5 Ways Job Seekers Can Truly Stand Out
Dave Kerpen
Serial Entrepreneur, NY Times Best-Selling Author, Global Keynote Speaker, Investor, Writer for INC.com
Competition in the workplace is more intense than ever. With all of the competition, how can you stand out from everyone else and get whatever offer you want?
The best form of career insurance is becoming a recognized expert in your field, and my friend Dorie Clark discusses exactly how to do it in her new book, Stand Out: How to Find Your Breakthrough Idea and Build a Following Around It. Here are her five key strategies:
1. Own your uniqueness. If you really want to stand out, don’t try to mold yourself into a corporate cookie cutter. Instead, recognize what makes you different, whether it’s a cross-cultural background, a passionate knowledge of a particular hobby, or a career switch that’s given you insight into multiple fields. That perspective enables you to see the world differently and offer valuable insights.
2. Leverage your affiliations. One of the most powerful forces in psychology is social proof – the tendency for people to look for external cues to gauge how they should react to something. If you can surround yourself with forms of social proof – whether it’s having gone to a noteworthy college, having worked for a blue-chip firm, or even having a wide variety of recommendations written about you on LinkedIn – it’s likely that others will take note and evaluate you positively.
3. Pick a cause. Getting involved with a charity isn’t just a nice thing to do. It’s also a fantastic way to develop professional skills (because when you’re volunteering, you have the ability to take more chances and try new things) and build strong relationships (because you’re connecting with influential people over shared values). If you really commit, the charity becomes part of your personal brand, and an integral part of how others know you. That’s how you can create a powerful network and a professional reputation that precedes you.
4. Expand your network. Every professional has people they’d like to meet but who don’t currently seem attainable. Emailing with a standard ask for coffee or to “pick their brain” probably won’t cut it. But there’s a surprising strategy Dorie describes in Stand Out – namely, that blog or podcast interviews can be a form of networking. A busy leader might hesitate to spend an hour giving a stranger one-on-one advice, but if she knows you’re going to share those insights with thousands of other people, the value proposition changes and you’re much more likely to get a yes.
5. Create content. Sharing your ideas publicly is one of the best ways to stand out. As “knowledge workers,” it’s very hard for potential employers to evaluate what you know and how well you do your job. So make it visible for them by writing down your ideas on a LinkedIn blog or elsewhere. If you don’t feel like you’re much of a writer, podcasts or videos also work well – the point is to create content, regardless of the channel. If you can provide a unique perspective about trends in your industry, a how-to for common challenges, or overturn misconceptions, you’re doing the world – and your personal brand – a great service.
More than ever, it’s important for job seekers to stand out. By following these strategies, you’ll shoot to the front of the line.
Dorie Clark's new book is now available on Amazon and major booksellers everywhere.
Now it's your turn. What do you think is the most effective way to stand out while job searching? Please let me know in the comments section below, and please share this with your network to help others truly stand out!
Dave Kerpen is the founder and CEO of Likeable Local. He is also the co-founder and Chairman of Likeable Media, and the New York Times-bestselling author of Likeable Social Media, Likeable Business, and the new collection, Likeable Leadership. To read more from Dave on LinkedIn, please click the FOLLOW button above or below.
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8 年Great read! I really enjoyed reading. You might like this as well: https://bit.ly/1JUFHxV
ClInical Psychologist, Social Worker and Advocate in Family and Human Services
9 年I agree with you. Where I live we need some father inside. I use each of them, I always consider be yourself and apply each of those principles could help us.
I think it's true to own yourself and not to underestimate yourself but to believe. The only wall to break is fear.
Executive Assistant to Leaders of Multi-National Corporations
9 年Great post. Sharing your ideas and what you know in your own field is definitely a way to be different from your competitors.
Saw something a little different from this but Dorie is indeed correct. Apply your uniqueness liberally and take ownership of your difference.