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Articles on Jobseekers Advice If you would like to submit an article to Jobseekers Advice, then please feel free to contact us. We are always looking for a wide range of articles dealing with career advice, CV advice, interview advice, working abroad, employment issues, education and training and other recruitment or careers related topics. The articles can be the result of professional experience or personal insight - we are looking to offer all points of view.
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MARKETING YOURSELF WITH
INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL PROMOTIONS
Surveys have shown that up to 80% of those employed are unhappy.
Unhappiness results from being overworked/underpaid, a deteriorating
relationship with colleagues or management, or possibly, disappointment in
oneself. If you plan to sell your time
and abilities, why not take complete advantage of your efforts. Being in
control of your career and promoting yourself can dissolve dissatisfaction
by providing more career options and opening more doors to opportunity.
Volunteering on committees or with non-profit organizations (whether
internally or externally) or offering your capabilities when your employer
shows a need can educate you on new topics.
While learning on the job or within a volunteer position, you’ll likely
uncover opportunities through continued personal growth or by networking
with individuals you wouldn’t have met through your existing channels.
Added responsibilities will show management that you are serious on saving
the company money, or that you care about your community.
Executives and business managers want to see measurable results from
employees, so I recommend making the effort to step up to the plate. The
benefits of self-marketing can far outweigh the time needed to do so; I’ll
outline just how in this story about a salesman. If a
sales rep out-produces colleagues with over $2 million in yearly sales,
then the company probably won’t mind paying upwards of six figures to keep
this employee happy, right? The company is experiencing a very favorable
return on investment, and the employee is trained, independent, and
compensated well. It’s a win/win situation. The
question now is how did this sales rep turn into an asset.
After all, out-producing colleagues is not an easy feat. I’ll tell you
exactly how this person went from a mediocre $50,000 salary to over six
figures within less than 2 years.
First, he took the initiative to participate in evening classes on various
sales topics, such as relationship building, new selling techniques, and
identifying the aspects that provoke
decision makers to buy. Did the company pay for these classes? No.
He saw the need for improvement and jumped at the chance to enhance his
education and produce more revenue for the company.
Second, he focused on external marketing techniques by sending personal
press releases upon obtaining key accounts (more notably known as “People
on the Move” within business sections of newspapers and other
publications), participating on non-profit
committees, and so on. One
opportunity was particularly beneficial. He elected to serve on a
high-profile committee and found himself talking to a secretary that
reported to the Director of Business Development for a prominent technical
firm. Ironically, his company had been
pursuing this corporation for over 5 years. He gradually built a
relationship and eventually landed the account that produced nearly a
million dollars in new revenue for his business.
Committee meetings were on his personal time and not compensated.
Marketing yourself to the community can enhance your existing job or job
search tremendously because companies like to see employees that I’ll
label “movers and shakers.” These individuals don’t wait for things to
happen, they make them happen.
Third, he documented all career successes and solidified his position in
the industry. Documentation can consist of letters from superiors or
customers, awards, and/or performance bonuses. When
seeking a raise, he created a presentation that focused on the amount of
new revenue he cultivated for the business over the last 12 months and
compared it to the proposed new salary. The company would be crazy to
refuse his request, in my opinion. If they did, he would subsequently work
for a competitor making him an adversary rather than an ally.
Taking a proactive approach, rather than being reactive, is what
catapulted this person to a six-figure salary. Prove yourself an asset to
your employer. Make them unable to live without your expertise, your
devotion, and your overall dedication to ensuring the company’s financial
health and customer loyalty.
BIO
Written by Teena Rose, a certified and published resume writer with Resume
to Referral (
http://www.resumebycprw.com ) and author to "Résumé Designs &
Job-search Strategies for College Grads" (published by CareerEpublications)
— forecasted to release
September 2003.
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