Career Advice From Microsoft, McKinsey & Pixlee
To remain competitive in the age of constant innovation, millennials must learn to adapt and develop new skill sets. Having a data driven mindset along with hard skills are now just table stakes in today’s competitive market.
Recently, I have been receiving many emails from millennials for advice to start and sustain a successful career, especially in marketing. Marketing, especially in social media and data analytics, has recently grown to become a popular career choice among millennials. In 2015, Glassdoor ranked marketing as the top 25 Highest Paying Jobs in Demand and Best Jobs for Work-Life Balance.
To understand the skills needed for a successful career, I sat down with thought leaders and executives from Microsoft, Pixlee, and McKinsey & Co. as they share their career advice to millennials. Although these advice were geared toward millennial marketers, they can easily apply to other career paths.
Social Empathy Trumps Hard Skills
Geoffrey Colon, Communications Designer at Microsoft and Author of Disruptive Marketing
This skill may catch many marketers off guard because it's not one you can simply learn like video editing or statistics. It's called social empathy. How can you put yourself in the shoes of others (usually your customers) and be truly human? Computer technology and automation is taking over a large part of marketing once done by people. But empathy isn't something machines can learn. We want to speak to humans when it comes to ideas and project management. We want to entrust their vision more than programmatic software.
To put it another way: being a great performer in marketing is becoming less about what you know and more about what you’re like. That's why the most well-rounded and curious personalities make for good marketers and not process-driven left brain analytical types. Start early by exposing yourself to new ideas you don't feel comfortable with. Being agile and not rigid on your life outlook will help you immensely. Consider taking some behavioral psychology and sociology classes.
Thinking Like An Entrepreneur
Kyle Wong, Co-founder and CEO of the visual marketing company Pixlee
My advice to millennials entering marketing is to think like an entrepreneur and to always be learning. Like entrepreneurs, marketers in today's environment need to be strategic, creative, analytical, and they need to be passionate about their work. Today's marketing world is changing faster than ever. What you know today will have a large impact on getting your job, but what you learn while on the job will determine whether or not you excel at it.
In-house digital teams must act like startups because they are typically understaffed despite the rapidly growing industry and increasing expectation to perform. The best digital marketers emphasize testing and constant learning. Digital media today encompasses a myriad of different touch points, platforms, and forms of advertising. As a result, good marketers need to stay up to date with the newest technology and test to see if it’s effective for their respective business. [an excerpt from Forbes: Digital Marketer: The Most Entrepreneurial Job In Marketing]
Top of Mind Through Thought Leadership
Glenn Leibowitz, Head of Communications at McKinsey and LinkedIn Top Voice
If you want to get into marketing, you need to walk the talk—do something that makes you look like you're already active in the space. For example, have at least two active social media accounts, with LinkedIn as your primary account, but one other like Twitter, and start sharing content about marketing topics.
Consider starting your own blog or start blogging on LinkedIn, Medium, or another platform like that. Write what you know best, don't over-research pieces, keep them brief, but commit to once-a-month frequency if you can.
Learn everything you can that's out there about marketing. There's tons of free resources. But consider investing in paid online and offline courses as well so you can start building real skills that will transfer into a job quickly.
Parting Thoughts
Do you agree with the advice from these thought leaders and executives? How do you define success? What advice would you give to millennials? Comment below!
--
Tai Tran writes as a millennial voice on marketing, millennials, and thought leadership, and academia. Tai is also a LinkedIn Top Voice and Forbes 30 Under 30 in Marketing & Advertising. He teaches marketing and digital publishing at UC Berkeley.
Enjoyed this piece? Follow Tai on Forbes, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Reach out and subscribe to my monthly newsletter. Like what you read? Share, like, and comment. All opinions expressed are my own and they do not reflect the opinions of any of my current organizations. This originally appeared on Forbes. #StudentVoices
Product Operations @ NFX
8 年Great article and advice! The importance of social empathy didn't come to me until I read this, and I do agree that building connections as a marketer stems from being able to connect from human to human. Living in the very fast-paced digital age, it's so easy to get caught up with focusing on the more technical aspects.
It is your concern when your neighbor’s wall is on fire
8 年What advice would you give to millennials? Great question. Here's the approach that I'd recommend that millennials take Tai. I'd recommend that you take a computer engineering approach to your business dealings. When you do that, you have to break things down to the smallest possible, controllable variable. Computers are absolutely stupid. They have to reduce things to absolute know-ability. There are no black boxes. You’ve got to know what’s happening. So taking a computer approach forces you to tell the truth; it forces you to look at what’s actually happening. You’ve got to get all your attitudes out of the way and all of your leaps of faith and all of your beliefs and all of the buzzwords and what the news and the PR machines are saying and what the industry press and research analysts/consultants are saying and just start dealing with the basic, raw, hard, little facts: the real-world events, the issues, the people impacted and the financial implications and the basic, simple way that those raw, hard little facts relate to each other. Once that's done you have a foundation to build on.