Soft Skills are Necessary for Personal Branding in Any Work Environment
April 16, 2008 at 10:41 am | In Career Development, Interview, People, Personal Branding, Podcasts, Success Strategies | 4 CommentsTags: baby boomers, gen-x, gen-y, Gretchen Neels, relationships, soft skills
Gretchen Neels is the president of Neels & Company. Her company is the leading provider of soft skills
training to professional services firms, covering all areas of business communications. Gretchen has over ten years of experience recruiting and retaining top talent at a number of prestigious professional services firms, including Bain & Company, Bank of America and Gordon Brothers.
Gretchen’s company offers two amazing products: Business Etiquette 101 & 102. 101 focuses on the basics for new professionals, and those who may need a refresher, on what’s acceptable and what’s not in the workplace. 102 is more candid and on-target advice to help beginners and veterans alike navigate the unwritten code of corporate protocol.
Personal Branding Podcast
Here is the Script
Me: What exactly are soft skills? How are hard skills different? Why do we, as brands, need both?
Gretchen: Soft skills are the opposite of hard skills. Hard skills are technical skills that identify people in certain industries. Soft skills are what we all need to use to get along with each other, such as emotional intelligence, a sense of humor, manners and observing the proper way to act in a given setting. Technical skills position you as competent, but soft skills allow you connect with your client and with co-workers.
Me: Why do young professionals need to be careful when communicating with older generations in the workplace?
Gretchen: There are 4 generations working under one roof. Traditionalists, baby boomers, Gen-Y and Gen-X. They all have different ways to communicate. Gen-Y uses technology as a mother tongue. They communicate through IM, whereas the older generations are more about “face time.”
Me: What’s your story and how would you describe your brand in as few words as possible?
Gretchen: I’ve been in recruiting and retention for along time and saw that a lot of people who had the hard skills didn’t get jobs. I felt really bad and thought they were great people, but if they had eye contact or confidence, they would have made it. I created a business that would teach these skills to people. My brand helps individuals and organizations improve performance through soft skills training.
Me: I notice that your company has a great “brand statement” and I just posted about how every individual needs a “personal brand statement.” What I tell everyone is that you need to be the best at something to a specific audience. Can you explain yours in more depth?
Gretchen: I started my career after college working at a big New York firm, where i got excellent training. When i started to go into business for myself, I saw the opportunity and importance to find a niche and do what I was most comfortable with. I wouldn’t be as comfortable in the food service industry, but I can mesh well with law firms, consulting firms and banking.
Me: You were recently quoted in the Wall Street Journal, in an article called “Law Without Suits: New Hires Flout Tradition.” Can you explain what the article was about, how you were positioned and how it impacted your personal brand?
Gretchen: It was a really strong article talking about how senior leadership at law firms is really at a loss. They have young people coming into their firms that are not dressing appropriately. They need the soft skills training. The writer, Christina Brinkley, reached out to me and asked me about my work with law firms. When I do practice interviews at schools, I’m coaching them before they even enter the workplace. It was a great article and I received a lot of feedback about it.
Me: What suggestions do you have for people my age versus the older generation. What is your top 5 list?
Gretchen: Buy the best clothes you can afford and be conservative because that will give you the credibility you need. Listen to what everyone has to say when you start your job. Don’t act like a know-it-all because that’s the worst thing you can do to yourself. “Dress for the job you want, not the job you have.”
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Great interview…great subject. Dan, you always move fast on this stuff…Gretchen only went public on this content in the last few days! I find working with older executives that this stuff is the hardest to coach, as they are simply too set in thier ways! however, as our Baby Boomers retire here in Australia, and the next Gen (my gen) come through and take up the helm, I believe on the whole we are more self aware, and more capable of developing these skills…so the soft skills wil become so much more relevant!
Comment by Luke — April 16, 2008 #
Dan,you stand out from your peers BECAUSE you wear a suit and tie. That is the first thing I noticed about you in the picture. You establish credibility by how you present yourself to others. I live in Puerto Rico were appearances are everything. I only see woman in sweat suits and sneakers when they are doing exercise. Men and woman are always in dress suits in corporate offices. When you go to the bank branches, all the employees have the same uniform: Suits, Dress Suits, and Ties.
I had one supervisor in the States tell me that I did not need to dress up because I was only going to be doing a customer service job. I stood out because I did not listen to her advice. I was chosen over my supervisor to represent the Customer Service Department when our Training Department decided they wanted our global customers to meet different employees through out the corporation.
Comment by lucilla — April 16, 2008 #
@Lucilla – That is me being very conservative. I like to wear much more colorful and “rebellious” clothing. I don’t walk around with tattoo’s, nose piercings or a mohawk though!
@Luck – Hey mate thanks for the reflection.
Comment by Dan Schawbel — April 17, 2008 #
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