In 2009 Hire People With Large Social Networks For Free Promotion

December 31, 2008 at 2:12 pm | In Employer Branding, Personal Branding, Recruitment, Success Strategies, marketing, social media | 8 Comments

We’ve spoken about how your network will soon be a job qualification back in October. I think it’s even more than that now, taking the economic climate and the rise of social media as a mainstream vehicle into account. Your network, which is naked online and seen by employers and your management, will become one of the most important promotional items for your company or prospective company.

We should all have a marketing mindset now.  If you don’t, it’s time to start reading this blog and acquire one!

3 different perspectives

The corporate perspective

Company’s are going to be cutting back on marketing budgets for 2009. Most company’s already have set their budgets and they are significantly lower than a year ago this time. Also, marketing departments are being downsized, which means there are less people to get the message out. The problem is that they still need to get their brand out there, in order for people to 1) remember them 2) think positively of them 3) have them in their evoked set (a top-of-mind product/service).

The employee perspective

Employees, especially in the marketing department, are in desperate need of support. With a slim budget, they are still forced to see a return on each dollar they invest in their marketing programs. Many employees aren’t accustomed to social media yet and are still resorting to investing every dollar they have into interrupting random people, hoping they decide to, at a minimum, visit their website. Employees are going to be very irritated and shocked that proving ROI next year is going to be difficult. Most have not taken the past year or two to build out their online network by developing lists that they can market to themselves.

The potential hire perspective

Over a million people have laid off, but how many have taken the time to build up their social lists? I bet very few. Most job seekers are still convinced that the old way of job seeking (how to get a job through social media) is the way to go and, sadly, most fail as a result. Sure, they create a LinkedIn profile and submit their resumes to corporate websites and traditional job banks, such as Monster and Careerbuilder, but they don’t understand that we’re almost in 2009! Attraction-based (or inbound) marketing is the best long-term strategy for never applying for jobs and getting job offers on your doorstep. The few potential hires that are socially-connected should be rewarded with job offers.  They do have to fulfill the job requirements and be exceptional.  That will never change.

Employees MUST BE the brand in 2009

There’s no doubt it my mind that each and every employee is a brand ambassador. There aren’t sign-up forms for employees. The second you accept your job offer, you hold the corporate brand for life. Management has to push their vision at you and make you love your work, despite economic uncertainties. If you meet someone for the first time and tell them you work for XYZ company, you better be able to articulate what the company does, what your role is and smile at the same time. If you commit a crime and do something dumb, at some level, it can hurt your corporate brand. This is the reason why company’s don’t like hiring people that have criminal records.

In 2009, you and your company can only succeed if you live and breath the corporate brand.

Benefits of hiring socially-connected employees

  • Marketing from the inside out for free
  • More connections equals higher productivity
  • Stay ontop of trends
  • Save money on hiring employees with quick and trusted referrals
  • Free consulting, tips and resources from people in their network

Layoff marketers who aren’t socially-connected

This might sound harsh and many of you might get upset, but the reality is that there are many more job seekers (3.3) for every job now.  That being said, it’s easy for a company, especially a small company, to add and remove workers on-demand.  Unless the marketer has provided exceptional ROI over a long period of time, their job is in already in jeopardy.  It doesn’t matter if you’ve put in 10 years or even 25 at your company either.

Marketers that are socially-connected can help you market for free, when you have almost no money.  Wouldn’t you rather hire these individuals, than keep those who can’t help you do this?

Are you socially-connected?

The Real Way to Get a Job Using Social Media Revealed

December 8, 2008 at 12:01 pm | In Career Development, Networking, Personal Branding, Recruitment, Success Strategies, eBrand, social media | 37 Comments

The question everyone is asking right now, after hearing about the 1.9 million layoffs in the past year figure, is “how do I get a job”? This is the wrong question to ask yourself because it forces you to apply to positions that aren’t the best-fit for your personality, passions and possibly, expertise. You have to think more broadly!

The real question: How to get a job, keep a job, advance in a job and then get another job.

You might be at different stages, but the movement and cycle is all so familiar. The old way of thinking, which is staying a job for a decade or more, is a total failure these days because that’s not how the economy works. The real way to succeed, I promise you, is to do everything you would now, and leverage everything you’ve already done in the past, in order to be successful in the future, while setting “flexible goals” because things change.

This means that you need to have a career commandermindset. It doesn’t mean that you should let people know you’re looking, unless you have no choice.

