Wednesday, October 5, 2016

So you want to join the "Gig Economy"?

So You Want to Join the Gig Economy? 



As a "career contractor", I've received a lot of requests for advice and tips from people that are contemplating making a move into the world of contracting. I'm happy to share my thoughts and experience but believe a roadmap is the best thing I can provide to get you on track if this is the path you want to take your career. I'll be posting the roadmap in a series of articles on Friday afternoon over the next several weeks. I hope to help guide your decision making and paint a realistic picture of life working in the Gig Economy. 
Here are the five stops on the roadmap:
1) Self-assessment. 
A short quiz to determine if you have the goods to succeed in the contingent workforce. 
2) Get your financial house in order. 
These are the steps you need to take in order to become financially stable enough to take on the risk that is contract work.

3) Establish your network. 
In this article I'll be sharing the 5 types of people/resources you must have in your stable to successfully create a pipeline of work. 
4) Building your personal brand. 
Tips for honing your personal brand and creating demand for your skills and abilities. 
5) Get gigs. 
Tips, advice and help for contract interviews, writing a contractor resume and other elements of getting hired for projects.

This blog has been verified by Rise: R37e3c0824f2be304074de2468c74c123

Friday, May 30, 2014

New Series! Debunking Buzzwords Week 1: Responsive Design

My recent clients have all been pretty obsessed with "responsive design". And although it is an important part of the user experience, I feel the term has garnered too much buzz recently. See, for User Experience experts and your better digital marketers, we have historically just called this "looking right", which isn't a new concept.

Responsive Design was born in the 90s and only recently became an integral part of coding (as we didn't have such a wide variety of devices to query - it was mainly to ensure your boss with his super big resolution setting didn't panic when he looked at the site once a month.)  It seems a bit too "feely" for a technical term. I think Device Recognition makes more sense - and doesn't fog Marketing Execs into thinking you're talking about some kind of CRM tool when you bring it up.

Responsive Design does sound nice though doesn't it? Isn't it always nice to get a response?
That's why I prefer to frame this as a CONTENT consideration, not a technical one. Searching for curtains? We show you curtains. BOOM, responsive design. Curious about car insurance quotes in your neighborhood? A link to an ad for a quote appears on your Facebook margin. Responsive design again! We can get even more literal. Having trouble using your FireTV? Click HELP and get real time, personalized assistance. Yep, that's my kind of responsive design.



 

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Your Business Goal Mantra - The What and Why Answer to Everything

What's your company "ommmmmm"? 

Not sure what I mean? Well, I'm looking for your daily mantra. Still wondering?

Let's start with this question: Do you know what your business goals are? You better - especially if you're about to embark on a campaign or web redesign project. Cause any decent agency or design firm is going to need the answer. And you need to be able to hold up your mantra card to help keeps things on track.


How do I know what our business goal mantra is?

Take time to fully appreciate and contemplate this question right now. Seriously, grab a coffee and sit with this for a while. Write down the goals of your organization (or department, or even your daily quota.) Play Enya if it helps. (Please use headphones.)

Caution - are the goals opportunities? Great! Can you prioritize them - or perhaps consolidate? "Grow revenue in Southeast region" and "Increase overall widget accessories sales" both mean "Sell More". Alternate ideas such as "positioning ourselves as the Greenest Widget Manufacturer" is also a goal.

Now, translate your highly considered and inclusive goals into a mantra. This is a short, concise, statement. Your mantra should be easy to remember and non-negotiable way to communicate WHY you do WHAT you do every day. Any time discussion sways to functionality, gadgets, tools, or design, revisit the mantra. Ask yourself, does this serve the mantra? Or is it just "cool"? Save yourselves time and money by always bouncing ideas off the mantra. Guard and defend your mantra. Don't let shiny things overshadow it. THERE SHOULD NEVER BE A HOW OR A WHO in your mantra.

Share your mantra with all of your business partners. Let them know it is king. It's more important than the cool new tools or apps, it's more important than what an executive saw on their kids iPad, it's more important than any one's ego.

Leveraging a business goal mantra will help agencies, information architects, and even developers understand your company better, and therefore make the best recommendations for you. It's fundamental.

Keep Clicking. And you can listen to something else now.

Michelle


Monday, July 16, 2012

Stop putting it off...invest in Social Media NOW.

It's really kind of a "duh" anyway. You do NOT need to increase your marketing budget to accommodate Social Media. You do need to repriortize and cut spending in more traditional areas.

Here are 5 simple ways to either redirect your marketing dollars toward Social Media or advertise for free:

1) CUT YOUR DIRECT MAIL
Unless you're putting out incredible deals (COUPONS) and really cool glossy magazine style catalogs (like Alloy - which offsets it's catalog cost by partnering with advertisers), cut your mailing campaigns by 25% (or more.) You also get to say you've made a "green choice".

