#TrendingThursday 2.0 – Num. 9

Does guest posting even work anymore? by Olivia Angelscu
After five years of successful blogging, I frequently have aspiring bloggers reach out to me and ask for advice. One of the many staple suggestions I provide is to offer to guest blog on other sites. This article examines how effective that suggestion really is and how to do it strategically.

What is the Best Résumé Font for You?
As a professional development consultant, I review and work on quite a few résumés each week and one thing I will say is that fonts do matter. You want to catch someone’s eye but not scare them off. Keeping a solid résumé ready is a must for young professionals like those of you who are reading this blog.

5 Common Mistakes Leaders Make: Which Ones Are You Guilty Of? by Jordan Kasteler
Consulting is a tough gig. Some people start off by rolling the dice but it’s always good to have some insight on best practices. This article gives some solid tips on how you can keep from ruining relationships that could pay dividends in the long run.

 

Make professional development a priority.

Investing In Me

I couldn’t do it all myself. I couldn’t keep tossing pennies into a wishing well and hoping that some magical genie would appear with a stack of opportunities. I had to put my money where my mouth was and pay someone who had the resources I don’t have to get me where I needed to be. So I did.
Yesterday, I transformed my WordPress blog from a basic paid blog with nothing but a domain to a premium website with bells and whistles. I also hired the amazing artist Charity Coleman to design my new blog logo and header.

Yesterday was not cheap for me but no one is going to build your brand for you. And you can’t bank on riding the coat tails of anyone else’s successes. You have to invest in yourself.

Buy a book. Read it. Develop a blog. Gain followers. Start speaking. Sometimes your investment is going to be one of time. But, whatever you invest in your brand, do it with the goal of having a return on that investment.

 

Make professional development a priority.

Your Brand is Looking Hazy

So you want to start a blog… or a clothing line… or a consulting firm. Cool. But what sets you apart? I see screen printed tees every day with logos that are only slightly different than what I could find on Instagram. How are you special? If you’re going to brand yourself, brand yourself. Don’t replicate someone else. Improve upon the foundation that they’ve set. Add value. No one in the history of the earth has ever been a bonafide original but, in order to establish something you can call your own, it has to be different. And, if you want to be more than a flash in the pan, it should be both different and of high quality.

What sets you apart? What gives you an edge on the competition? If you can’t answer these satisfactorily, maybe you should figure it out before taking any more steps.

 

Make professional development a priority.

The Name of the Game

Consistency.

That’s the name of the game.

Welcome to 2017. No one knows me for being a blogger exactly. My brand doesn’t rely on the fact that I have a professional development blog. There are millions of “bloggers” across the world. But I can’t think of many who are daily bloggers. Consistency is what keeps people consistently seeking me out for advice, speaking engagement, and professional development services. I have a track record that shows I’m always learning. Every day, you can learn bits and pieces of what I learn.

Now, consistency is usually seen as a good thing but it could be a bad thing too. The question is, “What are you known for on a consistent basis?” Are you known for keeping your word? For making good decisions? For being disciplined enough to do the tougher things? Or do you begin things and then quit? Do you give just enough effort to get by? Are you consistently inconsiderate?

This year, focus on being consistent in the right things and nonexistent in the wrong ones.

In each instance, consistency begins with a single action and, from there, it is continued.

 

Make professional development a priority.

 

Automate. Personalize.

Automate content. Personalize responses.

It’s that simple. Create content for everyone. Content that all of your readers want to read. Content that even those you aren’t looking to reel in will click on so that they can copy and paste the link to their family member or friend or coworker. Your content has to be relevant to someone that everyone (at least in your home country) knows.

Create the content. Schedule it. Automatically tweet it out. Then personalize your response to blog posts, tweets, and Instagram comments.

Just so you know what to do when you build a following. I’m still working on mine, follower by follower.

 

Make professional development a priority.