Two career situations and two sets of results

Situation 1: One woman has felt job security after 5 years as an employee of a company. While working at this company, she decided that networking events were a waste of time and that meeting people inside their company was the path to career advancement. She had very little experience with the internet and got her current job through an old friend she doesn’t speak with anymore. She had a great relationship with her group members and executive management and was feeling really good about her current position, despite hearing about the economy. She woke up one day and  walked into her managers office, only to find out she had been laid off.

Results: She struggles really hard to recover, forcing her resume into the inbox’s of her old friends, yielding no positive outcome. She emails her coworkers at work, that can’t do anything about the situation, as they are struggling to keep their job. She realizes that she might not be getting a job she’d be interested in for a long time, so she takes up a job as a waitress to feed her children.

Situation 2: Another woman (let’s keep the gender the same ;) ) is doing great at work. She’s only been there for a year, but she’s worked really hard to not only build relationships throughout the company, not just her own domain, but also outside of work. In the past year, she started a blog, went to professional networking events, signed up for social networks and kept in close contact with many of her friends of the past. She also was smart enough to gain new skills in her field, which led to her becoming the go-to-person in her company. She worked for an additional hour or two each day, making a strong case for why she should be working there. The woman wakes up one day and poof, her company decides that they are going to layoff her business unit.

Results: She remains confident (career commander) and sends out a Tweet that says “Just got laid off, looking for an internet marketing job in Sanfrancisco.” She also sends an email to her email list of 400 that she had built up and starts sending nice notes to her Facebook network. She also blogs about her experience getting laid off and ends by talking about the jobs she’s be looking for, with a link to her LinkedIn resume. She also sends a note to her LinkedIn database of contacts and asks the people she worked with for references for the great job she had done. She ended up finding a job within 2 months.

Dan, quit the storytelling and tell us how to get a job!!!

Before reading my strategies, please be open-minded and remain calm. The new way to get a job requires that you invest time in creating content, building relationships and learning skills that you can apply elsewhere. You need to be a commander and not wait around for someone else to tell you what to do next. This involves having confidence in yourself and taking things seriously. OK, now please read this…..

1. Conduct a people search

If you were ever a Facebook stalker, then you should be good at this one. The first thing you need to know is that you get jobs through people and not random submissions or “hail marry’s.” The second thing you need to know is that most companies have people who can be contacted online. The third thing you need to know is how to talk to people you don’t know and ones that don’t know you. I want you to name a company you want to work for. Let’s say you that you choose DELL (this one is easy to explain because Dell is rather “naked” on the web).

If you want to work for DELL, you need to find people who work there, especially the one’s in HR and managers in your field. For the record, let’s say you want a social media job there. I would start finding out names of people who are in those positions by searching for “social media interview Dell” or “Dell blog” or “digital media dell” or something like that. Let’s say you come across the name Richard Binhammer, who is part of the digital media team. You notice he has a blog and a Twitter account. You should subscribe to his blog, actively comment and do the same with his Twitter feed. Next, you find out that Dell is on Facebook in many locations. You become part of that community, by asking questions and talking to people on there. Next, after figuring out the names of more people that work there (possibly finding a Dell press release and a PR contact), you search for their name(s) on Facebook.

Once you find them on there, you should send them an “informational” message. Something like “Name, I just discovered that you work for Dell. I’m really interested in your social media job there and enjoy participating in your Facebook group. I was wondering what your day-to-day job requirements are and anything else you could tell me about it. Thank you.” Wait a bit to hear back and then send a follow-up. If that fails, then do the same routine with your second company choice. This strategy works better if you have an online presence to point people to.

2. Put up your billboard advertisements

Aside from being proactive, you will want to be reactive in your job search. Companies like passive candidates, just like girls and guys like challenges in dating. I would recommend stationing your personal brand on the leading social networks (LinkedIn, Facebook), joining social networks that are related to your field, establishing a blog, website and possibly advertising yourself using Facebook social ads or Google AdWords as mentioned before. The idea here is to have your brand exist where people are searching for qualified candidates. Every minute your brand isn’t there, another person is getting interviewed instead of you. I think VisualCV offers a great product for capturing most of your professional brand in a clean cut and precise website that is searchable in their database. I’d also recommend that you ensure your resume is on Monster.com, eRecruiting.com and Careerbuilder.com, in addition to JobFox.com and Jobster.com.

3. Sleeping is not an option

I’ve talked about how sleep is an opportunity cost in a web 2.0 world. Sleep is unnecessary if you’re in a job search because every hour you don’t have a job, that’s money you can’t use to support your life. Instead of sleeping for 8 hours every night, why not try 5 or 6. The more time you invest in your job search, the better chances you’ll have. Work on posts for your blog, become part of communities on social networks and blogs and do some crazy research to find people who are in companies that you want to work for (see #1). Conduct job searches on corporate career pages and vertical search engines, such as SimplyHired.com and Indeed.com.

