57 Resources to Help College Graduates Land that First Marketing Job

 

The Number 57

57 Resources to Help College Graduates Land that First Marketing Job

How CONFIDENT are YOU in LANDING a JOB After Graduation?

Low Confidence? Most college students would say things look bleak for finding full-time work after graduating.  According to the CNBC article, Job Picture Looks Bleak for 2013, the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE), plans to hire only 2.1% more graduates from the class of 2013 than from the class of 2012.

A Significant Gap Between Student and Employer Expectations.  Furthermore, a recent Business Insider article shares survey results from the academic services company, Chegg describing skills assessments by both college students and potential entry-level employers. In multiple skills areas (especially those relating to writing and critical thinking), college students are overestimating their skill levels and preparedness for business success in the following areas:

  • Writing to summarize results and convey information
  • Writing to communicate ideas or explain informaton clearly
  • Incorporating information to develop strategic insights


57 Resources to Land that First Marketing Job

There's Hope, If You're Willing to Put in the Work.  These various resources are categorized to aid recent college graduates who majored in marketing and communications (or current students majoring in these fields) during their full-time job search (or an internship search for current students).

These resources (along with resources from previous posts in this series) can give recent graduates ideas, strategies, and tactics providing a competitive advantage not only in the job search but also in developing several of the requisite skills and knowledge employers say recent graduates lack.

The categories are listed below with a make-shift table of contents:

  • Resource 1: Your Online Portfolio, Evan Kirsch and FolioMatch.com
  • Resources 2 – 9: Resources / Ideas from Tom Peters, Seth Godin, Mitch Joel, and David Meerman Scott
  • Resources 10 – 18: Career Success Ideas from Dan Schawbel for Young People and Millenials  
  • Resources 19 – 20: Job Search 101
  • Resources 21 – 28: Interviewing 101 (and Beyond)
  • Resources 29 – 30: Using Twitter's Real-Time Capabilities to Power Your Job Search
  • Resources 31 – 46: 21st Century Marketing and Communications: Walk-the-Walk and Talk-the-Talk
  • Resources 47 – 49: LinkedIn
  • Resources 50 – 51: Preparing Your Resume
  • Resources 52 – 57: Inspiration on Demand

Resources 2 – 57 are in no particular ranking or order. I included numbers to track the number of items and subsequently group them with some logic.  

Plus, having a high number for list-type blog post titles is scientifically proven to attract more readers.

 

Start Here — Number 1: Your Online Portfolio, Evan Kirsch and FolioMatch.com

1. FolioMatch.com. FolioMatch.com is the Kansas City-based brainchild of its President and CEO Evan Kirsch.  I met Evan during the 2012 UMKC Regnier Family Foundation Venture Creation Challenge.  UMKC's Henry W. Bloch School Management honored him as its 2012 Student Entrepreneur of the Year.  

Why Evan and FolioMatch.com are Number 1.  Evan created this company for an honorable mission and intent: To Put America's Young People To Work by Helping College Graduates Land that Ever-Elusive First Job.

Addressing Unmet Needs. FolioMatch.com fulfills HUGE unmet needs for young people who may have recently graduated, will graduate in Spring 2014, or are current college students seeking internship opportunities while in school:

  • Providing a living/breathing, on-demand online portfolio capturing all relevant projects, class assigments, internship deliverables / work products, accomplishments, awards, etc. throughout a college student's four-year college career
  • Devoting a career-focused, portfolio-centric, social network for a narrow audience (college students AND ambitious high school students)

I Think the World of Evan Kirsch and FolioMatch.com.  About a year and a half ago, I remember having lunch with him and listening to him passionately describe what drives him to make FolioMatch.com successful (at the time of our lunch the company was orignially named Folioboy.com):  

  • It isn't money
  • It isn't glory
  • It isn't fame

Evan founded FolioMatch.com because he genuinely believes:

Helping Others is THE HONORABLE WAY to Lead One's Life.  

I'm admiringly jealous of his guts to accomplish so much at young age.  20+ years ago, I lacked Evan's unshakeable vision, heart, passion, and resolve.  But, I'm working on that (because it's never too late to commit to becoming a remarkable artist).

Here's a video describing FolioMatch.com:

FolioMatch Introduction from FolioMatch Team on Vimeo.

Here's a video Evan and FolioMatch.com created to inspire talented, hungry, and go-getter millenials to embrace their call-to-action to create something remarkable via entrepreneurship:

FOLIO MATCH and MO CHALLENGE from FolioMatch Team on Vimeo.

From the Video.  "We started FolioMatch to be a one-stop resource for a student to keep track of all the projects they've completed over the years. Since then we have started sponsoring educational challenges so that we could help boost the content of students' portfolios."

  

Required Full Disclosure / Am I Receiving Any Money / Am I Receiving Any Equity / Am I an Advisory Board Member and other Boilerplate B.S. I Have to Write For Speaking So Highly of Evan and FolioMatch.com. I receive zero, nada, nothing, and any other cliche, etc. in financial compensation for talking up Evan and FolioMatch.com.  

