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Keppie Careers

Social media speaker, social media consultant, job search coach

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JobShouts co-founder describes tool for job seekers

September 23, 2009 By Miriam Salpeter

jobshoutsWhen I attended ERE Expo earlier this month, I had the chance to meet a lot of terrific people. Two new friends are the co-founders of JobShouts.com, Robin Eads and Michael Quale. JobShouts is a tool that helps connect job seekers with opportunities via social networks. Robin was kind enough to give a brief overview in this video.


To read Job Shouts’ most recent press release, CLICK HERE.
For more about Job Shouts, visit jobshouts.com

Need help getting your job search up and running? Learn how I can help!

Filed Under: Job Hunting Tools, Uncategorized Tagged With: career coach, ERE Expo, job search, JobShouts, keppie careers, Mchael Quale, Miriam Salpeter, Robin Eads

Not convinced that social networking can propel your job hunt?

September 22, 2009 By Miriam Salpeter

If there is one thing that I learned at the ERE Expo conference targeted at recruiters and career professionals earlier this month, it is that social networking is a key way that recruiters identify and source candidates. Have you been hesitating to use social media for your job hunt? Maybe you think it is a fad? Take a look at this video from Socialnomics…

A few key points:

Facebook added 100 million users in less than 9 months! If Facebook were a country, it would be the world’s 4th largest.

80% of companies are using LinkedIn as their primary way to find employees.

Are you making it easy for people to find you? Watch this if you think social media is not important. It may just change your mind!

Thanks to my friend Andy Drish for sending a link to this video on Twitter!

Let me help you navigate the social networks to propel your job hunt!

Filed Under: Job Hunting Tools, Networking, social media, Social Networking Tagged With: career coach, job search, keppie careers, Miriam Salpeter, social networking for job hunt, socialnomics

Use an email address you "own" when you sign up for LinkedIn

September 18, 2009 By Miriam Salpeter

LinkedInpic_logo_119x32A friend recently contacted me to ask for  help for one of his clients. His dilemma? The client had created a LinkedIn profile, but he didn’t remember the password AND he had used a work email address only to set up the profile. Unfortunately, he was no longer at the job and did not have access to the email account that LinkedIn would use to send him a reset password!

While LinkedIn customer service might be able to help, it is a good reminder to everyone – DON’T use an email address that you won’t always have access to when you sign up for social networks. Instead, set up a Gmail or other “take with you” account as the primary address and add your current work mails as additionals. That way, you’ll never be locked out of your OWN profile!

Need more advice to help you move your job search forward? I can help!

Filed Under: Job Hunting Tools, Social Networking Tagged With: Atlanta, Career Advice, job hunt, job search, keppie careers, linkedin, Miriam Salpeter

Spell your name wrong in LinkedIn?

September 6, 2009 By Miriam Salpeter

LinkedInpic_logo_119x32Today, my colleague Dan Schawbel tweeted a link to an article by Scott Kirsner with information about LinkedIn that makes some interesting new suggestions and tips for LinkedIn users. I’ve been writing about LinkedIn for some time, but found a few great tips from Kirsner’s sources, Lee Hower (part of the founding team of LinkedIn, reporting to the chief executive) and David Gowel (called a “Jedi knight of LinkedIn.”)

Whether or not you use these tips, be sure that you optimize your profile to include all of your previous jobs and keywords that will help people find you!

Some points they suggest in the piece that I have not written about (points theirs; commentary in my words):

Spell your name wrong.
How many people are searching for you, but spelling your name wrong? O’Mally suggests including typical misspellings of your name in the “Summary” section. My suggestion – if you have changed your name after marriage or have a nic name many people know (or used to know) you as, include those as well.

Take advantage of the toolbars.
While I don’t think that job seekers should spend an excessive amount of time searching for jobs on job boards, I thought this was a great reminder from the article:

Add the free LinkedIn Browser Toolbar (available at the bottom of any LinkedIn page, to the right of the “Tools’’ heading). “If you go to job-hunting sites like Craigslist, CareerBuilder, or Monster and you’re looking at a job at a specific company, the toolbar tells you the number of people in your network who work at that company,’’ O’Malley says. “You can also see lists of those people’’ who might be willing to help call attention to your resume once you’ve sent it in.

