Type | Public | ||
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Traded as | NYSE: LNKD | ||
Founded | Santa Monica, California (2003) | ||
Founder(s) | Reid Hoffman Allen Blue Konstantin Guericke Eric Ly Jean-Luc Vaillant |
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Headquarters | Mountain View, California, US | ||
Area served | Worldwide | ||
Key people | Reid Hoffman (Executive Chairman) Jeff Weiner (CEO) |
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Revenue | $243 million (2010)[1] | ||
Net income | $15 million (2010)[1] | ||
Employees | 1,797 (2011)[1] | ||
Slogan | Relationships Matter | ||
Website | linkedin.com | ||
IPv6 support | No | ||
Alexa rank | 15 (January 2012[update])[2] | ||
Type of site | Social network service | ||
Advertising | Google, AdSense | ||
Registration | Required | ||
Users | 135 million (November 2011)[3] | ||
Available in | English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Romanian, Russian and Turkish. | ||
Launched | May 5, 2003 | ||
Current status | Active | ||
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LinkedIn (NYSE: LNKD) ( /ˌlɪŋkt.ˈɪn/) is a business-related social networking site. Founded in December 2002 and launched in May 2003,[4] it is mainly used for professional networking. As of 4 August 2011[update], LinkedIn reports more than 120 million registered users in more than 200 countries and territories.[5][6] The site is available in English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Romanian, Russian, Turkish and Japanese.[7][8][9] Quantcast reports LinkedIn has 21.4 million monthly unique U.S. visitors and 47.6 million globally.[10] In June 2011, LinkedIn had 33.9 million unique visitors, up 63 percent from a year earlier and surpassing MySpace.[11] LinkedIn filed for an initial public offering in January 2011 and traded its first shares on May 19, 2011, under the NYSE symbol "LNKD".[12]
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LinkedIn's CEO is Jeff Weiner, previously a Yahoo! Inc. executive. The company was founded by Reid Hoffman and founding team members from PayPal and Socialnet.com (Allen Blue, Eric Ly, Jean-Luc Vaillant, Lee Hower, Konstantin Guericke, Stephen Beitzel, David Eves, Ian McNish, Yan Pujante, and Chris Saccheri)
Founder Reid Hoffman, previously CEO of LinkedIn, is now Chairman of the Board. Bhushan Kasvekar is Vice President of Products.[13] LinkedIn is headquartered in Mountain View, California, with offices in Omaha, Chicago, New York, London and Dublin. It is funded by Sequoia Capital, Greylock, Bain Capital Ventures,[14] Bessemer Venture Partners and the European Founders Fund. LinkedIn reached profitability in March 2006.[15] Through January 2011, the company had received a total of $103 million of investment.[16]
In 2003, Sequoia Capital led the Series A investment in the company.[17] In June 2008, Sequoia Capital, Greylock Partners, and other venture capital firms purchased a 5% stake in the company for $53 million, giving the company a post-money valuation of approximately $1 billion.[18]
In June 2010, LinkedIn announced it would be opening up a European headquarters in Dublin, Ireland.[19]
In July 2010, Tiger Global Management LLC purchased a 1% stake in the company for $20 million at a valuation of approximately $2 billion.[20]
In August 2010, LinkedIn announced the acquisition of Mspoke. It is the company's first acquisition for an undisclosed amount. This acquisition aims to help LinkedIn users do more than just find a job, increase users' activity[21] and improve its 1% premium subscription ratio.[22]
In October 2010 Silicon Valley Insider ranked the company No. 10 on its Top 100 List of most valuable start ups.[23] As of December 2010, the company was valued at $1.575 billion in private markets.[24]
LinkedIn filed for an initial public offering (IPO) on January 27, 2011[25] and the IPO occurred on May 19.
With 135 million users,[3] LinkedIn is ahead of its competitors Viadeo (35 million)[26] and XING (10 million).[27] The membership grows by approximately two new members every second.[28] About half of the members are in the United States and 11 million are from Europe. With 3 million users, India has the fastest-growing network of users as of 2009. The Netherlands has the highest adoption rate per capita outside the US at 30%.[29] LinkedIn recently reached 4 million users in UK,[30] 1 million in Spain,[31] and nearly 1 million in Pakistan.
As of March 2011 the service had 44 million users in the US and 56 million outside.[32]
As of October 2011, LinkedIn has over 14 million students and recent college graduates as members.[33]
One purpose of the site is to allow registered users to maintain a list of contact details of people with whom they have some level of relationship, called Connections. Users can invite anyone (whether a site user or not) to become a connection. However, if the invitee selects "I don't know" or "Spam", this counts against the inviter. If the inviter gets too many of such responses, the account may be restricted or closed.[34]
This list of connections can then be used in a number of ways:
The "gated-access approach" (where contact with any professional requires either a preexisting relationship, or the intervention of a contact of theirs) is intended to build trust among the service's users. LinkedIn participates in the EU's International Safe Harbor Privacy Principles.[35]
The feature LinkedIn Answers,[36] similar to Yahoo! Answers, allows users to ask questions for the community to answer. This feature is free and the main difference from the latter is that questions are potentially more business-oriented, and the identity of the people asking and answering questions is known.