4. Find “head hunters” the web 2.0 way

There are a lot of headhunters around and they are easier to find than ever. I think the easiest way to find people who can be your “job search agents” is to join Recruitingblogs.com, which has over 14,000 recruiters and is situated in a Ning network. Many of these recruiters have blogs, as well as corporate HR people. If you want to find the top bloggers in this area, go to Alltop.com. Head hunters are great aids in a job search because they’ve placed candidates before, have connections, industry knowledge and can help position you for a good job. They also get paid based for helping you, so the incentive gives you a better chance.

Conclusion

I pretty much just handed over many secrets that I’ve had for a while and haven’t gotten on “paper.” Please note that if you aren’t an extraordinary candidate, with a strong brand, even these tactics might not help you in the short-term. If you’re smart, you’ll work as hard as you humanly possibly in these times.  Realize that we have to work twice as hard for the same salary now. I would like to reiterate that you need to treat your entire life as a networking event (including your friends, family, teachers, etc). One person you meet can change everything for you!

Leave comments if you have any other secret strategies that can help people.

Schawbel Report: The Current State of Personal Branding [December 2008]

December 1, 2008 at 12:22 pm | In Career Development, Corporate Branding, Employer Branding, Personal Branding, Recruitment, Schawbel Report, eBrand, gen-y, news, social media | 8 Comments

A lot has happened since the last time I posted a “Schawbel Report” on the state of personal branding worldwide. The July edition had some great information on how education is evolving with social media tools, how the workplace is becoming more virtual and reputation management 2.0. I finally got around to doing my 3rd report. There is a lot of information here, but it’s all very important to your personal brand and that of your company.

The economy crumbles

The need for personal branding is directly correlated to the amount of competition there is for jobs. When there are fewer jobs available and more people vying for those jobs, personal branding becomes the only method for entry. We’ve seen a huge economic downturn this year, with no hope for economic stimulus in the near future, so understanding how to become more valuable and known for something is crucial to your survival.

  • 6.5% national unemployment rate (4.8 in 2007) according to the (National Labor Department)
  • 1.2 million job cuts since January 2008 (Barack Obama)
  • 350,000 jobs will be shed this month, which is the largest since May 1980 – MarketWatch
  • Corporate layoffs at Sun Microsystems (6,000), Citigroup (50,000) and Gannett (3,000) – TechCrunch Layoff Archives
  • 1.3% more college grads will be hired in 2009 (lowest in 6 years) – National Association of Colleges and Employers
  • 1.5 million graduating college students face stiff competition for a shrinking number of jobs – Courant

A new hope for job seekers!

Aside from scaring you, I’d like to offer you some new hope (think Star Wars with Luke Skywalker!). Instead of submitting your resume blindly to 100 corporate websites, as well as Monster.com and Careerbuilder.com, I think you need to add some other tools to your arsenal. Would you rather apply for jobs or have them come to you? With the internet, you can advertise your brand and have employers come at you with offers.

  • Success stories with social networks such as Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn
  • 20 tips for using Twitter in a job search
  • David Meerman Scott gives his advice, by stating “You want to find a new job? You have to stop thinking like an advertiser of a product and start thinking like a publisher of information.”
  • Mobile job searching is taking off, with JobCompass. It allows iPhone users to scour for jobs with extra emphasis on location.

Millennials are still an important focus

Millennials are extremely important right now, not just because there are over 75 million of them, but because businesses don’t know how to market to them or recruit them. Also, millennials require a lot of help with their brands because they are used to revealing their social lives to the wrong audiences, using Facebook.

  • More than 33% of millennials are dissatisfied with the technologies their employers provide – Accenture
  • 70% of millennials leave their first job within two years – Experience Inc.
  • 42% of companies want to invest more in millennials than other generations – MarketingVox
  • The most effective technique for targeting millennials is to participate in viral marketing and social networking sites – eMarketer

Branding through social media becomes required

For those who believe branding through social media is a fad, I must tell you that it’s just the beginning. Anyone who reads my new book next year (Me 2.0) will STILL be ahead of the curve. Companies, as well as millennials, are expected to have competency in social media or at least know that the tools exist.

