Coffee Shop Networking

Thursday, May 27, 2010 by Jeff Bockelman
I have to admit I am someone that does listen to some of the conversations that go on at other tables around me at the local Starbucks, Paradise Bakery and Panera Breads.

It's amazing how many of those conversations seem to touch on employment. Either someone is unhappy in their job, looking for a job, trying to fill a job... or just frustrated with their staff. My guess is that 75% of coffee shop conversations will touch on employment at some point.

Furthermore, coffee shops have become second offices for many professionals, and one business meeting can result in 3-5 mini meetings when you are introduced to others by the person you're with at the time. Kinda like speed networking!

Those mini meetings at coffee shops allow the next meeting to be warm, and much easier. Likewise, building a profile on CareerScribe, along with an introduction video, is an easy way to introduce yourself beyond a one page resume, making that next meeting all the more warm. When you realize that you can build a professional portfolio as part of your CareerScribe profile, you can understand how first interviews can be eliminated, and why online employee screening is becoming so popular.

I love Mr. Peanut

Tuesday, April 6, 2010 by Jeff Bockelman
I never thought the Weiner Mobile could be outdone.



... but then the Nut Mobile comes along!!!











You just never know what you'll see when you're out driving around. Brands are all around us. If we were only as recognizable as Mr. Peanut, we wouldn't have to worry about a career portfolio. A place like CareerScribe to put our best work and examples of our accomplishments to help develop our own personal brands.

Companies are always looking for progressive ways to differentiate and screen employees, both internal and external. Consider progressive ways to represent yourselves to them!





Vancouver Winter Olympics... talk about personal branding!

Thursday, February 18, 2010 by Jeff Bockelman
What better examples of personal branding.... Shaun White, Lindsey Vonn, Apolo Ohno, mogul star Dale Begg-Smith (the Man of Mystery).















All memorable brands, but if you think this happens by chance, or without effort.... think again! And without these brands, will their athletic accomplishments be remembered years in the future?

Much in the same way, individuals need to be developing their own personal brand through use of career portfolios and personal branding tools. By using tools like this, professionals can stand out amongst their competition, and be remembered during the candidate sourcing and candidate evaluation process.
 
Check out CareerScribe for just such a solution!

Are you born with a personal brand, or must you create one?

Thursday, January 14, 2010 by Jeff Bockelman

In a recent comment to the Smaller Indiana question above, I offered these thoughts:

The term "personal brand", is a bit lame... but it has begun to stick. I live in this space, and I can tell you, that in just the last 30 days, I have heard the term "personal brand" used and recognized more than in the last 6 months. I'm willing to wager, you are going to hear it more in the next year, and it will be nothing new in 3 years.

Call it what you will, the concept is about the information that is available to everyone about you. Information that forms a basis for who people think you are.... whether it is your hobbies and interests, your religious affiliation, your family, your education, your career, charitable work, where you grew up, etc., etc., etc. Organizaitons use this information to screen employees. Fair or not, all of these things collectively allow others to form an opinion of you. An opinion that you can't discuss with them.... not that they would even give you a straight answer if you asked them anyway.

Everyone should consider being proactive with this. You will have a tough time removing much of the information on you that can be found on the internet, but you can make a conscious decision about what you would like others to think about you in the next 5-10 years, and try to manage that impression. Develop an online professional portfolio of your best stuff. Over time.... you can likely change your "brand", much like Target did.... but it takes time.

Most are going to talk about personal branding, but many aren't going to take the long term steps necessary to really make a difference. I believe that there is great opportunity here.... obviously (CareerScribe), to get ahead of your competition, at least for a few years.... then who knows.

Have you Googled yourself lately?

Thursday, December 10, 2009 by Jeff Bockelman
Recently I conducted several career classes at IU University where I discussed personal branding and CareerScribe.