Another LinkedIn feature is LinkedIn Polls. In December 2011, LinkedIn announced that they are rolling out polls to their one million groups.[37]
In mid-2008, LinkedIn launched LinkedIn DirectAds as a form of sponsored advertising.[38]
In October 2008, LinkedIn revealed plans to opening its social network of 30 million professionals globally as a potential sample for business-to-business research. It is testing a potential social-network revenue model-research that to some appears more promising than advertising.[39]
In October 2008, LinkedIn enabled an "applications platform" that allows other online services to be embedded within a member's profile page. Among the initial applications were an Amazon Reading List that allows LinkedIn members to display books they are reading, a connection to Tripit, and a Six Apart, WordPress and TypePad application that allows members to display their latest blog postings within their LinkedIn profile.[40]
In November 2010, LinkedIn allowed businesses to list products and services on company profile pages; it also permitted LinkedIn members to "recommend" products and services and write reviews.[41]
A mobile version of the site was launched in February 2008 which gives access to a reduced feature set over a mobile phone. The mobile service is available in six languages: Chinese, English, French, German, Japanese and Spanish.[42]
In January 2011, LinkedIn acquired CardMunch, a mobile app maker that scans business cards and converts into contacts. LinkedIn plans to integrate this functionality into their services in the near future.[43] In August 2011 LinkedIn revamped its mobile applications on the iPhone, Android and HTML5. Mobile page views of the application have increased roughly 400% year over year according to CEO Jeff Weiner.[44]
LinkedIn also supports the formation of interest groups, and as of March 24, 2011 there are 870,612 such groups whose membership varies from 1 to 377,000.[45] The majority of the largest groups are employment related, although a very wide range of topics are covered mainly around professional and career issues, and there are currently 128,000 groups for both academic and corporate alumni.
Groups support a limited form of discussion area, moderated by the group owners and managers. Since groups offer the ability to reach a wide audience without so easily falling foul of anti-spam solutions, there is a constant stream of spam postings, and there now exist a range of firms who offer a spamming service for this very purpose. LinkedIn has devised a few mechanisms to reduce the volume of spam, but recently took the decision to remove the ability of group owners to inspect the email address of new members in order to determine if they were spammers.[45]
Groups may be private, accessible to members only or may be open to Internet users in general to read, though they must join in order to post messages.
LinkedIn allows users to research companies with which they may be interested in working. When typing the name of a given company in the search box, statistics about the company are provided. These may include the ratio of female to male employees, the percentage of the most common titles/positions held within the company, the location of the company's headquarters and offices, or a list of present and former employees.
In July 2011, LinkedIn launched a new feature allowing companies to include an "Apply with LinkedIn" button on job listing pages.[46] The new plugin will allow potential employees to apply for positions using their LinkedIn profiles as resumes. All applications will also be saved under a "Saved Jobs" tab.[46]
LinkedIn has received a generally positive reception from critics. Online trade publication TechRepublic claimed that "LinkedIn has become the de facto tool for professional networking."[47] Irish journalist James O'Sullivan commented in the Evening Echo, an award-winning regional newspaper in the Republic of Ireland, where the company has its European headquarters, that "LinkedIn.com, a business-orientated networking site, can be an ideal way for professionals to present an online profile of themselves...Unlike social networking sites, [with] LinkedIn you're outlining all your credentials; presenting the professional rather than the personal you. Considering the sheer vastness of the digital space, the potential for building up a solid base of contacts and fostering new business relationships is boundless."[48]
In 2009 Syrian users reported that LinkedIn server stopped accepting connections originating from IP addresses assigned to Syria. As company's Customer Support stated, services provided by them are subject to US export and re-export control laws and regulations and "As such, and as a matter of corporate policy, we do not allow member accounts or access to our site from Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan, or Syria."[49]
Cuba, Iran, Sudan and Syria are not available in the list of countries that LinkedIn users can select as one's location. However, as of April 2010, North Korea is still present there.
In China, LinkedIn is called as LINKEYIN by net friends, because it's a compound word, it's combined from Linked and In. According to the pronunciation and meaning, The word Linked can be translated to LINKE, and the word In can be translated to YIN. The word LINKEYIN is more easy to understand for Chinese people.
In February 2011 it was reported that LinkedIn was being blocked in China after calls for a "Jasmine Revolution". It was speculated to have been blocked because it is an easy way for dissidents to access Twitter, which had been blocked previously.[50] After a day of being blocked, LinkedIn access was restored in China.
A recent surge in social and professional networking companies have brought varied competition besides older companies such as Monster.com and Elance.com. Most notably Zerply,[51] Studentgenius and Beknown[52] (a recruiting platform within Facebook).
The Search, Network, and Analytics team at LinkedIn has a web site[53] that hosts the open source projects built by the group. Notable among these projects is Project Voldemort,[54] a distributed key-value structured storage system with low-latency similar in purpose to Amazon.com's Dynamo and Google's BigTable.
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