How Social Media Influence Equals Free Jumpers

Have you ever heard of PeerIndex? It’s an online influence measurement service similar to Klout and Kred.

By being an influencer on PeerIndex, you are able claim perks (PeerPerks) which come in all shapes and sizes.

Last year I was sent whiskies from Flaviar, coffee from Kopi and the best of them all was clothing from Jack Wills

My PeerIndex Social Media and Influence Interview

peerindex score jorgen sundberg

Here’s an interview I did with the good folks over at PeerIndex. They kindly invited me to an event in London a few months back and we’ve kept in touch since.

My PeerIndex profile (and everyone else’s) is unfortunately frozen so looks a bit dated but they are working on a new layout to presented soon apparently.

You can see the original piece article here: PEERINTERVIEW: Jorgen Sundberg.

1. What attracted you to social media?

I started using social media when I was still a technology recruiter. Historically, recruiters relied on their own database, job adverts and referrals. The calibre of people I was looking for would never apply to jobs, their details on our database would most likely be out of date, so referrals was the main source of finding ‘fresh blood’.

Until of course one day I discovered LinkedIn, luckily ahead of most of the competition. We were able to network on LinkedIn, identify and approach the right candidates, especially the ones who weren’t looking for new roles. So I have social media to thank for a good run in recruitment – and now I am a social media consultant.

2.How do you use social media in your line of work?

In several ways, first of all I use social media to have a professional identity. I know most people will find my LinkedIn and Twitter profiles when they google me. Second, I use it to connect with people I do business with; partners, customers, suppliers and such. Third, I use it for branding; sharing useful updates from our blogs, industry sites, general social media tips ‘n’ tricks. Finally, we also use it to target new clients based on demographics, location, job titles and so on.

3. What five tips can you give on how to be a good influencer?

  • Know your purpose – what brings you onto social media in the first place? Is it to get a job, promotion, clients, investors? Have a clear idea of what you want to achieve and try to set some success metrics if possible (e.g. X number of relevant followers by end of Dec).
  • Find your voice – you ought to look at what 3-5 things you want to be known for online. The more targeted you can be, the better. Nothing wrong with talking nuclear physics and lol-katz but make sure you get the balance right.
  • Find your peers – who will be useful for you to engage with? Who would you love to have read your new blog post or retweet you? Identify the influencers in your space and make sure you get on their radar for the right reasons – apply a non-salesy approach here please.
  • Be a leader – retweeting Mashable and TechCrunch all day is not original. Stop looking at what everyone else is doing and do your own thing. People will respect you for having your own opinion and daring to do something different. And you will become a leader in your niche over time.
  • And as the question included the word ‘good’, remember that you have influence and you have to use it for good things. Help out with charity campaigns whenever possible, retweet and highlight contributions for less known users and try to be helpful if you have the time. Remember that you are setting an example for lots of new users every day.

4. Where do you see social media going in the next five years?

Finally dropping the word ‘social’? I have a feeling social media will be embedded in everything we do from now on. Humans crave attention from other humans and social media has enabled us to get this wherever we may be (provided there is 3G or WiFi of course).

5. Who is your favourite influential tweeter?

Outside the social recruiting bubble that I operate in, I enjoy tweets from @Queen_UK. Who knew she had such a sense of humour? And adopting technology at that age, well done.

meerkats selling insurance again

6. Three websites which you would recommend are:

Again outside the recruitment / HR world, I would recommend:

7. If you were an animal what you be and why?

A meerkat, need to sort out car insurance.

photo by: marfis75

How You Can Increase Your Online Influence Score [Video]

online influence score jorgen sundberg

At the most recent Social Media London meetup we discussed the hot topic of online influence. I had invited Andrew Grill, CEO of Kred to talk about how influence works and what you can do to boost your own influence online.

I don’t know how important this influence business really is but I do know that most people I deal with know their Klout score and check it very often. Klout is one measurement, Kred is another which Andrew says is more about your influence within a particular niche. Then there’s PeerIndex as well which I don’t use personally.

A few tips that Andrew lists for you to increase your influence:

  • Find what you’re influential in, this is likely to be your professional field and/or niche. If it’s not – maybe you should change careers!
  • Give people recommendations and endorsements whenever possible, this will lead to increased reciprocal influence.
  • Focus on your main area(s) of interest, try to narrow it down to 2-3 things you want to be known for. This can be tough I know and can take a while but it will make you look more focused ‘in real life’ as well.
  • Offer something of value to your target audience, try writing a blog, publishing a podcast, create videos or if you are up for the challenge try your hand a writing a book.
  • Keep being authentic by mixing in ‘human’ updates, nobody wants to read a boring feed of industry updates without any human touch – don’t be a robot online please.
  • Be interesting, have an opinion, don’t just repeat what others say. A sure-fire way to get noticed is to have a strong opinion on a topic, firmly putting your foot down on one side of an argument. Not everyone will agree but everyone will respect you for not playing it safe.

And do try out Kred as well, it’s a little different to Klout and more advanced. And like Klout it doesn’t get everything right, apparently I’m influential in social media, recruitment and wine. I didn’t think drinking a glass of wine every now and then would qualify me as a influencer online!

Here’s the video I shot on the night, see what you think.

Related: 28 Smart Blogging Tips by Marko Saric [Video].

Social Media London is a community and monthly meetup featuring expert social media speakers, proudly powered by Link Humans. Thanks to Ben Donkor for his contribution to this post.