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Showing posts with label job. Show all posts
Showing posts with label job. Show all posts

Saturday, December 06, 2008

Are Social Media Jobs In Demand?

Strategy: What Say You? with Jay Deragon

Businesses are increasingly looking for people who fit the titles of social media manager, social media strategist and social media contributors.
Justin Williams writes: I have included a graph that shows from 2005 to current, Social Media Jobs have increased by 325%, this is astounding! More and more employers are seeking positions to be filled with their company.

Upon reviewing a handful of the job posting for social media positions one may conclude they are all the same, at least the job descriptions appear to be very similar. Most of the job descriptions appear to focus on candidates who know how to use a listing of social technology with little if any emphasis on relationship or communication skills. Now consider the irony of a business manager, who has little or no experience with social media, telling the HR Department to find us people with social media experience. The natural reaction by the HR people is to define the job responsibilities, skill sets and compensation. One must wonder where does the HR Department go for information concerning “social media jobs”? Most likely they look for previous job postings for social media positions created by other companies and simply copy the descriptions.

Does Business Know What To Ask For?

All this “social stuff” has little definition that can fit neatly into a job description. When you look at the landscape of practices one can see a variety of tools and techniques used by those who have large audiences of followers. Most of the dominant people who garner a massive audience follow a simply rule of sharing insights or passing along insights from others. However the dominant trait of these current “social leaders” is that they relate to the “audience” in a very human way. In other words they are either gifted with communications skills or have learned the art and science of human interaction using social tools. I am not talking about all those sites and people who push out massive marketing messages claiming to have the most current tools or the best advertising schemes. Rather I am talking about those people who simple engage people into dialog, share profound knowledge about the dynamics of human interaction with technology and do so in a very human way.

Finding people who truly understand the value of social media for businesses isn’t as easy as buying an IPhone. The IPhone has set records in sales and became a hit largely because of its design (art) and functionality (technology). When you hire a person to help your business maximize the potential of social media you need to focus on those who understand the art of human relations along with the science of using the technology to accomplish specific aims. The irony is that the art of human relations built on technological interaction is more about knowing how to continuously learn to create and satisfy human experiences. The experiences are centric to attention, attraction, affinity and audience preferences which we discussed here.

As most organizations know, hiring the wrong people for the wrong job can be extremely costly. It is even more costly if you assume everyone knows how to leverage social media for your business purposes and with your audience of suppliers, employees and customers. Be careful what you ask for.

What say you?


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Posted to THE NATIONAL NETWORKER. To subscribe for your free newletter, go to www.TheNationalNetworker.com. For the complete National Networker Relationship Capital Toolkit and a free RSS feed, go to: http://thenationalnetworkerweblog.blogspot.com.
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Sunday, November 02, 2008

Fine, I'll Network! What Do I Say?

by Jason Alba
Career Transition Editor


A few days ago I was with a friend talking about networking into his next job. He was beyond the point of using job boards, and finally decided to develop a networking strategy. He didn't say "networking strategy," of course, but that's what I call it.

We went through LinkedIn, and I showed him how to find the right contacts to talk to. We did searches by industry, company, job title, geography, and even Groups. He had already done some searches on his own and found a few people he wanted to talk to. In just a few minutes we easily found a dozen people that could prove to be valuable in his job search.

Then we spent some time on JibberJobber.com (the site I run), and I showed him what a job seeker does with JibberJobber. This is where he would keep track of jobs he applied to, companies he is networking into, network contacts he is nurturing relationships with, which version of his resume he uses to apply to which job, etc. It was obviously a good tool for him at this point in his job search, especially as he was about to start networking more aggressively.

After spending about 45 minutes on technology, he asked "so what do I say to these people? Do I just go up to them and say 'hi'?"

I think this is really the hardest thing to overcome, and once we figure it out, the key to really growing our network and nurturing relationships.

Does a job seeker say, "hey, can we have lunch? I heard there were some openings in your company and I'd like to learn more about them?"

Should a job seeker say, "I'm going to interview at your company next week and I really need some more information. Can I schedule an informational interview with you?"

Should a job seeker say, "I'm in transition and would like to pick your brain - do you have a few minutes?

I think any of these could be okay. Not great, not spectacular, not exceptional, just okay.

This is going to sound very basic, even silly, but the first thing to say might just be "hi." That's it. Sometimes just a "hi" will do, and the conversation can go from there. Here are two tips for what comes after "hi":

  1. Ask the person about themself. This isn't a time for 20 questions, but it is a time to see where you have things in common. It's okay to dig deeper on some questions where you really have interest, with something like "oh yeah? That's really cool, tell me about that!"
  2. Ask the person why they are at the event. Not a "so, do you come here often?" Perhaps something like "so, are you a member of XYZ association," or "do you work with marketers," or something like that.

If you need more help with how to network, or what to say, check out Some Assembly Required by Thom Singer. It's a great book with a lot of advice for business/professional networking.

Aside from what YOU should ask, you need to be ready to say something back, if they ask about you. I'll guess more than half of all first impressions are tarnished because someone wasn't prepared to answer "tell me about yourself." I've heard some that are too unpolished, talking about all kinds of hobby or personal things, and some responses that are too scripted... which isn't bad but they just don't sound natural.

Your target is to create a compelling statement that is around 30 to 60 second that gets across the main thing(s) you want the other person to know, and leave some room for THEM to ask YOU for more information. You can google "30 second commercial" and find a lot of opinions on how to create an effective pitch.

You have to know what you want, who you want to meet, and what you are going to say if they want to know about you. But first, you just have to get to that point where you say "hi," which for some of us might be the hardest step of all.

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Jason Alba is the CEO and creator of JibberJobber.com, and author of “I’m on LinkedIn – Now What???” After a corporate downsizing impacted Jason in 2006, he experienced firsthand the difficulties of conducting a job search. Drawing on his extensive computer software and IT experience, Jason analyzed the job search process and developed JibberJobber.com, the gold standard in career management technology.

Widely acknowledged as a leading career management evangelist, Jason continues to spread the word to job seekers through his blog, JibberJobber.com/blog. He is co-author of “I’m on Facebook – Now What???”and offers tutorials on how to fulfill the role of being CEO of You, Inc.

Jason Alba is:

CEO of JibberJobber.com

Author of I’m on LinkedIn – Now What???

Co-author of I’m on Facebook – Now What???

Founder of CEO Training for Me Inc.


________________________________________________________

Posted to THE NATIONAL NETWORKER. To subscribe for your free newletter, go to www.TheNationalNetworker.com. For the complete National Networker Relationship Capital Toolkit and a free RSS feed, go to: http://thenationalnetworkerweblog.blogspot.com.
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The Emergence of The Relationship Economy

The Emergence of The Relationship Economy
The Emergence of the Relationship Economy features TNNWC Founder, Adam J. Kovitz as a contributing author and contains some of his early work on The Laws of Relationship Capital. The book is available in hardcopy and e-book formats. With a forward written by Doc Searls (of Cluetrain Manifesto fame), it is considered a "must read" for anyone responsible for the strategic direction of their business. If you would like to purchase your own copy, please click the image above.

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