I double-checked my copy of How to Launch a High-Impact Nonprofit — and sure enough, towards the end of the chapter on productivity, the book actually encourages the reader to add that title to their Linkedin verbatim. Not explicitly as a certification, nor with CE as the certifier, but just in general..
Thanks for mentioning this. I wasn’t aware of this context, which changes my initial guesswork quite a bit. I just looked it up at in Chapter 10 (Take Planning), section 10.6 has this phrase: “As you implement most or some of the practices introduced here, you have every right to add the title Pareto Productivity Pro to your business card and LinkedIn profile.” So I guess that is endorsed by Charity Entrepreneurship. While I disagree with their choice to encourage people to add what I view as a meaningless title to LinkedIn, I think it I can’t put so much blame on the individual who did this.
Yeah, agreed that it’s an odd suggestion. The idea of putting it on a business card feels so counterintuitive to me that I wonder how literally it’s meant to be taken, or if the sentence is really just a rhetorical device the authors are using to encourage the reader.
Thanks for mentioning this. I wasn’t aware of this context, which changes my initial guesswork quite a bit. I just looked it up at in Chapter 10 (Take Planning), section 10.6 has this phrase: “As you implement most or some of the practices introduced here, you have every right to add the title Pareto Productivity Pro to your business card and LinkedIn profile.” So I guess that is endorsed by Charity Entrepreneurship. While I disagree with their choice to encourage people to add what I view as a meaningless title to LinkedIn, I think it I can’t put so much blame on the individual who did this.
Yeah, agreed that it’s an odd suggestion. The idea of putting it on a business card feels so counterintuitive to me that I wonder how literally it’s meant to be taken, or if the sentence is really just a rhetorical device the authors are using to encourage the reader.