I'm writing about Evan/his company because he leads a committed/dedicated tribe who rightfully deserves it.  I'm spreading the word about Evan and FolioMatch.com because it's THE RIGHT THING TO DO.  

And, that makes me feel good …

… please spread the word about Evan, his company, and FolioMatch.com's honorable mission.

If you're a college student (or an ambitious high school student), go to the FolioMatch.com site and register.

If you're a parent who's worried your son/daughter who graduates from college in Spring 2014 may face difficulty in this brutal job market (because the odds are he/she will), go to the FolioMatch.com site and register.

If you're a Spring 2013 college graduate and you're still actively looking for that first giggo to the FolioMatch.com site and register.  Learning how to leverage LinkedIn to your advantage during your job search is important.  But, it takes more to win an interview slot AND stand out among thousands of applicants.

 

Resources / Ideas from the Best Marketing and Communications Teachers:  Tom Peters, Seth Godin, Mitch Joel, and David Meerman Scott

Common themes running through the resources 2 – 9 are entrepreneurial hustle and creativity. Standing out in an unfavorable economy within an ocean of candidates requires the courage and true grit to aggressively market yourself.

2. Tom Peters / Fast Company: The Brand Called YOU: This August 1997 article is the original classic highlighting the rising importance of personal branding.  Mr. Peters was ahead of his time in publishing and describing these timeless career management principles.

3. Seth Godin: Graduate school for unemployed college students

4. Seth Godin and Inc.com: 5 Ways to be Known as a Groundbreaking Thinker

5. Mitch Joel: 8 Ways to Score that Elusive Entry Level Marketing Position

6. Mitch Joel: 20 Best Marketing Books of All Time: Mitch literally posted this article a few days ago. He's often asked what are the best marketing books he recommends studying.  If you go to the comments section of his article, you'll see four (4) additional recommendations I suggested.  I would also add Six Pixels of Separation and Ctrl Alt Delete to this list (because the author of these classics is a pretty cool dude).

7. David Meerman Scott: Lindsey shows how to market to millenials and how to get a first job: David's blog post describing how Lindsey Kirchoff aggressively and uniquely marketed herself personifies her entrepreneurial hustle an creativity.

Here's a great video David filmed with Lindsey Kirchoff (who started working full-time with HubSpot's Content Creation & Blogging Team in September 2012):

 

 

8. David Meerman Scott: Tough love for marketing & PR job seekers

9. David Meerman Scott: 5 ideas for marketing and communications professors' success in the classroom

Bonus. David Meerman Scott — Inbound Job Search: David published this video on December 2nd. He shares five (5) inspiring stories about people publishing creative and remarkable content to win dream jobs.  One of the stories is how his daughter, Allison Meerman Scott, leveraged her personal blog to differentiate herself from thousands of outstanding Columbia University undergraduate applicants to win admission!

 

Dan Schawbel: Have the Courage to Promote Yourself (Because It's a Good Thing)


No one understands more about personal branding for young people than Dan Schawbel
. It's why I literally carved out a "Dan Section" highlighting his work.  The man knows what he's talking about so take his advice seriously.

I do. And, even though he's 20 years younger, I believe his teachings apply to any age group or professional experience level.  He's the epitome of entrepreneurial hustle

10. Dan Schawbel and Forbes.com: My 10 Best Pieces of Career Advice for Millenials

11. Dan Schawbel: Top 5 Job Search Tips for Millenials

12. Dan Schawbel and Time.com: Somebody's Gotta Get Hired, Right? 6 Tips to Help New Grads Land Job Offers  

13. Mitch Joel and Dan Schawbel (from Six Pixels of Separation – The Podcast): SPOS #379 — Dan Schawbel Wants You to Promote Yourself  

14. Dan Schawbel and Time.com: How Recruiters Use Social Networks to Make Hiring Decisions Now  

15. Dan Schawbel and Forbes.com: How Globalization and Social Media has Impacted the US Economy

16. Dan Schawbel: Millenial Branding and Student Employment Gap Study

17. Dan Schwabel and Forbes.com: 5 Reasons Why Your Online Presence Will Replace Your Resume in 10 Years

18. Dan Schawbel and Time.com: The End of the Full-Time Salaried Job

 

Job Search 101

These Mashable articles do a great job in describing the basics AND the things to do to stand out. The common theme here is "put in the work." No magical formulas. Just get to work.

19. Mashable: 35 Surefire Ways to Stand Out During Your Job Search

20. Mashable: How to Nail Your Entry-Level Job Search


Interviewing 101 (and Beyond)

The common theme throughout these articles: Prepare. Prepare. Prepare. Do this and you'll eliminate 50% – 60% of your competition before walking in the room.

