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LinkedIn’s New Catch-Up Feature: A Missed Opportunity?
If you’ve been on LinkedIn recently, you might have noticed something new catching your eye. The My Network button has been lighting up with alerts more frequently, prompting curiosity about what’s going on. Clicking on it, you’ll find that LinkedIn has introduced two new sub-navigations: Grow and Catch-Up.
Grow remains focused on connection invitations, keeping track of who you’ve invited and who has invited you to connect. Catch-Up, on the other hand, aims to centralize updates about significant life events of your connections—such as job changes, birthdays, work anniversaries, and educational achievements. It’s an intriguing concept, presenting rows upon rows of milestones from people in your network.
For example, LinkedIn may prompt you to congratulate Mike for completing seven years at his company, offering options to give a thumbs up, leave a comment, or opt out of seeing such updates from Mike in the future. This structure is a notable effort by LinkedIn to enhance engagement and interaction within your professional network.
While this new feature has potential, there’s still a lot of room for improvement. As someone who has spent decades studying and teaching the art and science of relationships, I see LinkedIn’s attempt to make networking more personal and engaging. However, the implementation of Catch-Up seems to miss the mark in adding the nuance and intelligence needed to truly elevate professional relationships.
Understanding the Concept of Ambient Awareness
Let’s talk about the idea behind LinkedIn’s Catch-Up feature. Social scientists call this concept ambient awareness. The idea is that the more knowledgeable you are about your relationships, the more effectively you can nurture them.
In theory, LinkedIn's Catch-Up feature is designed to enhance your ambient awareness by keeping you updated on important milestones within your network. At Avnir, we see great value in this idea and are working to incorporate a dramatically deeper level of this concept into our Relationship Bank platform.
However, despite its potential, LinkedIn’s Catch-Up seems lacking in execution. LinkedIn, with all its resources, often struggles to deliver features that truly evaluate the true value of our business relationships. When I look at Catch-Up, three major issues stand out, and unfortunately, none of them are positive.
1. Too Many Contacts; Not Enough Real Relationships!
The first issue is the overwhelming number of transactional contacts versus meaningful relationships. Many of us have amassed hundreds, if not thousands, of connections on LinkedIn. But how many of these connections do you really know? And how many have moved along a continuum to become real relationships?
Scrolling through the Catch-Up feed, I often find myself staring at names I barely recognize. I don’t know Mike, Justin, Marina, Deb, Brian, or Jamel. This flood of updates from people I don’t have a real connection with underscores a significant problem: LinkedIn has become similar to the old telephone white pages. Rows and rows of unfamiliar contacts I don’t recall or could tell you anything about!
Social media, in general, has regrettably propagated the blurred lines between transactional contacts and deep, meaningful relationships. The Catch-Up feature, while well-intentioned, exacerbates this issue by flooding users with updates from a sea of acquaintances (at best). It highlights the superficiality of many of these connections and underscores the need for a more intelligent, context-aware approach to relationship management.
2. Little to No Value Add
The second issue is the lack of contextual relevance. These updates often don't align with my world, my goals, or what I'm trying to achieve. Instead of adding value by helping me nurture meaningful relationships, they end up wasting my limited bandwidth.
I suspect many people are experiencing the same frustration. They either ignore these updates or, worse yet, use the three little dots to stop seeing updates from certain connections. This not only disengages them from those people but also rejects the possibility of forming a meaningful relationship.
By failing to provide contextually relevant updates, LinkedIn's Catch-Up feature falls short in its goal of enhancing professional networking. For this feature to be truly valuable, it needs to prioritize updates that are relevant and meaningful to each user based on their unique relationships and professional profile, interests, and aspirations.
3. The Noise vs. Signal Problem
The third issue is the sheer volume of updates that create a lot of noise. Most of us don’t have the time to sift through endless notifications, and in the midst of all these updates, the truly important ones get lost.
The people I genuinely care about—those who have changed jobs, had birthdays, celebrated work anniversaries, or achieved educational milestones—are lost in the clutter. The feature isn't personalized enough to highlight what really matters to me. This lack of intelligence makes it hard to discern the updates that are relevant to my interests and priorities.
Imagine if LinkedIn could tell me that a valuable client of mine has moved countries. That’s relevant to me, and I want to know and talk about it. However, LinkedIn doesn’t know that because the feature isn’t smart enough to understand or prioritize my relationships.
With almost a billion users, LinkedIn has a wealth of data at its disposal. If they could harness this data to personalize relationship updates, the Catch-Up feature could truly become a valuable tool. Unfortunately, without this level of intelligence, it remains just another example of brilliant technologists missing the mark in understanding relationship nuances.
Intelligent Relationship Management
At Avnir, we’re taking a different approach: overlaying intelligent tech to solve complex business relationship challenges and opportunities. Utilizing decades of battle-tested Relationship Economics® insights, we’re trying to avoid clever features that may be technically impressive but fail to address the root causes of neglected, misunderstood, or guarded relationships. Features we’ve seen in other platforms often miss the mark because they don’t align with how business relationships naturally progress, evolve, and bridge from creation to capitalization along a continuum.
Our initial product, Avnir Relationship Bank™, focused on organizing your relationships with a unified view of your disparate contacts – you know, the same person you have in your phone, email, calendar, LinkedIn, and a spreadsheet somewhere, all with different data about them? We’re updating and enriching that data so you have their latest and most accurate information, so your emails and text messages don’t bounce because they left that job for which you have their info, two years ago!
We’re serving updates on your most valuable and prized relationships in While You Were Sleeping, our proprietary dashboard, so you can be contextually relevant. We’re relationally coaching you to prioritize your relationship commitments and touch cadence to reduce the chances of you neglecting valuable relationships. We’re delineating your work and personal relationships in unique buckets of your relationship ecosystem, so you can become more intentional in the relationships you choose to invest in.
You see, there is a fundamental difference between brilliant technologists trying to figure out relationships and a student of relationships for the past two decades trying to overlay intelligence on a proven methodology. Although there are no guarantees of success, we like our chances.
LinkedIn's Catch-Up Feature: Good Intentions, Missed Opportunity
The concept of creating ambient awareness and nurturing relationships proactively is commendable. LinkedIn's Catch-Up feature aims to enhance our awareness of key connections, but it misses the mark in its execution.
If I were to grade it, I'd give it a D. While the idea is solid, the implementation is lacking. LinkedIn appears to misunderstand the core principles of relationship-building and the potential of its platform.
The main issue is the confusion between quantity and quality. LinkedIn's approach prioritizes sheer volume—it has almost a billion users—rather than focusing on fostering deeper, more meaningful relationships.
True impact and success come from cultivating fewer but richer connections. At Avnir, we prioritize ensuring our platform not only performs well technically but also genuinely helps people build and sustain meaningful relationships.
Elevate Your Relationships with Avnir
We believe that the true power of relationships lies in their quality, not just their quantity. Our approach is designed to help you nurture and activate meaningful connections with intelligent, context-aware technology.
About David NourDavid Nour is the author of 12 books translated into eight languages, including best-sellers Relationship Economics®, Co-Create, and Curve Benders. He regularly speaks at corporate meetings, industry association conferences, and academic forums on the intentional, quantifiable, and strategic value of business relationships. |
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