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    November 28, 2008

    How does a young person get a job in advertising or PR in a recession?

    Llamallamallama by eschipul I was one of three panelists for a talk with AAF-HIMA Houston a few weeks ago. My PPT slides are posted. Each presenter only had 10 minutes, which is a rough format, but it did force me to distill the content down. Two slides with recommendations for individuals and agencies to get through the recession are:

    1. What can I, the employee or job seeker, do?
      1. Build your personal brand
      2. Participate in social networks
      3. Stay close to billable work
      4. Be humble (arrogant people suck)
    2. What can my agency do?
      1. Relationships - build and maintain (hint - see social networks above)
      2. Recurring revenue - focus on recurring
      3. Retrain, retool and recruit (biggest weakness of the old slow agencies)
      4. Get rid of dead weight NOW
      5. Charge for creative (most hopefully already do this)

    After that talk I received numerous emails from young people in the audience looking for employment. This is ok initiative, although it is noted that they all said "what do I do?" instead of "here is my plan, do you think this will work?". The difference again being one of initiative, but I'll leave that for another blog post. So some advice with candor.

    How does a young person get a job in advertising or PR in a recession?

    1. Network - yes Dorothy when times are tough it really does matter who you know. But right now with social media and being active in arts and non-profits you have NO EXCUSE not to know the right people. So drop that excuse.
    2. Avoid obvious errors. One email I received had a typo in the subject line. See this previous post on an email I received from a brilliant job seeker once.
    3. Experience - get some. In a recession the negotiating power is to the employer and people ALWAYS learn through experience. So you almost always favor the experienced. How do you get experience?
      1. Internships - the most obvious
      2. Internships - design your own. Contact your church, present an outline of your "custom designed three week internship". Odds are they will say no, but at least try. Get off your duff and try it.
      3. Arts and Non Profits - they always need free labor. Again, make it easy for them to say yes by doing the legwork.
      4. Charities - donate your time over the holidays, anything, just somehow focus on skills where you want employment.
    4. Seek referrals - many of our best employees come from referrals. So it doesn't hurt to meet people who work where you want to work. Plus you might find out they are jerks and you don't want to work there. Or it may reinforce a positive impression. But again, show some initiative.
    5. Do your homework - the fastest way out of an interview if you get one is to not have done your homework on the company you are applying with.
    6. Send your resume anyway - even with no job listings, you can submit. Ideally through a friend who works there and can vouch for you. There probably aren't any openings, but why not try?
    7. Submit your resume to the right person - For example, at our firm I am usually NOT the right person. Find the RIGHT person and submit to them. If you know a principal at the agency do a "cc" if you want, but sending it to the right person is critical. Do your homework.
    8. Resubmit your resume - companies have to have an applicant tracking system or they won't keep the resumes. (hint - few have ATS systems) HR lawyers tell companies not to retain unless they are retaining all resumes and are indeed looking at them. So most people will just delete the resumes after filling a position. Yes really. So don't think once you are in "the database" at an agency you will be considered in the future. It just isn't so.
    9. Lose the attitude - it worked in HS, maybe in your Greek, but a bit of deference is always required when working with clients. You can be humble and be a bad-ass. In fact most REAL bad-ass creatives I know are actually quite humble in person. They are SO good, they let their work speak for them. Find these people and learn from them.
    10. Don't be too polished - it makes you look untrustworthy. If your facebook profile (you do have one right?) looks like Mr. Clean worked it over, well its pretty obvious you're a poser, right? Just sayin'. I can watch paint dry if I am looking for excitement, so why work with you?
    11. Do NOT say "I'm not good at math" - duh, advertising definitely requires basic math. I'm not talking about diffy-q, but come on. If you can't reconcile media buying you make yourself sound like a fool. This burns a lot of applicants IMHO.
    12. Build your personal brand - facebook? yes. Twitter? yes. Blogging, Flickr, myspace, delicious, etc definnitely consider. For example at our company these are huge advantages, but maybe not at other companies. Again - do your research.
    13. You've got 7 Seconds to make a first impression - read it.
    14. Learn about blogging - Katie has a great "blogging for business" presentation on slideshare.
    15. Realize details, large and small, are the same - if you can't remember to clean the coffee pot it is the same as saying "hey, I'll fly to Tokyo and then oversleep past the big meeting". Yes really, basic human psychology. So watch out for those simple questions because it is an experienced interviewer's way of asking if you are careless.
    16. Know where you are going - If you don't know where you want to be in two years, and you are a millenial, you are saying you are floating with the wind. Why on earth would you hire someone drifting, train them, only to hvae them then leave to fish off the coast of Alaska? I mean that person makes an awesome and interesting friend, but perhaps a less than ideal person to invest 20k training in. Right? Candor is good. Find out where you are going.
    17. Read books - life is too short to not learn from others who have gone before you. Be smart - read. Nuf said.
    18. Don't look like a job hopper - I hear what Penelope says about job hopping. I also know squirrels can run on power lines. But like the Electric Company says YOU ARE NOT A SQUIRREL! On the flip side, she has some good news for young job searchers here.
    19. Buy people lunch or a beer - one of the joys of being a manager, or a ceo, is that you always get the tab. Offer to buy someone lunch and you invoke the law of reciprocation. Yes, spend the money.  (pet peeve - people you KNOW have savings who say "I don't have any money" because we call this a "lie". Sheesh. Say "not in my budget" instead.)