  • 85% of social media users think companies should interact with their consumers through sites such as Facebook and Twitter – eWeek
  • 75% of U.S. adults use web technologies and tools to connect with other people and to share information. Adoption has grown from 56% just a year ago. – Mediapost

Social media is part of journalism forever

  • 100% of millennial journalists (aged 18 – 29) believe new media/communications tools are making journalism better – Society for New Communications Research
  • 87% of millennial journalists reported that bloggers are important opinion shapers
  • 50% of journalists report visiting a corporate website or online newsroom at least once a week – Bulldog Reporter

Social networking mayhem

Social networks can be your best friend or worst enemy, but either way, people are using them to find information about you or their customers. They might even be using advertising services to put banner ads on your screen.

  • 55% of top-brand CMOs said they’re not too interested in social networking sites for marketing – Epsilon
  • 79% of consumers clicked on an online ad but only about 57% of consumers on social networks clicked an ad – IDC
  • 55 percent of workers use social networking sites at work for personal reasons – 8e6 Technologies
  • Virgin Atlantic launched an investigation of several crew members who allegedly criticized the airline’s safety standards on Facebook. – Brand Republic
  • Patriots cheerleader was fired after her pictures surfaced on Facebook and U2 singer Bono was embarrased with pictures taken with underage girls – Fox News & TMZ
  • 99% of the Amherst College freshman class is connected on facebook before classes started – InsideFacebook.com

Technorati blog trends for “personal branding”

This chart really won’t tell you much. To me, it’s all up and down based on it’s acceptance in the media and with bloggers. There have been quite a few posts this quarter that are anti-PB, which actually draws more people to post and is part of why you see more traffic in certain time frames.

Google trends for “personal branding”

Ever since I started this blog, the amount of mentions PB has acquired has been quite volatile. I’ve always seen a consistent degree of coverage from South Africa though and a moderate amount from the US.

  • Top regions: South Africa, Indonesia, Romania and the Netherlands
  • Top cities: Amsterdam, Netherlands, Toronto, Canada and New York, NY, USA
  • Top languages: Indonesian, Romanian, Dutch and English

Gen-Y Brands Will Hold the Recruiting Power Very Soon!

November 26, 2008 at 1:23 am | In Book Reviews, Career Development, Employer Branding, Interview, Personal Branding, Recruitment, Success Strategies, gen-y | 2 Comments

Today, I spoke with Tamara J. Erickson, who completely made my day.  She’s a generational expert and her latest book is on Gen-Y.  The coolest thing I got out of this interview is the fact that the amount of jobs in our economy will be greater than the amount of Gen-Y’ers to fill positions, even though there are 75 million of us.  This will allow us to have more recruiting power and as a result, we will be able to negotiate and get paid more.  Aside from this, Tamara talks about the issues Gen-Y will face and what they (we) need to do to succeed.

Tammy, can you paint a portrait of the stereotypical Gen-Y for us?

Most Gen Ys are what I like to callimmediate” — eager to live life fully today. This trait is often interpreted by older generations as “impatient” or “unwilling to pay your dues but it actually relates much more to the influence of random events, such as terrorism and school violence, on Ys’ view of the world. In a random world, making sure that what you’re doing today is fulfilling, meaningful, and enjoyable just makes sense. Ys are also confident and optimistic (they’ve grew up in a consistently positive economic climate until this year and have heard positive, esteem-building messages from the adults in their lives), tolerant, and eager to learn. They’re also very family-centric.

“Ninety percent of Ys say they are very close to their parents — a huge change from Boomers (when they were teens, more than 40 percent said they’d be better off with no parents!).”

Relative to Gen-X and baby boomers, what competitive advantages and threats does Gen-Y have while they grow up and become workers?

Gen Ys have one huge advantage: without even trying, they will bring innovative ideas to the workplace, simply because many of the ways they do “things” are . . . well, different. For example, Ys rarely schedule. If two Ys want to get together, they most likely would text to ascertain each other’s coordinates — and then would home in on each other, like ships following radar. This is very different from the way corporations today operate; most activities rely on long-range plans and detailed schedules. Not every Y-way will work for every situation, but organizations that are smart enough to pay attention to the possibilities have the potential for some real innovations.

There’s also early evidence that Ys are able to perform some tasks more quickly than older employees — perhaps because they are more adept at using technology, perhaps due to comfort with multi-tasking. Many managers tell me they are struggling to come up with enough work to keep their Y employees challenged and busy.

The biggest threat to Ys is that they won’t “get” how corporations work. To Ys, many corporations feel like mysterious secret societies, full of unwritten rules. They find themselves irritating older colleagues for reasons that they don’t even fathom or, more commonly, feeling frustrated because they aren’t making the progress or having the impact they’d hoped to have. One of my key objectives in Plugged In is to help Ys figure out how organizations work — what they should expect — as well as how they can have an impact and help the organization change.