I love this idea! It’s the perfect combination of networking and job board searching! Although, I like to advise clients to research and identify organizations rather than specific jobs, this is an enhancing option for job board fans.

LinkedIn can replace business cards.
There’s a tiny link called “View/Edit contact info” that is in the right column of the screen for people who are connected to you. Did you know that you can actually save information about your contacts and use LinkedIn as a rolodex of sorts?

Automated searches.
Did you know that you can track people being hired or leaving a company? (Stealthy!) Gowel says, “After you’ve done a search (regular or advanced), just click the link that says “Save this search.’’ LinkedIn will email you information weekly or monthly!

Stealthy vs. public prowling.
You may or may not realize that LinkedIn tracks who views your profile. Well – there is a way for you to avoid being tracked. The post notes, “Click “Account and Settings’’ in the upper right corner of most pages, then under “Privacy Settings’’ choose “Profile Views.’’ You can select:

This can be useful if you are stalking profiles, but think carefully about this option…There may be reasons that it would actually HELP you if someone knows you have reviewed their profile. For example, if you are going to be interviewed and you review the profile of your interviewer. I think it is a good thing for that person to know you are doing your homework!

There are other tips, but these were a few that I haven’t shared in the past! Read the entire post HERE.

Need an optimized LinkedIn profile? Some tips to get your search moving forward? Learn how I can help with your job hunt.



Filed Under: Social Networking Tagged With: David Gowel, job search, keppie careers, Lee Hower, LinkedIn tips, Miriam Salpeter, new LinkedIn tips

A new paradigm for work? Slash careers and Gen Y

August 27, 2009 By Miriam Salpeter

sunnyday325950178_aaa3c571cd_mA shadow seems to remain over the job market for new college grads. The Hire Ground blog quoted my colleage, Lindsey Pollak:

While many of Gen Y’s employment troubles can be blamed solely on the current economy, there are other difficult circumstances they must overcome, Pollak says. Those with the misfortune of having been born in the 1980s are also the first wave of job seekers who have been trained to seek conventional careers yet are entering a workplace that is alien to every previous generation.

“The old paradigm is clearly not working anymore,” she says. “The thinking was that all the baby boomers would start to retire and there would be lots of new positions open, but that’s not happening. Even the meaning of the word ‘career’ is changing. You’re not going to see people working for one company for 30 years anymore.”

There’s no doubt that Gen Y (and all) job seekers who embrace the new paradigm will be the most successful finding fulfilling positions, but those positions may look very different from the old norms.

The article notes:

Pollak, author of the new post-grad bible, “Getting From College to Career: 90 Things to Do Before You Join the Real World,” says some new terms are cropping to describe the peripatetic nature of employment today, in which workers will commonly jump from job to job, sometimes moving into several different fields. Some are calling these “slash-careers,” she says, referring to the need to add a series of slashes in job descriptions (e.g., editor/speaker/dancer). Others say young job seekers are members of “free-agent nation” and need to become their own CEOs and take more control of their careers.

Marci Alboher, author of One Person/Multiple Careers,  authority on “slash careers” and the writer who likely first coined the term notes on her website:

“…slash careers integrate and fully express the multiple passions, talents, and interests that a single career often cannot accommodate.“

Anyone looking for a job, particularly young people with less experience, will do well to embrace a variety of types of internships, part-time work and entrepreneurial options to take advantage of the opportunities the current economy offers. No, it isn’t your father’s job market…The situation requires a creative approach and may result in different types of results from the ones college students might have expected. However, there are positive aspects to the situation – the proverbial “silver lining.”

For one Gen Y’s optimistic take on the situation, see the video interview with Stephanie Perrett, a Gen Y intern for Stephanie A. Lloyd and Radiant Veracity:


If your search is stalling, consider getting some help to get it jump started? Not sure you can put all of the great tools at your disposal to good use? Need a great resume? Learn how I can help you propel your job hunt forward.

photo by hana8hana

Filed Under: Career Advice, Drive Your Career Bus, Job Stories, Personal Branding, Uncategorized Tagged With: job search, keppie careers, Marci Alboher, Miriam Salpeter, optimistic Gen Y, slash careers, Stephanie A. Lloyd, Stephanie Perrett

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