One of the first questions I asked each class of 60 was... "How many of you have Googled your own name recently?". I was shocked that only 4-5 students raised their hand. Taking into consideration that probably 8-10 of the students were sleeping... I still think those are surprisingly low numbers. Upon asking the question... you would have thought I asked who in the room had logged onto a pornography site recently. Students appeared embarrassed to admit they checked what was out there on themselves.

Fact is.... If you're not paying attention to the personal brand that is being developed about you online, you are really missing the boat, and the longer you wait to develop these habits, the harder it is going to be to change that brand if it's inaccurate.

All progressive companies are utilizing the internet in their candidate sourcing process, as well as internally for performance management and to screen employees. Individuals are using search engines to form an opinion about people to network with, friends, coworkers, etc. If you ever used an web dating site and not Googled the person you met to see what else you can find, you are REALLY taking a chance!

More and more career portfolio sites are surfacing to help individuals better tell their stories and have an impact on their personal brand. I can certainly be accused of being biased, but over the next 3-5 years, I believe you will be left behind by your peers if you are not developing the habits of true "Career Management". Of course I also believe CareerScribe is one of the best tools out there to help you do that now!

Happy Branding!!!!

Will an employer take the time to review my profile?

Friday, October 30, 2009 by Jeff Bockelman

In a recent career class at Indiana University, a student asked an interesting question. This student was concerned that an employer would actually take the time to review their professional portfolio on CareerScribe.



















My response is "Well... do you think an employer is taking the time to review your resume among hundreds?"

It's not the first time that I've heard this comment. Unfortunately, what I've come to find is the question is really less about whether they believe an employer would want to have additional details, proof, artifacts and a video introduction to screen employees... OF COURSE THEY DO! The reality is that most people just dread the idea of having to spend more time documenting their career accomplishments, successes, etc. Do a video?..... "I hate the way I look on video." They are hoping they can just get by with that boring resume!

Fact is.... you can get by with just a resume. Resumes will not be going away anytime soon. The question to ask yourself is do I want to be competing for jobs with an archaic, dying tool like a resume, or do I want to give myself an edge by using progressive tools that help me tell my story through a free online portfolio... and make my best first impression through video? Give a potential employer the opportunity to get some real insight on you, without asking them to invest 4-10 hours of time scheduling, and bringing you in for an interview, which most of the time doesn't result in a fit.

My final comment.... as your "Career Personal Trainer".... Don't be so lazy, and get out there and compete in the top 10% of your peer group who are using these technologies to present themselves and their personal brand in a compelling way.

Improving the Candidate Sourcing Process

Friday, September 18, 2009 by Jeff Bockelman

There seems to be a real opportunity out there for recruiting and staffing firms to reinvent the recruiting process for their customers. The old processes that have been around for years, which involve presenting resumes to companies for their open positions, is dying a slow death... significantly increased by the events of the past year.



The staffing firm of the future, must be able to present their candidates in a much more progressive way than resumes, if they want to beat their competition by helping their clients screen employees more efficiently. Thinking you have a better database of candidates than the next guy, and that is your competitive edge.... has been over for at least 3 years now.

Staffing firms should be considering the use of candidate profiles, which isn't entirely a new concept.... but the content and look/feel of the profile has changed. Profiles should likely include portfolios of documentation that prove the accomplishments, experience, education and certifications a candidate has. Furthermore, video should be considered to introduce presence, professionalism, passion, enthusiasm, etc. A profile might also include background verification and personality/skills assessments. Essentially, you are eliminating a first interview through the use of a professional portfolio.

CareerScribe offers this type of candidate evaluation tool. An application that allows professionals to develop an online personal brand.

 





Fear of Video

Friday, August 28, 2009 by Jeff Bockelman
Video is a great tool for personal branding. If you're not using it currently, you should and likely will. So better to start getting comfortable with it now.

Speaking as a former Accountant and CPA, I know video is scary for 75% of the professionals out there. You see it all the time on the internet, YouTube, etc., everyone makes it look so easy, but you get paralyzed before even explore it.

