Showing posts with label LinkedIn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LinkedIn. Show all posts

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Gotta make that money, honey!

As we all know, the economy is still rebuilding and you may be looking for a job as we speak. Maybe you were laid off, fired or your company has indicated that you should probably start looking. Well...you're not the only one in this boat. Our resident HR expert has shared some insight on some things you may know and some things you may not already know about the hunt! The most important thing is to keep your head up, stay confident and try not to get too frustrated. Good Luck!

Contributed by: Joanne Coghill

www.ncogeto.com

Most people look for jobs the traditional way by searching the want-ads and using online job websites like Careerbuilder, Monster, and Craigslist. You'll email or send out loads of resumes which is not a bad strategy, however the employer can be overwhelmed by the amount of responses and may never see your resume since everyone else is doing this using this same method. Then you sit wondering what happened and getting frustrated with the lack of response.

The competition for jobs is extremely high due to the high unemployment rate. The employer is receiving an excess of responses that they can not review all resumes that coming in. It is important for the job seeker to think out of the box and stretch themselves on how they are networking and looking for a job.

Here are some suggestions to help you with your job search and build your network.

1. Mix it up! Check your local community newspaper or google to find local mixers, networking events, job fairs or workshops to meet people who can assist you in your job search as you build your network. Your church may also consider sponsoring a networking event or workshops to find those looking for a job, looking to change jobs or just to inquire and meet new people. You never know when you met someone and reach out who may know someone who is looking for employees. Bring your own business card (you can get free online business cards, you may have to pay for shipping) and exchange business cards so that you can follow up with everyone you meet at any of these events. Email or send them a note to follow up meeting them at the event. This is the start to building your network.

2. Using your networks - Another way to connect with your personal and business networks is to use online social and business networking sites. Some great sites to create accounts on are MySpace, Facebook, Plaxo, Twitter, Linked-in, Talkbiznow and Bebo. Create user accounts on these sites and let people know in each community what types of jobs you’re interested in finding. Again, you never know who can connect you to someone that has the perfect job for you.

*TheCircleLA TIP - You don't have to be a part of EVERY social network, just be sure that you use the ones you do use wisely and to their full potential. Pick 2-3 that you will focus on. Otherwise it gets confusing.

3. The Ol' fashioned way - To find new businesses listings that have or are about to open check in your local newspapers. You can find this under “fictitious business name” in the classified section. New businesses often need to hire new employees. Review these daily to you if there are new businesses opening that might be a good fit. Send them a note and a resume and follow it up with a phone call a few days later. Even if they’re not ready to hire, you’ll be first on their mind when they are ready.

4. What do YOU want to do? You may have a business that you want to work for. Call them up and ask if they are hiring. If they are not hiring ask them if they ever hire temps. During recession times many companies have have laid off their full time staff and they may be hiring temps to fill in where needed. You may get your foot in the door if they are open to hire you as a temp. Otherwise another options is to ask if they would be open o consider having a volunteer or an intern work for them for free. This would be another way to get your foot in the door on a trial basis. What do you have to lose? You have the time and they might be intrigued enough to take you up on your offer.

5. Tap Into the Community - There are many churches that are offering support for those who are unemployed. Talk to your church to see if they offer or willing to offer any type of support group and any help. Also check with your local community, check on line or in the neighborhood newspaper to see if there are support groups to assist those who are unemployed or looking for a job change.

6. Be proactive, assertive and friendly but not pushy or aggressive, when contacting a potential employer. People generally will find that when you are friendly, flexible, creative they are willing to talk to you and willing to go the extra mile.

7. Stay POSITIVE which will help reduce stress and keep you focused.

8. Start your mornings with daily prayer and meditation. This will help you focus throughout the day.



*TheCircleLA TIP - Revise your resume. No matter how good you think it is, look and look again. Make sure your experience stands out and highlight achievements in other positions. If you have gaps in your resume, be sure to continue to do any type of work, whether its networking, small projects, planning your own business. This shows that you're proactive and have been keeping your mind busy. Be smart with the time you have at hand.

*If you are interested in contributing to Netropolis, please contact us at TheCircleLA@Gmail.com

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Social Media who? Getting with the times for your business!