21. Fast Company: How to Nail Your Next Phone Interview

22. Lou Adler and LinkedIn Today: Moneyball for Job-seekers: How to Increase Your Interviewing Odds

23. Lou Adler and LinkedIn Today: Five Things You Must Not Do in an Interview and Five Things You Must Not

24James Caan and LinkedInToday: The 3 Questions People Always Forget to Ask During Job Interviews

25James Caan and LinkedIn Today: 5 Ways to Avoid Losing Out on that Dream Job

26. Mashable: INFOGRAPHIC — Top Job Search Mistakes Millenials Make and How to Fix Them

27. Mashable: 6 Job Interview Questions and Answers to Avoid

28. Lea McCleod, M.A.: 5 Big Reasons New College Grads are Failing the Job Search

 

Creative Ways to Use Twitter in Your Job Search 

When it comes to real-time news and responsiveness, there's Twitter and then there's everybody else. Leverage its real-time capabilities to your advantage. Finding out about that open, entry-level position before other candidates is a competitive advantage.


29.
 Mashable: How a 140-Character Twitter Resume Could Land Your Next Job

30. 20 Twitter Resources for Job Hunters

 

21st Century Marketing, Communications, and Public Relations Knowledge

Talk the Talk Like Seasoned Marketing Pros. The interviewing team will deem you credible only if you "speak their language."  Therefore, learn how to speak it.  Learn about the movements impacting marketing now (and in the future).

You don't have to memorize vocabulary lists by rote. But, you have to credibly demonstrate your awareness of how marketing, communications, and public relations are constantly changing.

Walk the Walk Like Seasoned Marketing Pros. The following resources provide ideas and suggestions for developing skills in writing, storytelling, and critical thinking.  Remember, the Internet turns every moment before, during, and after a job interview into a show-me you're different opportunity — Take the Initiative and Take the Advantage.

21st Century Marketing and Communications Fundamentals Bootcamp


31
. HubSpot Inbound Marketing Blog: You Were Too Embarrassed to Google (But Should Definitely Know)

32HubSpot Inbound Marketing Blog

33HubSpot Academy 

Content Marketing

34Marketing Profs Daily Fix Blog

35Content Marketing Institute Blog


Online, Digital, eCommerce Future Trends and Patterns

36The Mitch Joel Six Pixels of Separation Podcasts on iTunes (and their free)

37eMarketer Articles

Blogging

38Copyblogger Blog

39. Darren Rowse: PROBLOGGER Blog


Measurement and Analytics

40Occam's Razor Blog By Avinash Kaushik

41The Future Buzz Blog by Adam Singer

42Google Analytics Blog

43Google Analytics Academy

Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

44Rand Fishkin's MOZ Blog

45The MOZ Blog

46Danny Sullivan's SearchEngineLand.com Blog

 

LinkedIn

47. Forbes: 7 Ways to Make LinkedIn Help You Find a Job

48. Forbes: 5 LinkedIn Strategies You Haven't Thought of Before: the suggestion to use LinkedIn showing you've researched a company's competitors and the point of "sales reinforcement" has powerful applications in a job interview

49. Lou Adler and LinkedIn Today: Networking Rules for Job Seekers — The Good, The Bad, and The Almost Perfect

Preparing Your Resume 

50. Mashable: Why You Need Several Versions of Your Resume

51. LinkedIn Labs Resume Builder: This handy app transforms your LinkedIn Profile into a PDF resume. Therefore, fill out your LinkedIn profile with as much detail as you can. 

Inspiration On Demand 

52. to 55. LinkedIn Influencers — My First Job Job Series: If you're getting down on yourself during the process, GO HERE IMMEDIATELY. Everyone had to start out somewhere. That includes some of the world's most influential movers & shakers in every industry.  

Don't believe me?  Here are some samples how:

My First Job. I started out as an unpaid, summer laboratory tech intern / dishwasher at The Washington University School of Medicine.  Luckily for me, the department's head researcher paid me that fall because my boss said I was a good guy.

56. Jonathan Fields — The Good Life Project: Jonathan is an A-List entrepreneur and a person driven to help others succeed personally and professionally via entrepreneurship.  His video interviews are inspiring.

I subscribe to his free podcasts on iTunes and listen to them repeatedly.

Check out this video on overcoming and reframing risk and the fear of failure and judgment.  Pure Gold.


 

 

57. Video: Best Day of My Life (Dog Version) by American Authors: Trust me, this video will make you feel soooooo good after watching it no matter how bad you feel. And, it's probably why American Authors are my new favorite band and why this song is now my all-time favorite.

 

 

Closing Thoughts

This is post five (and the final one) in a series to help new college graduates and current students land full-time jobs or internships.

Here are the respective links for posts 1 to 4:

Your Turn

If you're a college graduate looking for work, a concerned parent, a worried relative, or a current college student, please let me know in the comments if the content here helped (or if it didn't).

What should be kept on this list?  What should be taken off? What resources did I miss?  What should be added?

Please help me in continuously improving this page as a helpful resource to others.

Tony Faustino is a marketing and corporate strategist.  He writes about how The Internet reinvents marketing strategy for organizations and individuals in his marketing strategy blog, Social Media ReInvention.  Follow his tweets @tonyfaustino or circle him on Google+. 