Most phones or even cameras have decent forms of video quality now. Quality that is perfectly acceptable for use in your professional portfolio, etc. Other options include webcams, flip videos ($129 or less at Best Buy) and personal digital video cameras. I often try to steer professionals away from overdone, overedited videos. Being yourself, or at least your professional self (so know kegger party videos), is usually more effective these days when using video for personal branding or video job interviews.

Since it is highly recommended that you keep these personal, professional video introductions to no more than a minute or so, it is frequently possible to do the video in one take, with a little practice. However, using simple video editors, like MS Windows Movie Maker... which comes standard on most computers, can be a lot of fun and not take a lot of time. If you're video is much longer than 1 to 1.5 minutes, you risk not having it viewed during the online employee screening process.

When you think about your opportunity to make YOUR BEST FIRST IMPRESSION through the use of video, or you can just follow the heard by continuing to send resumes, I don't understand why everyone isn't using video.
 

Social Media and the grammar playground

Friday, July 31, 2009 by Susan Kent
I heard a discussion recently that really made me think (and I do everything I can to avoid that!). It was like having two good friends angry at each other, both with valid points. So it left me feeling torn...

The discussion was about social media, progressive thought, and professional representation. One party thought content ruled the day, and that the occasional word omission, misspelling, and "make up a word if you need to" line of thinking is progressive and powerful - and people who feel grammatical astuteness and spelling perfection are a must are archaic.

The other party feels writing as though you didn't pass 8th grade english is childish, ignorant, and misplaced in the professional world. And arguably, it depends on what professional world you are in. But the parties involved feel in most cases, they are right. Maybe they are both wrong. 

See, I was an English major. No misspelling, word omission, or punctuation error gets by me. I don't always take the time to correct them, but I always notice them, particularly in professional documents. But I get that not all people find those areas important, that sometimes the content and the attitude of the material far outweighs the need for proper comma usage. So who's right? Do you form impressions of people/products based on their command of the English language? Would you forgive word omissions and other errors when evaluating candidates if their content was great, or would you dismiss even the best candidate if you saw mistakes in their career portfolio? I think the real deal breaker is who is READING the content, not who is writing it. And by the way, those were not rhetorical questions...I'd love to hear your thoughts. 

So my point today is that even if you don't place a high level of value on grammatical perfection, the person who reads your professional portfolio through CS might, so take a moment to proofread.  Class dismissed.

Where did all the jobs go? Where did all the good candidates go?

Monday, July 13, 2009 by Sean Reiche
I was walking around the streets of Boston this week and saw this sight:



It actually made me laugh that people would turn to a newspaper dispenser to look for their next career.  What's even funnier (or maybe scary?) is that candidates believe companies look for candidates in a similar manner.

They think that companies go to their file cabinet, pull out a list of resumes, and start going through them.  Some more technically inclined may think they do the same, only digitally.  Download some resumes, look through hundreds, and make a decision from there.

The reality is companies don't have the time to do that.  Instead, they would like to view the information about a candidate in a professional manner, dynamically, and using smart search tools.

This is why it's so important to have a great career management profile.  Companies use this info to quickly find you and evaluate you deeper than a paper (or word doc) resume.

So instead of focusing on finding jobs in newspaper dispensers; manage and share your own career.  You can then use CareerScribe to share your profile and tell your story.

Waking up late

Tuesday, June 23, 2009 by Jeff Bockelman

Yesterday I had the unpleasant experience of realizing I set Alarm #2, instead of Alarm #1 on my clock. So 5 seconds after the alarm went off, and I realized it's already 7:30am, when I have an 8:00am meeting, that's 30 minutes away.

The dreaded nightmare of oversleeping.... only to be outdone by the nightmare of showing up to class, and there's a big test that you haven't studied for.

Then the panic and questions set in :

How did this happen?
What could I have done differently?
So now what?
How do I avoid this ever happening again?

