LinkedIn Kills Its #CRM Features

booleanstrings Boolean 9 Comments

linkedin-crm

Remember, when LinkedIn acquired this company:

connected

… and integrated its functionality into the main product, we got this menu item – Contacts. I became a fan of it early on. The Contacts became the foundation of LinkedIn CRM (contact relationship management) features for everyone. The “Contacts” combined the first-level connections, imported address books,  and “saved” profiles.

Initially, we could search using many facets and see a nice graphical representation of the Contacts’ locations:

contacts-search

The pretty location graph didn’t stay for too long, but we enjoyed the rest of the Contacts’ functions for a while.

We could leave notes, visible only to us, on profiles; that helped to communicate with others more efficiently. We could edit the contact information (perhaps imported from an old address book) when it got outdated or when obtaining additional info or websites for the person. Records imported from address books were automatically cross-referenced with existing LinkedIn profiles. (This popular email-finding technique relied on auto-cross-referencing.)

Those were the days, my friend!

Much of this CRM functionality still exists in LinkedIn Recruiter. Most of it, however, is gone from personal LinkedIn accounts (no matter, paid or not). Want to hear the details?

We can no longer save contacts. We can edit “notes” and add tags – but only for those profiles that have made it to the Contacts list by February 25, 2016. Of course, most prospects in everyone’s business practice haven’t been “saved” – and can’t be “saved” or tagged any longer; there’s no place to add the notes either.

The import functions for other address books, such as Yahoo or MS Outlook are still there, but LinkedIn no longer tells us which imported contacts have profiles on LinkedIn. The Contact records still look like this for previously imported contacts (hi, Jim!), showing the sources for the contact.

connected-xref

But if you try to import an address book today from Yahoo or MS Outlook, you will just see a list of email addresses with no other information.

Most of the mentioned feature removals happened in the Contacts. To add to this, the recent LinkedIn messaging redesign has also affected smooth communication. For example, we no longer have the checkbox to not let multiple recipients see each other. This is what it used to be like:

LinkedIn_Messaging

That checkbox is gone – now messages sent to several people often proceed to a “spam” loop, where each person is asking to remove them from the conversation and each such message is delivered, again, to all.

Maybe LinkedIn has removed the existing CRM functions while preparing some new and brilliant CRM functionality for the members? Who knows?

In the meantime, we’ll take a look at some alternatives at one of the upcoming Productivity Tools webinars

Comments 9

  1. Unfortunately, LinkedIn can’t get out of their own way. There are dozens of features that don’t work properly on LinkedIn and each time they roll out a new ‘feature’, something else goes wrong. LinkedIn has become the ‘Obamacare’ of tools; Alot of people need it, however, that doesn’t mean that it actually works well. Every time Jeff Weiner talks to his company, he stresses how important it is to provide efficient service to it’s customers. It’s almost contradictory because each time they make a change, it’s not for the benefit of the customer at all. There are very few other options, so looks like we’re all stuck for the time being.

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  2. I wonder if this has anything to do with Linkedin recent acquisition of Connectifier? I believe Connectifier built its platform (directly or indirectly) upon these same features. Linkedin has to ride the paradox of being an “open” social network, while protecting itself from those that would exploit its collaboration features.

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      John – who knows? But I doubt it. Connectifier’s strongest feature is to give its users contact information for viewed profiles. No way LinkedIn would be able to do anything like that, due to its members’ privacy (I think).

  3. Caveat emptor. Buyer beware. These changes are designed to upgrade you to a more costly product. I signed the contract being told Recruiter Professional was a completely different product from Recruiter lite and that is not the case. It’s also the difference between 100.00 per month and almost 500.00 per month. Ouch.

  4. LinkedIn is becoming a shocking organisation with limited customer service. If their NPS ever gets above 50 I will be amazed. Who is running the company? who has made all the changes? fast becoming the worst company in the world.
    How can they offer a functionality, one that we have relied upon, used, and trusted them to look after our workflow – then unceremoniously take away!! Just an arrogant approach to its customers.

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