Photo Credit by STV Photos via flickr

LinkedIn’s Grad Guide Videos: 13 Pearls to Help Recent College Graduates Find Jobs

 

 

How Confident are You in Finding a Job After Graduation?


This is the second post in a series to help recent college graduates and current undergraduates get jobs.   "Should Recent College Graduates & Current Undergraduates Learn LinkedIn?" is the first in this series.

I reviewed the six videos in the LinkedIn Grad Guide Video Series.  The six (6) LinkedIn Grad Guide videos are in post #1 of this series.  Here are my favorites videos with their key points summarized.

 

LinkedIn Grad Guide Video 2: Building Your Professional Brand

 

 

 

1. Grad school admissions officers and recruiters Google you before deciding to meet you in-person.


2. 70% of employers rejected a job candidate because of information they found on online.


3. 85% of employers say a candidate's positive online reputation influences their decisions.


4. "It's no longer enough to simply have a resume. Students now need a professional online presence."Holly Paul, former US Recruiting Leader, PriceWaterHouse Coopers (now Chief Human Resources Officer, Vocus).

 

5. Ask you professors, campus job managers, and internship supervisors for LinkedIn Recommendations.

 

LinkedIn Grad Guide Video 4: Building a Professional Network

 

 

 

6. 70% of jobs are found through networking.


7. Write a brief, polite, and personalized "connection request" when asking someone to be part of their LinkedIn network.

  • Don't Use LinkedIn's Generic Invites. The generic invitation message "I'd like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn" isn't enough.

LinkedIn Grad Guide Video 5: Turning Relationships into Opportunities

 

 

8. A 4-Step Template for Asking Someone to Network with You

This template doesn't guarantee acceptance of your invitation.   But, following these steps helps differentiate your LinkedIn invitation from the generic "I'd like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn" requests.

  • Use the Subject Line Wisely. Mention your connection to the person in the subject line.
  • Write a Concise Intro. Keep your introduction to who you are and your reason for connecting.
  • Make Your Ask. Never directly ask someone for a job; Ask for general career advice on a particular industry or company.
  • Say Thank You. Politely thank the person for considering your request.

 

9. Ask Your "1st Degree Connections" for Introductions to "2nd Degree Connections"

Look for mutual connections to a job opening or a person within the targeted company. This is especially important when you don't have a direct link or "an in" with someone connected to an opportunity you're want interested in.

 

LinkedIn Grad Guide Video 6: Researching and Prepping for the Interview

 

This MUST WATCH video is required preparation for informational interviews (e.g., someone who might not be directly connected to a job opportunity), and the all-important first, formal interview.

Why?  Recruiters say knowledge about their company is one of the most important factors in landing a job.

 

10. The 4 Types of Information to Know When Preparing for a Job Interview

  • General Company and Employee Information: the company's mission, products, services, and markets
  • Industry / Competitive knowledge: the company's industry and its competition
  • Insider Secrets: knowledge about the company's culture / mindset that only "an insider" (usually a current or former employee) can provide
  • Ongoing Updates: keeping up-to-date on company news (and its relevant competitors)

11. LinkedIn's Company Pages Can Identify Potential Interviewers

 

 

LinkedIn: Overview | LinkedIn

LinkedIn's Company Page

Along with general company information (what the company does, number of global offices, available jobs that may interest you, etc.), Company Pages can identify important information about your potential interviewers:

 

  • Educational Backgrounds: the interviewer's college major(s) and alma mater
  • Company Career Paths
  • Common LinkedIn 1st Degree Connections Shared with the Employee
  • Social Media Participation (do any of your potential interviewers use Twitter or publish personal blogs)
  • Things You and the Interviewer Share in Common

Demonstrate you did your homework by not only researching the company but also by learning about the people participating in the interviewing process. Identifying things you and your interviewer(s) have in common (and tactfully discussing them at appropriate points during the interview) can positively differentiate you among other applicants.

 

12. LinkedIn Groups Can Help You Learn Important Industry Knowledge

 

 

The Start-Up of You: A Career Strategy Network | LinkedIn

The Start-Up of You LinkedIn Group

 

During the interview, you'll want to be conversant in a number of key topics about the company's industry such as:

  • The "industry lingo" used by people working in that line of work
  • Relevant news events affecting the company (and its competitors)
  • Key people within the industry

Demonstrating your industry knowledge is HUGE.   Leverage LinkedIn Groups to your competitive advantage and further differentiate yourself!

 

13. You May Have a 1st Degree LinkedIn Connection (or a 2nd Degree LinkedIn Connection) Who Can Share Important Insider Secrets

 

 

Connections to LinkedIn

My 1st & 2nd Degree Connections to LinkedIn

Remember, a 1st degree connection is someone you're already directly connected to in LinkedIn. A second degree connection is someone you are not directly connected to (but one of your 1st degree connections may be connected to this person).

2nd degree connections are vitally important because your 1st degree connections may be able to provide a "warm referral" to them. And, that provides you another competitive advantage over other interviewees competing for the same position.