All great questions, much like the questions one asks themselves when they find out they are losing their job. This scenario has been playing out all too often over the past year as professionals realize they've made mistakes in managing their careers, and they aren't prepared to market themselves in a competitive job market.

There isn't anything you can do now to change the past, but you can deal with the situation at hand as best you can, and look for better ways to market yourself, such as free online portfolios. Online employee screening is becoming much more popular as a means of candidate sourcing, so if you don't have a professional presence online, you are likely being overlooked for some opportunties.

More importantly, recognize there are habits and skills you can be developing now, so that you aren't in this situation again. Begin developing a career portfolio, and maintain it routinely so you can avoid the panicked feeling of waking up late for your meeting.


 

How will you stand out?

Wednesday, June 17, 2009 by Susan Kent

When I coach clients through the task of finding new employment or moving ahead in their career, my first question is, "How are you unique?" Very few job seekers answer that question well.  And I'll admit, it's tough; we spend so much time trying to fit in to the organizations we belong to, being unique rarely gets a second thought. But as a candidate in the market for a new or better job, it should be your first thought.

Every step of the employment process is potentially fatal - a rotten resume lands you in the trash can, a poorly executed interview drops you from consideration, lackluster follow through and ill managed salary negotiations thwart even the best of candidates. I'm stressed out even writing about it! What is a job seeker to do?

How about thinking and acting like a unique candidate.  Present a resume in a non-traditional format - CareerScribe Profile - and start off on the right foot. Embed a resume that laughs at medocrity, shoot a video that screams, "I can think, act, and perform in a way that will bring in a profit," and proactively reach out to potential employers with enough included information to earn an interview. Online emlpoyee screening and applicant tracking sytems are time consuming and often fruitless. Give them something to really sink their teeth into.

And while CareerScribe can't hold your hand in an interview, it can buy you some confidence. Your potential employer, who is focused on effecient and quality hiring, has already met you through your video introduction. That dreaded first impression has already been made, on your terms, so you can relax and foucs on demonstrating your value and expertise.  

Don't just send off your resume (yawn) and hope for the best. Send your career profile and knock their socks off when they begin candidate evaluations.  Good luck!
 

Late for a meeting

Monday, June 8, 2009 by Jeff Bockelman
It's seems that it has become more and more acceptable to arrive late to a meeting.

I am as guilty as the next person, maybe more, when it comes to showing up on time.... all the time. I find myself easily distracted by "one more call", "one more email", etc. I may have started out with every intention of being 10-15 minutes early, but that last call or task I decided to take on, always seems to make me 3-5 minutes late.

Most of the people I talk with, seem to be ok with being 5-10 minutes late for a meeting, but there are certainly a number of more traditional/"old schoolers", who will significantly devalue you, if for no other reason than you arrived late. This especially seems to be the case in the Indianapolis job search market.

So here are the rules I've established :

1)   If you're going to be late, even 1 minute, call or text message the person you are meeting, and let them know you're running a few minutes behind. In return, the person you are meeting should wait with no hard feelings.

2)   If you are running more than 10 minutes behind, call and text message if they don't answer. Also send an email because most seem to get emails instantaneously on phones anymore. Be very apologetic, and don't make excuses. Give the person you are meeting the option to reschedule, and expect it if you are running more than 15 minutes behind.

3)   Finally, if you are the one waiting, and you haven't received any calls, texts or emails from the person you are supposed to be meeting with. Wait for 10 minutes, try calling them and leave a message. Anything over 15 minutes late, you are free to go with no guilt on your part.

NEVER be late to an interview. Being on time speaks to enthusiasm, organization and planning in the candidate evaluation process. Interviewers will use this to screen employees.

Of course.... I'm writing this blog while I'm waiting on someone that is now nearly 30 minutes late with no call. I think I'll leave!

Totally Hooked

Thursday, May 21, 2009 by Susan Kent
 I am totally hooked on technology. That's right, hooked. I am not a techie (in fact, I majored in English largely to escape the continually morphing and encroaching gadgets, software, and the like). But now I can appreciate the amazing difference technology, once one embraces it, can have on the quality and efficiency of life.