What 3 pieces of interview advice would you lend to Gen-Y?

1) Be ready to articulate a compelling reason why you want to work at that company. Nothing is more appealing than authentic enthusiasm. The reasons may include how a specific element of your previous experience can contribute to an objective or program the organization has underway (do your research in advance!) or what you want to learn from this job. The specifics are less important than simply having a logical, well-informed, and enthusiastic reason.

2) Ask (polite) questions about what it is really like to work there. Most of the complaints Ys have after six months on the job have to do with the day-to-day reality of how work gets done — excessive layers of required approvals, too many boring meetings, bureaucracy, lack of equipment, or unfriendly colleagues. Try, if possible, to meet the people that you’ll actually be working with on a day-to-day basis; they can make or break the experience. Don’t be dazzled by the company’s brand or reputation without really digging in to understand what your job will be like.

3) Leave your parents at home (and out of sight). Okay, I know most Ys don’t bring parents to the interviews — but a few do allow mom or dad to be a little more visible in the process than many managers are quite ready to accept. It’s so easy for older managers to mistake Y’s close relationship with parents and (I think) sensible tendency to rely on people who have expertise to contribute as a lack of confidence or self-sufficiency. Don’t give them any excuse to hesitate in hiring you!

After getting a job out of college, which is obviously tough in this economy, what tips would you give to Gen-Y for being successful in their first 6 months to a year?

Make sure you understand (and negotiate, as necessary) the work place norms. The four most common sources of conflict among the generations at work are:

  • How members of each generation view time and place — Older colleagues often view work as a place — a location you go to at a specified time. Work used to require synchronous activity — it would be hard to run an assembly line if everyone wasn’t there at the same time — but for much of the work today it’s no longer necessary. However, older colleagues often still use adherence to time and place norms as a sign of commitment or team work and misinterpret a Y who arrives “late” or works from the local Starbucks.
  • How they communicate — Ys are much more comfortable using text and social networking than members of older generation are. Older colleagues may not only be uncomfortable with digital communication, they may even feel offended by a lack of face-to-face interaction.
  • How they get together – Older generations are planners and schedulers; Ys are coordinators. Boomers may be annoyed by younger team members’ seemingly ad hoc approach.
  • How they find information or learn — Ys like to learn “on demand” — to figure things out as they go, reaching out to personal contacts with relevant expertise for information or referrals, as needed. Ys are likely to be bored and turned off by what an older colleague may view as a necessary training phase.

The key is not that anyone’s approach is right or wrong, but that it’s important for Ys to discuss expectations with other colleagues to make sure that there are no misunderstandings.

Gen-Y has about 75 million people, which is much greater than the other generations. How do you think this will change the workforce and what can employers do now to prepare?

Gen Y will change the workforce dynamic in several ways. First, although this is a huge generation, they are fewer in number than the number of jobs the economy is likely to create over the next decade. Granted, the current slowdown is putting a dent in the near-term job market, but longer-term, the demographic trends are pretty compelling. Birth rates have fallen dramatically over the past several decades in the U.S. (and most other countries around the world), while the size of the economy has continued to grow. As the economy rebounds, it will have the capacity to create more jobs than the Gen Y’s could fill.

This phenomenon will intensify in the segment of the job market that is looking for college-educated employees; the number of jobs there will significantly outstrip the number of Y’s with college degrees.

“All of this adds up to provide workers of all ages with greater leverage — to tip the balance in the employee-employer equation toward employees, allowing individuals to negotiate arrangements that are more desirable than have been available in the past — more flexible, varied, learning-oriented, and lucrative.”

Because of this added leverage, Ys are likely to be able to bring many of their preferences — asynchronous work patterns, more frequent task rotations, even corporate objectives that include greater balance on social good — into the reality of the workplace.

Employers should begin today to create a wide variety of flexible work arrangements — project-based options, virtual work, self-scheduling, and other approaches. And, they should help managers develop confidence and skill in managing a rapidly changing workforce.

——-
Tamara J. Erickson is both a McKinsey Award-winning author and popular and engaging storyteller. Her compelling views of the future are based on extensive research on changing demographics and employee values and, most recently, on how successful organizations work. Erickson has co-authored four Harvard Business Review articles and the books Plugged In: The Generation Y Guide to Thriving at Work and Retire Retirement: Career Strategies for the Boomer Generation. She is with nGenera .

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