More importantly, 1st and 2nd degree connections can reveal important "tribal knowledge" available only to current or former employees (e.g., valuable "insider secrets") like:


  • Company Culture
  • The Employee Traits the Company Values
  • Company Leaders You Should be Familiar With

 

Conclusion

Reviewing the six (6) videos in the LinkedIn Grad Guide Series can give you a competitive advantage. You'll learn how to fully leverage LinkedIn's features and content.  

Remember, it requires a lot of people "to say yes" during the hiring process but only one "to say no."

Therefore, minimize your risk and maximize your opportunity by investing 30 minutes investment to study these videos. 

Please stay tuned for post #3 in this series (around 2 weeks from this post's publication).   I'll summarize books by marketing gurus that can help recent college graduates or current undergraduates build a professional online presence.

Your Turn: What do you think of the advice in the LinkedIn Grad Guide Videos?  How well do you think the LinkedIn Grad Guide Videos can help recent college graduates (or current undergraduates) find full-time jobs and internships?  Let me know in the comments.

 

Tony Faustino is a marketing and corporate strategist.  He writes about how The Internet reinvents marketing strategy for organizations and individuals in his marketing strategy blog, Social Media ReInvention.  Follow his tweets @tonyfaustino or circle him on Google+.   

 

Photo Credit: by MAURO CATEB via flickr



Note: This is post two in a series sharing resources to help new college graduates and current students land full-time jobs or internships.  If interested, here are links to other posts in this series:

Should College Graduates and Current Undergraduates Learn LinkedIn?

 

 

College Students are LinkedIn's Fastest Growing Segment

 

It publicly signaled college students are a critical growth driver by announcing its College Pilot Program in July 2012. At that time, LinkedIn cited 20 million college undergraduates as members of the online service. Even more importantly, college graduates and students represent LinkedIn's fastest growing demographic. The company recently announced two (2) new portals serving this fast-growing customer segment:

In parallel with the release of LinkedIn Student Jobs and LinkedIn University Pages, LinkedIn also launched their "LinkedIn – Now For Education" landing page. The landing page is "a buyer-persona friendly" site serving and targeting the following audiences:

  • Students: Recent Graduates, Current Undergraduates, and effective September 12th, high school students
  • Parents: The Alumni Section can help parents locate their 1st degree connections who may be able to help their child gain valuable insights (or even more valuable connections) during the application or research process
  • Academic Institutions: Top universities can be even more aggressive and selective in the students they target and recruit for admission
  • Prospective Employers: Self explanatory

 

 

35 to 54 Year Olds are LinkedIn's Biggest Membership Base

This Business Insider infographic shows LinkedIn's smallest membership segment is 18-24 year olds (e.g., college students and recent undergraduates). 18% of LinkedIn members's are 18-24 year olds versus 40% who are 35 to 54.

 


 

The LinkedIn Grad Guide Video Series

Want more proof LinkedIn wants to attract and grow this important market segment? Check out this video series — classic, targeted content marketing:

 

LinkedIn: Your Career Starts Here

 

LinkedIn Grad Guide Video 1: What is LinkedIn

 

 

LinkedIn Grad Guide Video 2: Building Your Professional Profile

 

 

LinkedIn Grad Guide Video 3: Finding Your Career Passion

 

 

LinkedIn Grad Guide Video 4: Building a Professional Network

 

 

LinkedIn Grad Guide Video 5: Turning Relationships Into Opportunities

 

 

LInkedIn Grad Guide Video 6: Researching & Prepping For Interviews


Conclusion

I smiled when the "youthful-sounding" voiceover in the LinkedIn: Your Career Starts Here video refers to the predominance of LinkedIn's older members:

"It's (LinkedIn) not just for top executives. It's not just for old people with heavy briefcases. It's (LinkedIn) for you. And, it's the perfect place before you start your professional story."

35-54 year old professionals recognize and understand LinkedIn's value in building and maintaining careers. I would love to find some statistics proving/disproving if this demographic comprised most of the service's first-movers and early adopters.

This is a brutal job market for all ages. Unemployed workers over 50 and recent college graduates are especially impacted by the current economy. 50 year-old executives have to work extra hard to find employment. And, the power of a college degree is dwindling.

Thoughtful, savvy personal branding positively impacts careers. Whether we like it or not, an online world accelerates the competitive pressures shaping our professional lives (including our children in their early high school years).

In about 2 weeks, please stay tuned for my next post in this series. I'll summarize my favorite "pearls of wisdom" LinkedIn shares in the six-part Grad Video Series.

Your Turn:  What do you think of LinkedIn's marketing strategy to grow its membership base?  Is opening their service to younger members a smart move?  Let me know in the comments.

 

Tony Faustino is a marketing and corporate strategist.  He writes about how The Internet reinvents marketing strategy for organizations and individuals in his marketing strategy blog, Social Media ReInvention.  Follow his tweets @tonyfaustino or circle him on Google+.   

