很tricky,因為不想讓資料公開在網路上,又想讓HR看到我的基本資料。我的折衷是公開title & company和學校就好。

8. 隱私設定:誰來我家(who's viewed my profile)
不知道這個中文翻成什麼,借用無名小站的詞。這我直接關掉,不想看別人也不想被別人看到。但你如果有買membership,就可以不被別人看到、但看得到其他沒有隱藏的人,

9. 隱私設定:動態放送(update broadcasting)
這我直接關掉,因為會顯示的動態包含你follow了一間新公司、加入一個新團體、修改或增加了某項經歷或簡介、endorse別人的專長、like一篇文章、有了新的connection、換了一張新大頭照,像我常常follow公司的人(單純有興趣不是為了跳槽)就會一直出現在別人的牆上或LinkedIn定期email。如果真的要讓大家知道update,改一下設定幾天就好了,我覺得。

10. 隱私設定:connections
可以設定成只讓別人看到mutual connections,臉書也有同樣的功能。

11. 推薦(recommendations)
重質不重量,當然愈多代表人氣愈高、大家愈喜歡跟你一起工作。理想情況有這四個推薦就很好:直屬上司、非直屬上司、同事、客戶。太高層沒有直接互動的話就可有可無。

12. 大頭照
這個不是臉書啊…自拍照就免了。有些人的照片倒是很厲害可以模仿一下。