Those college friends who would have otherwise been scattered like seeds in the wind - Facebook.

Keeping up, in real time, with the latest and greatest - Twitter.

Sharing pictures for download and print on demand (because Grandmas demand it!)- ShutterFly.

Getting intimate access to the daily thoughts and struggles of thought leaders and corporate gurus - Blogging.

And, duh, managing one's career with an easy to use, innovative, and sharable application - CareerScribe. 

Do you think that it's strange that you'll manage your friendships (that you would have otherwise let dissolve) with a fervor, but let your career flop around like wet cardboard? Get online, create your free professional portfolio, and get noticed during candidate evaluations. You agonized for hours over which photo to use for your facebook profile, perhaps you should direct some of that energy into managing your career! 


Like dieting and excercise

Thursday, May 21, 2009 by Jeff Bockelman
For awhile now, I've been telling professionals that doing a good job managing your career is like dieting and excercise. No one can argue that you should be doing it, but unfortunately, our educational system is only now starting to incorporate(require) students to learn some of the very basic skills/habits, such as maintaining a career portfolio as a routine.

State workforce development offices are starting to recognize the importance of these skills. Realizing it's only a bandaid to provide resume services and certain types of training. These things may help the person at the time, but you're not equipping them with skills to help them throughout their career. Professional portfolios are the way to go when it comes to candidate evaluation.

The bad news is, like dieting and excercise, many of the career management skills and habits being taught to professionals with 5-10+ years of experience, likely won't stick. The employment pool has been so negatively reinforced with their habits, i.e. "I only update my resume when I'm unhappy or been told I'm going to lose my job", that it's very tough to unlearn that way of thinking, and realize the good career management habits can be fun. Documenting your successes and accomplishments, which ultimately creates more value and can help you further your career, should be fun. If you own a house, doesn't it make you feel good when the house has been freshly painted, you've planted flowers, mulched and just mowed the lawn? All these things add value, and you feel that inside.

Hopefully, the current employment market issues will translate into long term changes to our education system and the services our tax dollars provide through regional workforce offices. 

Twitter Wisdom

Tuesday, May 19, 2009 by Susan Kent

I'll admit, I hesitated for a moment to join twitter - but I'm glad that moment has passed. I'm following Chuck Gillespie, and I recently viewed a tweet that stated, "Amazed at how orgs worry about their applicant experience ten times more than employee experience. Why?" (http://crgillespie.wordpress.com) OMG, LOL!

But it's true, right? Firms wine and dine potential, but neglect assets? You'll knock yourself out to create a quality hiring process, spend countless hours screening potential employees, and endure long meetings to discuss candidate evaluations. But once you have found your golden boy, he's just another cog in the works.

Create an experience that's meaningful and lasting for candidates on both sides of the process. Those who want in should create a professional portfolio through CareerScribe so your evaluation is effecient and successful. Once that candidate is on board, they utilize that same application to create an on-going talent mangagement system that allows you to easily recognize and promote high performing employees. In the end, you're creating an environment that's attractive to people inside and outside of your organization.

Tweet, tweet.

Soften the Blow of a Layoff

Thursday, May 14, 2009 by Susan Kent
I have never met a manager who looked forward to a layoff.  Unfortunately, it's an all too common occurrence these days. Every manager searches for the kindest words, right approach, or best justification when delivering the news, but it's tough to find anything that feels adequate. Losing a job has been likened to going through divorce, and managers know what hardships may lay ahead for ex-employees.  But many employers are doing their best to soften the blow.

Career coaches and outplacement firms are contracted by employers to aid recently severed employees in getting a leg up on other job seekers. Professionally written resumes, interview coaching, networking strategies, and professional document creation are typical components of the service. Good start, but something is missing - a comprehensive, on-line, value driven, accomplishment laden, job preference identifying career portfolio.