 

Note: This is post one in a series sharing resources to help new college graduates and current students land full-time jobs or internships.  If interested, here are the respective links for posts two and three:


Photo credit: chrisinplymouth via flickr

 

Start-Up of You Book Review, Part 2: Five Game Changers in Career Competitive Advantage

The Start-up of You Book CoverNote: This is the second post in a series reviewing The Start-Up of You: Adapt to the Future, Invest in Yourself, and Transform Your Career by Reid Hoffman and Ben Casnocha

Post #1 introduces why the principles and values shared in The Start-Up of You are important in today's ambiguous and uncertain economy.

I'm a HUGE FAN of the career management concepts shared in this book. Its teachings and lessons will influence and impact my professional and career management choices forever.  

I read / studied The Start-Up of You from cover-to-cover.  If I could do it again, I would prioritize reading these five (5) chapters and their related concepts first (in the following suggested order):

* Chapter 6: Take Intelligent Risks — The Volatility Paradox: Small Fires Prevent the Big Burn

* Chapter 7: Who You Know is What You Know — Synthesize Information Into Actionable Intelligence

* Chapter 1: All Humans Are Entrepreneurs — The Start-Up of You Mindset: Permanent Beta

* Chapter 5: Pursue Breakout Opportunities — Court Serendipity and Good Randomness

* Chapter 3: Plan To Adapt — Maintain an Identity Separate from Specific Employers

Reid and Ben provide great insights throughout the book.  Here's a beautiful visual from Ogilvy Notes of all of the valuable lessons from The Start-Up of You: 

Start-Up of You Visual Notes

You Might Want To Grab Some Coffee.  The following chapters and their verbatim quotes are the concepts I found most inspiring.  Sometimes, I provide only the quotes because the words alone inspired me.  In other sections, I include my point-of-view.  

Buy and Read This Book.  Most of all, I hope sharing these five (5) game changer concepts from the book will motivate you to buy and read it.

If you're still here, I suggest grabbing that cup of coffee (or maybe two).  

 
1. Chapter 6: Take Intelligent Risks

Read This Chapter First.  Beginning with Chapter 6 is the only thing I would have done differently.  I suggest starting with the section of the book titled, The Volatility Paradox: Small Fires Prevent the Big Burn.  

These passages represent my "eureka moment."


"Without frequent, contained risk taking, you are setting yourself up for a major dislocation at some point in the future.  Inoculating yourself to big risks is like inoculating yourself to big risks is like inoculating yourself against the flu virus.  By injecting a small bit of flu into your body in the form of a vaccination, you make a big flu outbreak survivable.  By introducing regular volatility into your career, you make surprise survivable.  You gain the ability to absorb shocks gracefully."
"Opportunity and risk are two sides of the same coin, after all:  join and create groups, be in motion, take on side projects, hustle.  In a phrase, say 'yes' more."
"Pretending you can avoid risk causes you to miss opportunities that can change your life.  It also lulls you into a dangerously fragile life pattern, leaving you exposed to a huge blow-up in the future."
"When you're resilient, you can play for big opportunities with less worry about the possible consequences of unanticipated hiccups.  For the start-up of you, the only long-term answer to risk is resilience."
"Remember: If you don't find risk, risk will find you."

Companies and Individuals Who Don't Take Intelligent Risks Marginalize Themselves Over Time.  Here's a video of Reid discussing the importance of intelligent risk taking:



 

 

Previously, I Said "No" More.  I said no to additional career-related opportunities because of the additional time commitments.  I'm not talking about the "traditional" internal company, career-related opportunities (i.e., accepting high profile internal projects to increase exposure to senior management, etc.).

I'm referring to externally focused opportunities beyond the significant time already devoted to this personal blog.  These opportunities will consume additional time next to an already consuming and stressful full-time job and family duties.

Focus On The Upside.  But, Chapter 6 convinced me to start focusing on the upside. These are investments in my "soft assets" (i.e., cultivating new contacts, learning new skills, expanding the reach of my network intelligence, acquiring actionable knowledge).  Dwelling on the potential downside is counter-productive (e.g., the time demands).

A Counter-Intuitive Approach.  For someone in their mid-forties balancing demands of a young family and a full-time job involving travel, "taking on more" seems counter-intuitive.  But, The Start-Up of You makes the case for constant investment in activities building our "soft assets."   

Investing in yourself requires significant time and commitment.  Plus, it's especially important to make those investments while gainfully employed.

Safe is Risky.  Seth Godin says it best and simply from his classic book, Purple Cow


(page 30) "My goal in Purple Cow is to make it clear that it's safer to be risky–to fortify your desire to do truly amazing things."
(page 64) "Safe is risky."

