Showing posts with label networking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label networking. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Need a speaker? Meet my mentor, Rod!

A few weeks ago I was begging everyone I know to vote for me for the Unity Journalists' New U business pitch competition. If you voted or helped spread the word, THANK YOU from the bottom of my heart!

I won the online vote, and am waiting to find out my score from a panel of seasoned entrepreneurs. Their score counts as 2/3 of my total score ... if I win, I get $10k in seed money for my writing company.

The program I participated in was wonderful in every way. During the program, each contestant was matched with a mentor.

My mentor was AMAZING! His name is Rod Colon, and he's a master networker, executive/career coach, author and radio show host. Based in New Jersey, he worked for JP Morgan on Wall Street for many years as an executive recruiter before launching his own company in 1997. He has traveled all over the world helping students and professionals navigate their career.

I consider myself very fortunate to have had an opportunity to attend college and benefit from all of the resources available -- including lectures and programs on campus, my school's career resource center, etc.

Following a magazine layoff in 2008, I became a career advice junkie and still follow a ton of career blogs to this day to try to stay proactive in my professional growth.

Even with all of these opportunities, I can tell you that I have learned SO MUCH from Rod since I met him in October. Even with all of the resources available to me, there was/still is so much I never knew about networking.

Rod has changed my life. Every Tuesday, we have a standard mentorship call in which we discuss business/career strategies, opportunities, etc. I'm really grateful to have met him,
and I feel the need to pay it forward.

As a young woman, I wasn't always comfortable negotiating salaries, tooting my own horn, or taking credit for my work.

Rod has taught me so much in such a short time. I'm talking insider secrets from his experience on Wall Street -- a world that someone like me, the granddaughter of Mexican migrant farm workers, would never have access to.

If your school, company, organization, church, etc. needs a dynamic speaker to empower you ... Rod is your guy. And no, I'm not getting paid to say this or paid for speaking engagements he acquires.

I'm saying this because he's that good.

I'm saying this because I believe his message is too good ... too essential ... to keep to myself.

I'm saying this because I know that you WILL benefit from hearing him.

Want to meet him? Here's his contact info:

Rod Colón
Master Networker, Professional Development, Executive Coach, Speaker, Author
Weekly Co-Host of Radio Show "YOUR CAREER IS CALLING"
732-367-5580

Also, I just finished reading a great book on networking that Rod suggested to me. It's called Never Eat Alone by Keith Ferrazzi, and I highly recommend it!

Monday, January 18, 2010

Tap Into the Hidden Job Market

Finding work is a full-time job, and with 15.3 million unemployed Americans to compete against, it pays to work smarter.

To help local job seekers gain a competitive edge, the Orlando Business Journal recently hosted its periodic seminar called, “Job Hunting with the Business Journal.”

Robert Bobroff, circulation sales executive, walked attendees through the journal while teaching methods to uncover potential job leads.

Right out of college, Bobroff launched a 13-year career in the real estate industry. When the market tanked, Bobroff started looking for new career opportunities.

He started his job search the way many people do — behind the computer screen. He e-mailed resume after resume and filled out tons of online forms.

But the phone never rang.

Everything changed when he stepped away from the computer, and started networking. In fact, his current job at the OBJ was never posted.

Today, many companies know that they don’t have to bother with posting opportunities on job boards, Bobroff says. They can simply wait for candidates to come to them. And boy, do they come. Bobroff beat out 16 other qualified candidates for his un-posted job.

Here are some of Bobroff’s job search hints.

Read business news to dig up potential jobs in the hidden market. Review articles through a job-hunter’s glasses. Look for news about:

  • expansions
  • promotions
  • new permits
  • project or grant awards

These are all indications that a company may need to hire soon.

Don’t dismiss a company because it’s not in your industry. Remember that hospitals, engineering firms and research institutes may need sales professionals, marketing people, administrative support and more.

Get active. Gain valuable insight about potential opportunities before they’re public, and expand your network by using warm calls, Bobroff says. People love to hear, “I read about you in the paper.” Call or e-mail a potential employer and congratulate him or her on the company’s new expansion project, contract, award, etc. Employers want to hire a person who shows initiative.

Make networking a priority. Study the business news to find people you know, and people who you should know. Look for news about companies on your wish list. Cut out the clipping and send it to the contact with a handwritten note, Bobroff says.

While e-mails can get stuck in spam folders or lost in inboxes, most people read each piece of U.S. mail they receive. Offer to treat the contact for coffee in the handwritten note.When you attend networking events, arrive early and stay late.

View relationships as opportunities to help others, rather than what you can get out of them. The best networkers want to help you first, Bobroff says. To start a conversation, ask a person what he or she does. Think about who you can introduce them to. More often than not, they will reciprocate.

Pay attention to advertising. When a company purchases an ad to announce an achievement, take note. Send a congratulatory e-mail. Show interest, and watch what happens.

Dig for contact info. To uncover contact information for companies, check out SunBiz.org. Can’t find the e-mail address for a specific person? Check the company Web site for e-mail addresses that are available. Copy the formatting to potentially uncover the e-mail address. For example, if e-mail addresses on the company Web site uses the first initial followed by the last name, most likely it’s the same format for the person you hope to contact.

Bobroff’s workshop was right in line with what I’ve been reading in Kathleen Conners’ “The Thrill of the Hunt.” Conners began her human resources career in the early 1990s when unemployment in her hometown, Colorado Springs, hit 7.9 percent.

In Chapter 7 of her book, Conners describes strategies to uncover employment opportunities using:

  • industry award lists
  • industry and trade publications
  • university alumni publications
  • chamber of commerce directories
  • business journals
  • Books of Lists

She even includes scripts to use during warm calls to help shy job hunters.

To find out about industry trends, Conners suggests reaching out to sales executives at companies because they tend to know everything about their industry, stay on top of news, know everyone in their company and keep tabs on their competitors.

To find out the telephone extensions of hiring managers, Conners recommends calling the company after-hours and listening to the company directory, if available. You can experiment with extensions and listen to names to uncover direct lines for key contacts.

Visit http://peoplehirepeople.com/book.html to find out about Conners’ book. For more information on the next OBJ workshop, contact Bobroff at rbobroff@bizjournals.com or 407.241.2912.