Consider using outplacement/career coaching firms as partners in a layoff, and ask them to include CareerScribe in their curriculum. An on-line professional portfolio will go a long way in helping candidates obtain their next position, and will be a permanent asset to them. As previous employees move forward in their search, they can use these career portfolios to present immediate value and stand out in candidate evaluations.

As a previous career coach, I can tell you those services are the hope and motivation that is absent for so many job seekers.  Including CareerScribe brings tangible value to a much needed, and greatly appreciated, service.

According to the Experts...

Thursday, May 14, 2009 by Susan Kent

 I attended an unconference today sponsored by Catalist Jobs (catalistjobs.com) where experts (including our own Jeff Bockelman) spoke to candidates regarding strategies to a successful job search. So I was curious, does the information being given to your potential candidates match up with what companies are saying they want?

yes and no.

There was a consistent message of uniqueness, creativity, and professionalism in the tone and content of today's speakers. And companies say they want a stand out candidate to fill the position. But are companies utilizing opportunities in candidate evaluation, beyond just an applicant tracking system, to screen employees and get the result they are looking for? Not unless they're using CareerScribe.

A resume is a good start, but it's just a start. If someone handed you a yearbook and asked you to pick a spouse, you'd laugh, right? But you'll get about as much info from a yearbook as you will a resume. A general understanding of the person, but hardly enough info to make a smart commitment. Ask for more.

Ask for a professional portfolio through CareerScribe. This online employee employee screening tool brings you a giant, efficient step forward in the commitment of hiring an new employee, teammate, bottom-line impacter!

Give candidates the (mutually beneficial) opportunity to present themselves in a unique, creative, and professional way.

ExactTarget Leverages CareerScribe

Wednesday, May 13, 2009 by Craig Burton
 Here's some copy from the official press release. Nice.

ExactTarget, which plans to hire more than 100 additional new associates this year, will initially use CareerScribe to evaluate technical candidates for its Solutions Consulting Group.   
 
“We’re excited to be working with ExactTarget and to provide them with a powerful method that will considerably reduce the amount of time spent evaluating and pursuing the most qualified candidates,” said Jeff Bockelman, founder and president of CareerScribe. “I know from experience how much time can be invested during the first round of the hiring process. As a professional recruiter, I spent hours upon hours interviewing individuals who I knew within the first few minutes of meeting were not going to be right for the position. That is one of the reasons we founded CareerScribe.”
 
In addition to recruiting resources, CareerScribe’s platform also provides companies with tools to simplify the performance management process for their current employees.  Employees can catalogue their current skill sets, goals and track day-to-day accomplishments via CareerScribe’s exclusive CareerTracker tool.  The tool provides employees with an online career journal to highlight major career accomplishments, upload supporting documents and store the information on visual timelines. At the end of the year, the journal provides both employees and managers rich documentation on accomplishments, making data compilation for performance reviews easier. 
 
“CareerScribe provides yet another resource for us to leverage to build our team,” said Todd Richardson, ExactTarget’s vice president of human resources and risk management. “The technology gives us additional tools to interact with candidates across the country.”
 

A Better Resume - keyword tricks?

Monday, May 11, 2009 by Sean Reiche
As I was reading the entire internet, I came across an interesting article on msn.com from CareerBuilder.

The article was about how you should format your resume and put certain keywords in there that will help you be found.  They weren't suggesting you lie, but they were highlighting a serious problem with their software.

They search resumes.  As we know by now, things have changed and we are not our resumes.  CareerBuilder obviously agrees with this.  How did they fix it?  They decided, let's help our users make our search better.  Instead they should be telling people to use tools that help them market themselves better.  Using tools like virtual portfolios in their job search allow companies improve candidate sourcing without relying on keyword tricks.

Quality hiring has been a hot topic for companies since the dawn of time.  Many are using sophisticated tools to help with their online employee screening.  Candidates need to realize this and start using the same tools to better define what they want and what they have to offer.

Resume "keywords" aren't going to cut it.