 

 

2. Chapter 7: Who You Know Is What You Know

Synthesize Information Into Actionable Intelligence.  It's not enough to have great connections with a diverse set of skills, industries, and professions.  Your network must inform your decision making with excellent data.  But, "what do I do next with that data" is a determining factor in driving your success:

Here are my favorite book passages describing the importance of synthesizing information or "connecting the dots:"


"So far we've talked about the first step — pulling information from multiple people from multiple people in your network. Once you have gathered information, the next step is to analze the validity, helpfulness, and relevance of what each person has said.  Remember, that everyone has biases — even your parents or best friend.  It's not that they are trying to manipulate you.  It's just the nature of being a human with personal experiences and self-interests.  Bias can be obvious or nonobvious."
"As you pull information and advice from various sources, think about how the person's personal goals, ambitions, and experience might have colored their position.  Bias is not reason to dismiss information or advice altogether; just account for it in your analysis."
"Synthesis is the important final step.  If you don't step back and take in the big picture of all you've learned, it will feel like you're worming your way through a cocktail party hearing bits and pieces of several different conversations but not able to make out anything of substance."
"Synthesizing what you learn involves reconciling contradictory advice and information (which is inevitable if you're pulling multiple streams from diverse people), ignoring information you believe is completely off base, and weighing each person's information differently.  This is a complex cognitive process."
"For now, we'll just say that when it comes to intelligence, good synthesis is what makes the whole worth more than the sum of the parts."
"Network intelligence is the advanced game: if you do it well, it'll give you a competitive edge."
"IWe means your network can help you decide on a direction and then help you move quickly, but only YOU can drive the process forward."

Connect the Dots, Commit to a Personal Strategy, and Have the Courage to Ship: Connect. Commit.  Ship.  Any action answers "what do I do next."  That's why I altered the final quote to emphasize YOU.  

 As Seth Godin would say, Poke the Box:

  • Don't listen to your lizard brain (e.g., don't give into the fear of failure)
  • Start something (e.g., commit to your decision)
  • Pick yourself (e.g., be the initiator)
  • Ship (e.g., get it out the door, finish)



 

3. Chapter 1: All Humans Are Entrepreneurs

The Start-Up of You Mind-set: Permanent Beta.  Permanent beta is a lifelong commitment to continuous personal growth.  This concept is analogous to how technology companies keep iterating and testing software after the official launch so the software can be continuously improved.

Our careers are much the same way:

"For entrepreneurs, finished is an F-word.  They know that great companies are always evolving."
"Finished ought to be an F-word for all of us.  We are all works in progress.  Each day presents an opportunity to learn more, do more, be more, grow more in our lives and careers.  
"Keeping your career in permanent beta forces you to acknowledge that you have bugs, that there's new development to do on yourself, that you will need to adapt and evolve."
"But, it's still a mind-set brimming with optimism because it celebrates the fact that you have the power to improve yourself and, as important, improve the world around you."


Reid Describes Permanent Beta and Learning To Improve Every Month.  
In the first video, he explains the concept of permanent beta.  In the second video, he talks about when he interviews people.  During those interviews, he wants to understand how people grow their capabilities on a monthly basis.



 



 

4. Chapter 5: Pursue Breakout Opportunities

Court Serendipity and Good Randomness.  What I enjoy most about this concept is "proactively making our own luck."  And, the best way to achieve serendipity (e.g., accidental good fortune) is to be doing something.  You have to be in motion.


"Serendipity involves being alert to potential opportunity and acting on it."
"You won't encounter accidental good fortune–you won't stumble upon opportunities that rocket career forward–if you're lying in bed.  When you do something, you stir the pot and introduce the possibility that random ideas, people, and places will collide and form new combinations and opportunities." 
"By being in motion, you are spinning a web as wide and tall as possible in order to catch any interesting opportunities that come your way."
"As entrepreneur Bo Peabody says, "The best way to ensure that lucky things happen is to make sure a lot of things happen."  Make things happen, and in the long run, you'll design your own serendipity, and make your own opportunities."


You Have to Be Playing in the Game.  You can't make your own luck or court serendipity and good randomness while sitting on the couch watching tv.  Here's a short video with Reid talking about how sitting on the sidelines means missing out on breakout opportunities:



 

5. Chapter 3: Plan to Adapt

Maintain an Identity Separate from Specific Employers.  This book section focuses on personal branding.  Here are some important direct quotes:


"Establish an identity independent of your employer, city, and industry.  For example, make the headline of your LinkedIn profile not a specific job title (e.g., "VP of Marketing at Company X") but personal-brand or asset-focused (e.g., "Entrepreneur. Product Strategist. Investor.")"
"Start a personal blog and begin developing a public reputation and public portfolio of work that's not tied to your employer.  This way you'll have a professional identity that you can carry with you as you shift jobs."
"You own yourself.  It's the start-up of you."

 
Your Personal Blog = Your Personal Competitive Advantage.  A personal blog and other self-published content give you a differentiating competitive advantage by:

1. Showing how you think
2. Demonstrating your individual creativity
3. Making it easy for a potential employer / great connection to find you (e.g., SEO benefits)
4. Giving you practice in an important and portable business skill set — writing
5. Proving you're technology and Internet savvy 
6. Informing people first-hand how you're driven to learn new skills

Seth Godin and Tom Peters Says A Personal Blog Matters.   In this video, they both discuss how a personal blog is the best personal marketing tool.  



