Saturday, October 26, 2013

LinkedIn Intro embeds professional profiles into Mail for iOS


The No. 1 activity people do with their smartphones is email -- LinkedIn says that up to 28 percent of a typical professional's day can be gobbled up by reading and responding to email on a mobile device.


And in LinkedIn's continued quest for world domination (the stated goal is to have no fewer than 3 billion professional profiles, one for every single member of the global workforce), the company wants to put its network where your eyeballs are: in the email app you're already using.


[ Also on InfoWorld: The 7 best new features in iOS 7. | Discover what's new in business applications with InfoWorld's Technology: Applications newsletter. ]


LinkedIn's solution is Intro, which places a strip of LinkedIn profile information on every email you receive in the default Mail app for iOS. So if you get an email from someone you don't know, you can see at a glance their headshot, company, and title, with a handy button to let you add them to your LinkedIn network with one tap. Pull down on the strip to expand pretty much their whole LinkedIn profile, including the connections you share, their personal summary, work experience, education, you name it.


You can link Intro to your Gmail, Google Apps, Yahoo Mail, AOL Mail, and iCloud -- no Exchange support at the moment. It adds a new account to your Mail settings, and instructs you to go turn off your older, non-Intro'ed account. You don't have to delete that account, only disable its Mail service, so it's easy to go back at any time. But if you leave both accounts on you'll see all those email messages twice in Mail's unified inbox).


LinkedIn Intro is built with technology from Rapportive, an email startup acquired by LinkedIn last year. Rapportive works as a browser plug-in that adds info about your messages' senders to the sidebar of Gmail, but this is the first time we've seen it in a mobile app -- let alone Mail, which is made by Apple, which is notorious for keeping tight control over every aspect of the user experience.


In our tests, Intro's usefulness is clear, although pretty contextual. If you get a business-related email from someone who's writing you from an email account associated with their LinkedIn profile, sure enough, there's a little strip of profile. So it's easy to see a little more about them than you'd get in a typical email signature, and you can take advantage of that info if and when you email them back.


And it's perfect if you want to add the contacts you correspond with to your LinkedIn network, since all it takes is a tap -- you're not redirected to the mobile LinkedIn app, or a website, or even the standalone LinkedIn Contacts app.


But if you don't care about making new LinkedIn connections, or you mostly correspond with people you already know, Intro doesn't add much. And since the profile only appears on received messages, when you go to reply, it vanishes from your view, so you have to either go back a screen or rely on your memory if you want to pepper your response with tidbits from their profile (say, if you went to the same school or have a mutual connection).


Intro also adds "a snippet of your LinkedIn profile" as a signature to your outgoing messages, although you can turn off that setting in the Intro settings app that's automatically installed when you add the service.


Source: http://podcasts.infoworld.com/d/applications/linkedin-intro-embeds-professional-profiles-mail-ios-229460?source=rss_applications
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