    Well I rambled a bit. Many of those are clearly not recession or advertising agency specific. But that is what came to mind this afternoon on November 28th 2008. Good luck with your job search!

    January 18, 2008

    Web Marketing Deck from Rice Advertising Lecture

    From my guest lecture for the Advertising Class at Rice University yesterday, here is the slide deck.

    November 17, 2007

    Best Advertising Slogan Ever Written

    There is little if anything I could add to Nick Padmore's obsessive linguistic analysis of the best copy shots and advertising slogans ever written. While I desperately want to tell you the results, to blog post the best ad slogan ever written, that would be wrong. So go read it:

    Greatest Copy Shot Ever Written

    ...So what makes good copy good? Perhaps we can find out by considering what’s made the best of the best…the best.

    In the year 2000, some of the stars of creative advertising during the 20th century nominated 115 best slogans, straplines, taglines, and headlines, all of which could broadly be ... (READ)

    October 19, 2007

    AAF of Fort Smith Social Media Presentation Deck

    Presentations slides from my American Advertising Federation of Fort Smith Arkansas presentation on Social Media are below. If you want to embed this in YOUR blog or web site go to the AAF presentation on slideshare.net and copy/paste the "embed" part on the right hand side.

    A few links that I mentioned
    www.technorati.com - search the blogosphere
    www.lynda.com - great for training
    www.slideshare.net - youtube for slides
    www.schipul.com/en/sem/keywords/ - keyword density analyzer
    www.marketleap.com - link popularity checker

    Books:
    The Tipping Point - Gladwell
    Naked Conversations - Scoble, Israel

    August 20, 2007

    Making Them Wait - People Just Don't Understand

    Making them wait - interesting advertising! But be prepared to commit 2 full minutes before clicking play.

    Link found here from an American Copywriter link on Grok Newsletter Post.

    July 19, 2007

    Audit Bureau for Newspapers Now Includes Online Readers


      investigation analysis publication 4 
      Originally uploaded by eschipul

    The Audit Bureau of Circulations now is going to include online numbers in newspaper "read" figures. File this under "if the math doesn't add up change the operators."

    Audit Bureau Makes It Official: Newspaper Circulation Statistics Group Will Roll Online Readership into Circ Figures to Help Slumping Industry

    The Audit Bureau of Circulations said this week that it would begin tallying online readership as well as print-edition circulation in a boost to an industry where advertising sales have suffered from a migration of readers to the Web. The organization said it would release newspapers' print, online and combined readership figures. The numbers are a key factor in negotiations on newspaper advertising rates between newspapers and marketers, Reuters reports. (more on newspaper audit figures)

    Emphasis added. Note the focus on "newspaper advertising sales" as the driver. If this is done realistically then it is a good thing. But unfortunately with newspaper ad salespeople this is unlikely. As Disraeli said "there are lies, damn lies, and statistics."

    Specifically when it comes to advertising I have always found the "readership as a big multiple of subscriptions" to be an insult to a business man's intelligence. You have 10 subscribers, and hey, they leave it on the coffee table so 7 other people read it, so we charge an advertiser as if that 1 subscription equated to 8 readers. Oh really?

    Continue reading "Audit Bureau for Newspapers Now Includes Online Readers" »

    July 02, 2007

    Ethics of Clicking Adverts on Blogs of Friends

    From the post on the ethics of clicking ads a la Robin Hood:

    I was surprised to read a comment promoting click fraud on AlexKing’s blog.  I wanted to comment on how misinformed the person is and have written an ...

    May 10, 2007

    Trunk Monkey Television Ads for Suburban Auto Group

    Gotta love the Trunk Monkey TV ads for Suburban Auto Group. Well done!

    April 23, 2007

    Friending is Not the New Ad, It is the New Advertising-Denial

    I think this post on friending being the new advertisement misses the point. Friending is the new advertising-intrusion-followed-by-rejection-with-a-few-accepts. Think Telemarketing. When a brand says "You don't know me but I want to be your friend", and they have not contributed in any meaningful way to my network, that is an intrusion.

    Ahhhhh, the attack approach and get rejected method. Isn't that what banner ads tried to do before we all installed pop-up blockers? Just asking..

    March 17, 2007

    SMS Text Shortcode Howto Roundup for Advertisers

    Twitter is doing a great job of blasting down barriers between web and SMS texting. While at SXSW when the SMS stopped, I popped over to a web browser on the blackberry and kept going. But SMS was more convenient.

    So if a you want their own short code, how do you get one? Well luckily this shortcode post on GigaOM answers that question.

    10 Things to Know About Short Codes

    Do you need one? If you want to market or promote something to mobile users, manage mobile communications to members of a group or organization, or get cell phone users to access your mobile application or service — then, maybe. How much are you willing to spend and what kind do you need? Here’s 10 things to know about short codes, how to get them and what to avoid:

    1). There are two kinds of short codes, shared and dedicated. (finish the shortcode article here)

    Update: Note the comments regarding qtags - a Houston based Short Code Service! Thanks for the comments Allison!