Secrets of the Job Hunt

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Eureka! Strategy for On-Line Presence Explained

Chris Brogan did it. He defined how to build a platform in which to be seen and heard. Trusted too. You may have heard how important it is to have an on-line presence. As a job seeker, you want to stand out from the crowd. You want to be known for having something valuable to offer. You want to know what the trends are in your industry and occupation. There should be a strategy.

Read the full post, A Simple Presence Framework, for his explanation.

First:

Listening: Understand what is being said about your occupation, industry, niche. Chris recommends checking out "Alltop and Google Blogsearch to find existing blogs on the topic. Subscribe. Get ready to start commenting there."

Then build a home base, outposts and pasports:

"A home base is the eventual site where you hope people come to interact the most with you. Outposts are places of presence that you maintain for interaction and promotion purposes. Passports are profiles to use on various social sites, meaning that it’s important to have an account/profile there, but you might not necessarily have to participate as a full-fledged community member."

For even more about outposts, read this .

How does this apply to job seekers? I hope you are seeing the connection.

Your home base would be a specialty blog where you share expertise and knowledge of your industry, occupation, or niche.

Outposts are places where you promote your message. They could be email accounts, or social news or recommendation sites like digg.com, stumbleupon.com, delicious.com or disqus.com.

Passports are your LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter accounts.

You are sharing information, not about what you are doing, but, information relevant to what you do. Trends, research, factoids.

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Tags: job, linkedin, on-line, presence, search, strategy, twitter

Comment by amyeandrews on June 18, 2009 at 5:56pm
An online presence is critical in MOST jobs today, and I'm a strong proponent of everyone having a presence, no matter what you do because you always need to be prepared and 'out there.' However, I still believe there are some industries and jobs that are still far behind the online curve and traditional methods work best. That being said, whether you're online or not, the strategy of outposts, passports and home base still can work.
Comment by Hannah Morgan on June 18, 2009 at 8:15pm
Amy, thanks for your comments! I agree that not all industries are utilizing social media yet. Can you list some of the industries you see as not there? Admin Assistants? Non-profits? See, there are exceptions to these rules, you just never know where the tech savvy lurkers may be. Amy, thanks for the re-inforcement of developing an on-line presence.

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