Does anyone remember when we used to call people to get in touch with them for business? To invite them over for dinner? Get directions? The fact that there is a couple of generations out there that will never know that feeling is crazy to me. I didn't actually have a cell phone until I was 18, which was late in my neighborhood. Now, I can't imagine living without one, mainly for the fact that I don't even know my parent's new phone number. The only number(s) I know for sure are the ones I had to dial before I got a cell phone (and of course my own cell #). Crazy isn't it?

I have spoken with several small business owners that know about social media platforms, but haven't quite adapted to the new wave of communication. Since social media has become an important business tool to reach target audiences and elevate business goals, it is important to know what it can do and how it can work for you.

Things to know:

Facebook has 300 million users

YouTube has 13 billion videos/month

LinkedIn has 36 million business represented

There are 112 million blogs on the Internet
Twitter has 10 million users and is growing at 40%/month


What are the social media 'must haves'?

Facebook - Facebook can be used as a critical branding tool to reach your target customers and act as a public forum. It will be important to be active on your Facebook page, engage your fans/friends and update your page regularly. Virgin America does an excellent job of this.

Twitter - This is the perfect venue to post news, expert thoughts, industry trends and follow/be followed by customers and partners. This is also a great way to follow industry thought leaders and engage in casual conversation on a professional level. This is also a chance to position yourself as a thought leader and/or expert. The Ellen Show has a great example, plus a celebrity name to it, but you'll get the idea.

Blog(s)- If you are trying to position yourself as an expert in any industry you must have a blog. The key to blogs is content. Content should be refreshed on a regular basis. When you are creating your blog there are some key things to keep in mind:
- Focus - determine your blog's focus. You don't want your blog postings to be willy nilly. Decide ahead of time if your blog is going to be a personal blog about your life, about transformers, about antenna technology or about men's fashion trends. This way your blog becomes a reliable source for some kind of specific information.
-
Frequency - make sure you have a consistency in your posting, whether its everyday, twice a week, once a week, etc. You also need to be careful of posting TOO much on your site, you want to leave the reader wanting more, not wanting to mark you as SPAM.
-
Flavor - be sure to keep your voice when you're blogging. If you're not sure that your writing skills are up to snuff, then take a first draft at it and have the same person edit your writing to maintain a consistency in the writing style.
-
Following - the only way to develop a real following is to follow others. Stay in touch with your audience and respond to them regularly. Keeping your followers engaged is the key to getting more fans. It is important communicate and stay 'reachable'.

4 ways social media helps your business

1)Enhancing business productivity by providing business collaboration tools.
Social bookmarking (delicious) organizes your web, Facebook is a rolodex on steroids, and wikis and blogs are virtual journals that can be utilized in an infinite number of ways.

2)Cheap and efficient virtual marketing research

Companies can get very comparatively precise data about what your potential customers are thinking and searching for. You can also find out what their customers are doing on their websites. Why are so many customers clicking away here? Why are we losing customers on our e-commerce site? How can we make our site sticky so? How are our competition beating us?

3) Low cost and risk

It is easy to get started in social media from anywhere from $0- $5000 (blogs, websites, maintenance and design costs, etc.) Social media is a affordable, low cost communications solution for business.

4) SEO and marketing

Social media leverages the network effect of the web. How do you get information? Most people these days get their information two ways on the web: searching and recommendations from friends or trusted associates.

Proceed With Caution!

Whenever entering a new realm of communication you should factor in both the benefits and risks. Although few, there are definitely risks to social media if you are not careful.

1) Transparency - Social media forces your company to be more transparent, you have to be ready to be clear with your online communications. Online'rs can see holes through anything. Don't be defensive, engage conversation it creates more discussion points and openness.

2) Be careful with the company information that you are sharing. If you are unsure, DO NOT SHARE!

3) The rash affect - Social media spreads like wildfire. Something that happened in a remote area of Japan, may be communicated throughout the world in minutes with the use of social media.
4) Monitoring - Make sure that you are steadily monitoring your social media presence.

5) Get your company involved - It doesn't bode well if there's only one person in the office on the party train. Get your employees, families and friends involved in your online communities to promoted interest, discussion and contributed content.


In this day and age, business without the presence of social media is very difficult, unless you have already been in business for decades. Even then, to keep up with the times is very important to keeping your business edge. Start building your social media strategy, if you're not sure ask someone. In the past few years there have been an abundance of social media experts that have surfaced to help businesses with just this critical area of business.