Google Me! (And Yourself While You’re At It)

Every time I get an opportunity to speak somewhere, I know that the group of students and/or young professionals I’m speaking with will search for me after I leave (if they’re not Googling me as I speak). And when I interview for a job, I know that the person interviewing me will likely do the same. So, in order to be proactive and protect my brand, I search for myself periodically. I make sure to take a look at the web results as well as the images associated with my name. What I don’t ever want to do is to be speaking to a group of students about professional development and a student raise his hand to ask me why there is a photograph of me passed out drunk or wearing a shirt with obscenities. See, my brand leaves room for me to have a drink or two from time to time. It even allows me to question the status quo as far as political issues go. But what you do not see when you search for me on Google is me swearing (with the exception of me directly quoting others). So, how do you establish an online presence? I’m glad you asked.

GoogleMe

1) Formulate a plan of action
The coolest thing about the internet is that you can choose who you want to be. Of course some people take that too far (hence shows like Catfish). But really, the World Wide Web allows you to develop a persona that otherwise would not be possible. For me, I decided that I wanted to be recognized as a professional development consultant. Take some time to write out your goals and then decide how you can use the internet to leverage that brand. Social media is a great tool. I recommend toying around with Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram to begin with. Pinterest is also an awesome way to get your content discovered.

2) Clean all negative content off the first page of results
Most employers will not look past the first page of search results. And, those who do probably won’t look past the second page. So you have to get your name out there. The more positive content you have out, the more quickly the negatives will fall down in search results. So write, write, and then write some more. Post your material to your blog, message boards, LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, and other websites that are intended for sharing. Before you know it, people will have clicked on your positive content so much that any negatives you may have had will be on the fourth or fifth page of search results.

GoogleMe2

3) Write!
I said it before but I’ll say it again: Write. The better you get at writing about your subject matter, the more people will trust your judgment. The more they trust your judgment, the stronger your brand will get. Not to mention that the ability to write just might be what gets you noticed by the right people. My blogging has given me the opportunity to write for magazines, journals, and other blogs across the nation. The consistency of my posts has gotten me numerous speaking engagements. So, please write. You never know who will read it.

4) Make better decisions
I’m not big on New Year’s Resolutions. But, since it’s the first Monday of 2015, I will ask you to resolve to do one thing: Make better decisions. At a point in history where almost everything done outside one’s own home is recorded by one camera or another, your ability to make great decisions is what will keep your online presence intact. My father told me time and time again that it takes years to build a great reputation but one bad decision can ruin all that you’ve worked hard to build. So make a decision today to be intentional in everything you do. If you go out for drinks, do so with the knowledge that too many will land you on Instagram as a meme. If you tweet an offensive statement, just know that words are often misconstrued years later and, if you have any hopes at a corporate career in the future, that may be pulled out of the Twitter archives 15 years from now. For those of you who, like myself, are set on entrepreneurship and, therefore, believe they haven’t got anyone to answer to, how wrong you are. Poor word choices made by owners of major companies can cost them millions in revenue every year. So choose your words wisely. They will be what make or break your future.

Take my advice folks. I don’t know a lot but I know a few things and I know that how you are perceived is what is going to put you in a position to make your dreams come true. So protect your name. Enhance your brand. And Google me.

WordPress

Good evening. I’m running a bit late on my blog tonight and, because of poor planning, I didn’t think about what application to focus on for my #TechTuesday post today. Then I thought about the fact that blogging is the new “in” thing and I knew I’d post about the WordPress application that I use at least 2 to 3 times a week to get The Reader published on the day it’s supposed to be published.

This app is amazing. I can do almost everything on here that I can from wordpress.com and that is great because it keeps me from having to leave the apartment and post from a location with wifi. Throughout the day, I look at the app to check my readership stats, approve comments, and review older posts or edit drafts of posts to come. If you are a blogger and you use WordPress, check this app out. If not, I have a blog with Blogger.com (D3in3D.blogspot.com) and their app is decent too but, having used both, I can say the WordPress app has more functional features.

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