Monday 10 May 2010

3 online tips to help you with your career: manage your online CV, choose your employer, share your passion

This article was written for $uccessMag, a magazine aimed at young entrepreneurs and graduates.

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My first career job after university was working for a design agency. That was in 1999. I worked on a website for the BBC aimed at helping young people and graduates decide on their career path. The job involved writing advice for interviewees, templates for CVs and how to decide what to do with your career.

A decade later and the picture is very different. The Internet is changing a company’s methods of recruiting and an employee’s ways of finding jobs. It is changing how a company understands itself as new generations of employees make their voice heard in the market place.

If you’re thinking about starting your career the choices you make now will affect your expectations of work and shape the decisions you make in the future. The Internet can be a very useful tool to help you get the right job and to generate opportunities . It is also vicarious – a Labour candidate was recently sacked for his opinions expressed online – choosing what not to say is equally important as choosing what to say.

Tip #1 – your CV is bigger than it used to be, be aware of it!
Whilst a CV still plays a central role in recruitment, a decade of online communication and social media has changed the playing field. In essence your CV no longer sits politely in a Word document. It’s out and about on the Internet in the things you say and the things you do, even in what your friends about you.

As an employer if I were to receive your CV the first thing I would do is to type your name into Google. I would then look to see if what I found matched what I read in your CV. I may come across your Facebook or LinkedIn profile, maybe the blog you write or your Twitter account.

What you do or say on the Internet tells me more about you than your CV ever will. In effect it has become your CV. Make a list of where you communicate online and what you communicate and ask yourself, “If an employer looked at this would it help or hinder my chances of being employed?”

Tip #2 – Choose your employer
As the world of employment matured in the 20th century, prospective employees began to ask more often, “Is this company good to work for?” This meant that reputation management became important to companies as part of the armoury to attract good quality candidates to their vacancies. Candidates would get an idea of whether they wanted to work for a company largely based on what it said about itself through brochures, adverts and events and how it conducted itself in the interview process.

In the 21st century candidates are finding out about companies through what other people say about it on the Internet. Company reputations are increasingly in the hands of their customers, their staff and interest groups.

Ask yourself: “How do I want an employer to behave towards me? What opportunities will that employer provide? How will my employer support me in my career? Is this a company I will be proud to work for?” Research what people say online about a company to answer these questions, they will tell you more than just a recruitment brochure!

Tip #3 - Love what you do and share your passion for it
I’m always impressed in interviews by someone with genuine passion for what they do, especially if they share that passion with others. The Internet is a great way to share and hone that passion!

Share the things you love doing online, whether that be through words, pictures or videos. Over time you will join and develop communities. These will help you articulate what it is about these activities that you love, helping you to make better career decisions and also attract opportunities that you perhaps hadn’t envisaged.

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Choosing a career path has never been easy. Nowadays the definition of a career is changing. Many people are now thinking, what career can I take next? Careers are much less fixed than they used to be and you may find yourself working in a variety of different roles during your life.

Your first choice of career needn’t be your last, use the Internet to help you make better choices and to attract the right opportunities to you.