 

 

And, Remember The Brand of You is Just One Part of the Start-Up of You.  Here's Reid Hoffman's take on personal branding.  Pay close attention to his point that a brand must be backed by substance if you want it to be relevant.


 


Closing Thoughts

What Were Your Favorite Concepts From The Start-Up of You?  Have you read this important book?  Take time to invest in yourself by reading it.  

Reading The Start-Up of You will make a significant difference in your life.  It's already changed mine.

And, it will have a lasting personal impact and influence for many future years.

 

Tony Faustino is a marketing and corporate strategist.  He writes about how The Internet reinvents marketing strategy for organizations and individuals in his marketing strategy blog, Social Media ReInvention.  Follow his tweets @tonyfaustino or circle him on Google+.   

 

Your Turn

Please let me know if you agree or disagree with my thoughts in the comments. I would love to hear from you. I’m here to read, listen, and learn from YOUR PERSPECTIVE.   Comments are open. So let’er rip!

 

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Fortune 500 Companies Achieve ROI with LinkedIn

Money at HandA recent Fortune Magazine article, How LinkedIn Will Fire Up a Career, provides a great example of social media delivering significant financial savings to Fortune 500 companies. 

The article initially talks about how Accenture, a major player in management consulting, plans on hiring tens of thousands of new employees in 2010.  Then, the author asks its readers "will Accenture be able to find you" and further discusses the importance of online visibility (specifically through LinkedIn).  The article states: "If you don't have a profile on LinkedIn, you're nowhere." 

I agree with this opinion and have commented on this point in previous posts.  However, I believe there are other relevant insights from the article particularly LinkedIn's success in generating tangible return on investment (ROI) in Fortune 500 recruiting: 

 

1. LinkedIn Saves Fortune 500 Companies Significant Money and Time
According to John Campagnino, Accenture's Head of Global Recruiting, a major recruiting firm's fees can cost $100,000 to $150,000 per person.  Campagnino goes further and says: "Start multiplying that by a number of senior executives, and you start talking about significant numbers of dollars very quickly."  In addition, online services like LinkedIn decrease the time it takes to fill positions by nearly 50%.  Arlette Guthrie, Home Depot's Vice President of Talent Management, says time to fill a position is an important metric among recruiters.

In my opinion, these significant cost savings in money and time clearly demonstrate the financial value of social media.  Having a well-respected business periodical like Fortune publicize these results will increase the credibility and adoption of social media in America's largest corporations. 

2. Other Fortune 500 Companies Recruiting Successfully with LinkedIn
Here are some of the companies mentioned in the article on how they're successfully using LinkedIn (and these are major brand name corporations):

Accenture.  Campagnino further elaborates that he plans to make as many as 40% of Accenture's hires in the next few years through social media.  He says: "This is the future of recruiting for our company.

IBM.  Annie Shanklin Jones, Head of IBM's U.S. Recruiting, says LinkedIn "is a great equalizer" and "gives the recruiter an opportunity to reach out directly to a candidate."  She says, "LinkedIn is the most important social media site for reaching prospective hires."  Also, the article points out that IBM was a first-mover in experimenting with social networking particularly for recruiting talent.  It uses Twitter to broadcast job openings, and the company organizes its own talent communities.   

Oracle.  The firm found its CFO, Jeff Epstein through LinkedIn in 2008.

Home Depot.  Guthrie says Home Depot uses LinkedIn to find candidates for difficult-to-fill jobs such as supply chain, information technology, and global sourcing.  Their recruiters use LinkedIn to research potential hires, engage with them in groups, and respond to inquiries.

3. Fortune 500 Companies Target "Passive Candidates" by Using LinkedIn
Fortune 500 firms perceive that the most talented and sought-after candidates are those currently employed.  Headhunters categorize these individuals as "passive candidates," and LinkedIn provides a target-rich population.  Finding these candidates is difficult and explains why the recruiting industry is an $8 billion industry.

LinkedIn currently has 60 million members.  A typical member's profile is a college-educated 43-year-old making $107,000.  More than a quarter are senior executives.  According to the article, every Fortune 500 company is represented on LinkedIn — and that's why recruiters rely on it to recruit high-caliber talent.

In May 2009, JobVite published the results of its second annual Social Recruitment Survey.  Here are some findings relevant to this post:

* 77% of respondents said they use social networks to reach passive candidates who are not actively seeing employment
* Among online sites used to research candidates, LinkedIn was first (76%) followed by search engines (67%), Facebook (44%), and Twitter (21%).

Bonus Round: Helpful Resources for Achieving ROI with Your Own LinkedIn Profile
I hope you feel this post made a good case for the financial ROI Fortune 500 companies are producing with LinkedIn.  Here are some additional resources you may find helpful in achieving ROI with your personal LinkedIn Profile:

* Mashable — HOW TO: Build Your Personal Brand on LinkedIn by Dan Schawbel
* HubSpot Internet Marketing Blog — 4 Minutes to Optimize a LinkedIn Profile for SEO by Mike Volpe

Photo Credit: From Flickr by Don Hankins