Sack Your Career Counselor - Top Ten Tips for Creating A Blog That Will Change Your Career
You have permission to publish this article electronically
or in print, free of charge, as long as the bylines are
included. A courtesy copy of your publication would be
appreciated - send to margaret@careersnet.com.
Title: Sack Your Career Counselor - Top Ten Tips for Creating A Blog That Will Change Your Career
Word Count: 827
Author: Margaret Stead
Email: margaret@careersnet.com
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=5778
The article is preformatted to 60CPL.
Sack Your Career Counselor - Top Ten Tips for Creating A Blog That Will Change Your Career
Copyright 2006 Margaret Stead
As CEO and Chief Career Coach for CareersNet.com, I see
teeming hordes of people wanting to change their career.
Trouble is 99% haven't got a clue how to go about it.
The problem is most Career Advisors haven't got any idea
either. Ask yourself: "Who advised you at school, college,
university, at the job centre? As Dilbert once said 'Would
you trust your career counselor, if they worked that hard?"
I've been on both sides of this equation. While I was
unemployed I worked very hard at presenting myself well.
When I've been the recipient of resumes, I realised that
many career change artistes fail because they put
themselves first, rather than the addressing the OTHER's
problem.
In fact, I cannot remember a time when an applicant first
thought of what I might WANT or NEED before telling me what
a great guy or gal s/he was, thus sounding like every other
'Knuckle-headed loser." - "I'm great take-me."
Every recruiter and prospective employer thinks that the
NEXT person they see is going to be the 'One'. They want
you to be the 'One'. In fact, somewhere, someone is
desperate for you to be the 'One'.
Believe me. That's why producing a blog, a two minute job,
is a fantastic vehicle for your self promotion, because
first - you have to find the problem that you can solve and
become the 'ONE' that they are looking for.
Below, I share my Top 10 Tips for creating a blog that
helps change your career. Enjoy, and do pass these tips
along to those who you feel would benefit from reading
them. Think Content: If your blog contains rich relevant
content, you will keep your audience returning for more.
Well thought-out position statements that run counter to
business as usual are another avenue to explore in the
content arena.
Visualize Your Audience: Don't write for a "demographic."
Too many press releases seem to be writing for some vague
audience.
Personify the reader(s). Imagine them reading your blog or
'a lift from it that a reporter might use.' If you can't
visualize this, start over.
Optimize Your Blog for the Search Engines: Everyday, more
people get their news from Google News or Yahoo News and
the like. When writing your blog, think about the keywords
your target audience uses to make up that filter. Don't
overuse those keyword phrases, but don't ignore them either.
Try New Circuits: Don't just use the same old search engine
directories you've always used. (but don't neglect them
either) I've recently gotten much better bang for the buck
by using RSS feeds as part of the service for no extra
charge that results in "links" with more blogs and other
sites syndicating content via RSS.
Be Quotable: Say something that is not part of the daily
drone. That PR clutter can be your friend so long as you
say something relevant and different that breaks through it.
Get Help: Many blogs are terrible because they're written
by individuals obsessing about themselves. Get help with
discovering what makes you tick and how you can use the
strengths you undervalue.
Be Tough on Yourself: After you have drafted your post to
your blog, before you submit it - read it as if you never
laid eyes upon it. If the headline was a subject header in
an email, would you open it or delete it? As you read
through the copy, where do you start to lose interest and
start thinking about supper?
Jump Page: I sometimes offer 3 out of 10 tips or trends
within my blog and a live link thereafter for readers to
jump to my site where they can read the remaining 7 tips.
Very effective.
Create News: Much news is manufactured, not only for B2B
but B2C as well. Creating an event that you can repeat
annually, such as a competition or review of something
interesting to your target audience, can generate traffic
for your site for many years to come.
If you establish a "Hall of Fame" or some other perennial
competition, you're likely to also create a clamour for
other firms to be heralded in your final results that will
be announced in your blog.
Track Your Results: See what works best by tracking your
results for days after your blog has gone out. Any blogging
service worth it's salt should offer you this feature for
little or no extra.
Furthermore, you yourself should search for citations of
your blog in the major blog search engines for days after
to see how well it has propagated.
Bonus Tip: Edit, Edit, Edit. With the onslaught of so much
information coming at all of us, editors and readers alike
are less and less patient with puffery and prose that don't
get to the point quickly.
As Net Guru Mac Ross advises, "Make every word work hard."
See my Change Your Career With a Blog! and receive a five
day no charge ecourse!
About the Author:
Margaret Stead is a Career Consultant, Business
Psychologist and self-styled 'Dream Architect' on a mission
to create a million brilliant careers. She has increased
career currency, capability and job satisfaction for many
successful career change individuals, regularly coaching,
executive business leaders in using new media to accelerate
their success. If you'd like to read more - sign up for our
FREE ecourse 'Change Your Career With A Blog':
www.careersnet.co.uk/career-change-why-blog/
|