Featured Posts

WordPress Adds new Likes and Reblog This buttons. Trying to make their user-friendly blogging platform a little bit more social, WordPress just added a "Like" button (just like the new famous Facebook one) as well as the...

Readmore

LiveLABS @ TruLondon On Thursday and Friday this week I’ll be leading two tracks at TruLondon (http://thetruconferences.com/) that we hope will turn into something pretty special. We’ve...

Readmore

Socialgraphics: a customer-centric approach to social... The always incisive Jeremiah Owyang (who I met at the CSN Conference last year, where we were both speaking) left Forrester Research to join Charlene Li (who wrote Groundswell...

Readmore

Twitter and Sports Stars: and implications for Corporate... Just getting round to writing about two separate but interlinked events earlier in the year,  that is - sports stars using twitter. Philip Hughes revleaved prematurely...

Readmore

Latest on LinkedIn - recommendations more valuable... LinkedIn Recommendations & Jeremiah Owyang is an interesting (and comic) article by Jason Alba looking at why you should consider requesting/giving recommendations via...

Readmore

Carve Consulting: Social Media, Corporate Social Networking, ePR, Social Recruiting, Reputation Management Newsletters Carve Consulting: Social Media, Corporate Social Networking, ePR, Social Recruiting, Reputation Management LinkedIn Carve Consulting: Social Media, Corporate Social Networking, ePR, Social Recruiting, Reputation Management Rss

Tracking the fall-out from the economic crisis…via LinkedIn

Posted on : 23-02-2010 | By : Sarah Thomas | In : Carve Consulting Blog, LinkedIn

Tags: , ,

While updating some LinkedIn training materials for a client session this week, I came across the following image from the LinkedIn blog that shows just how powerful a tool LinkedIn can be.

It shows that even though many people left the financial industry after the collapse, a large proportion stayed and you can see where they went. Interesting huh? Who would have thought.

bearstearns

You can read the full post here.