Jeff Weiner says LinkedIn will evolve to help companies do things like determine skill gaps and create just-in-time curriculum to "train workers for the jobs of tomorrow." Shara Tibken was a managing ...
LinkedIn has impressed Wall Street with its professional social network, but the company wants to have a much bigger impact globally, says LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner. LinkedIn has close to a quarter ...
LinkedIn is positioned to become the first global economic graph with the ability to mine the transactions of an emerging data economy. That’s the conclusion of a study by faberNovel, which has ...
But the social media business is offering a glimpse behind the scenes at the digital pipelines intended to eventually pave the way to LinkedIn's long haul plan: establishing the world's first economic ...
SAN FRANCISCO---The term “graph” has become one of the most unexpected buzzwords in technology this year. Perhaps even a bit haphazardly, the word is being batted around frequently by some of the ...
Last Thursday LinkedIn unveiled its plan to build the world's first economic graph. Its building blocks, for now, will come from the data and data exhaust of its members as they create and maintain ...
For businesses seeking to relocate to a specific city, the economic graph can also provide details on untapped skills among city residents. It’s a powerful tool based on macro-level, connected data, ...
Quitting isn’t just ‘quiet,’ new data from LinkedIn’s Economic Graph team found that more workers are quitting their jobs before the one-year mark. Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are ...
Co-founder Allen Blue leads session on 'New Talent Dilemma' during The Government Summit 2015 in Dubai Dubai, UAE; February 10, 2015 Allen Blue, Vice President - Product Management and co-Founder, ...
David McMillan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond ...
ECONOMICS is not usually associated with humour. But once a year in the Irish city of Kilkenny, organisers of the “Kilkenomics” festival try to inject some merriment into the dismal science. When it ...