2) CANCEL THOSE OLD SCHOOL BANNER AD CAMPAIGNS
Talking about the old school kind, on AOL, Yahoo or anywhere other than Facebook. Just stop. Do invest some of that money on Facebook ads.

3) PUT CONTENT GENERATION IN THE HANDS OF YOUR FANS
Spending a ton on ads and YouTube videos? Invite your customers to produce great content and simply provide a place for it to be shown (your website and YouTube Channel.) Everyone is looking to become the next YouTube star...create a contest and provide a platform for your best customers to do your advertising for you.

4) IT'S FREE TO "LISTEN" TO TWEETERS.
It's even free to respond 1:1...make this a part of your interactive strategy and responsibilities. Or even better - get your brilliant customer service reps involved. They already know all of the answers since they're thoroughly trained on your products and services (and they are probably already familiar with social media). This could possibly reduce calls by answering questions and issues online (offsetting their time away from the phone.)

5) TAP INTO THE STREAM - THEY'RE COMING TO YOU, BE READY
Social Media has the huge advantage of bringing your customers to you, instead of hunting them down yourself. Even negative comments can have positive outcomes if you simply listen. Any time someone tweets, Facebooks, or creates content using your product - tap into it! Comment, provide information and answers.

Keep Clicking,

Michelle

Friday, October 7, 2011

Where We Will Find the Next Steve Jobs? Try a Mirror.

The world lost an incredibly important human being this week, Apple CEO, Steve Jobs (1955-2011).

The unassuming nerdy guy sporting his wire frames and simple black turtleneck made development code cool. His earnest presentation style wasn't particularly inspiring; however, his mind and ideas were. Whatever he created, in turn, created hope. And jobs. And pride. It had been a long time since Americans could claim products invented in our own country that are so influential on such a global level.

When an inventor passes, the world can feel like a really scary place. We immediately panic. Who will come up with the next big ideas? How can we maintain what that special person provided us? Simply improving upon existing great ideas does not satisfy the insatiable hunger we have developed for new, life-changing technology. Nothing illustrates this better than Tuesday's luke warm reception of the 4S phone; ironically just one day before Jobs death.

Jobs has left giant shoes to fill and ones that we hopefully won't try too hard to replicate - but instead, think beyond. Think even bigger. Have the audacity to even think, dare I say it, think better.

Apple has replaced Jobs in the sense that there is another person who sits in a certain office, holds a certain seat on a board, is responsible and accountable for certain things that he use to do, but no one is going to be Steve Jobs, except Steve Jobs.

But what we can do is learn from the man who has changed our lives so remarkably. We can be smart and take a smart man's advice. And we can look to ourselves for big ideas. And for that reason - I send a letter to the universe to remember a few things about finding special talent, like the kind Steve Jobs had. And really the answer is, we all have a little Jobs genius in us. Maybe if we all think a little more like him, we can all be a little more like him.

1) Innovation is not likely found in a Board Room. Big ideas aren't always innovative. And people at the top tend to say the same things. They have to. It's echoey up there.

2) The best ideas don't necessarily grow only at the most prestigious universities. Really smart people often create their own education, quilting together experiences and researching the things they are most passionate about. All of us can open a book. Take a class. Be curious. Ask questions.

3) The best ideas often come from the biggest mistakes. Your customers know what those are - TALK to them. Mistakes, fails, misfires - these are all just masked opportunities. They aren't something to be "dealt" with, they are something to leverage for growth.

4) People who make and service products understand their nuances and limitations far better than anyone else. Be sure to nurture those people and provide them with outlets for their ideas.

5) Young people, especially in our Jobs created "iWorld" are brimming with big thoughts and opinions. If reeled in, they can provide our world with amazing things.

6) Passion = Hard Work that Doesn't Feel like Hard Work. Jobs himself has on several occasions made mention that if you love what you do, it shows in your work. In each of us there are great ideas. Don't think your dreams or hobbies are merely there to provide diversions from "real" work, they can be your life's passion.

7) Risk is not a bad word. Say it with me. RISK is NOT a bad word. It's not. It's a means to an end. Everything wonderful in life began by taking a risk. Weighing our ideas down with too many statistics and focus groups and politics just waters them down. It would be like Romeo & Juliet without the poison. The Rolling Stones without Mick Jagger. Apple without the iPhone.

8) Instead of looking around the world for what's wrong or what's missing - try looking at the things that make life great. Simply because it's a better use of your time. Positive thoughts create fertile soil for positive ideas.

9) Do something creative everyday. Even if you don't consider yourself an "artist" draw something. Paint something. Play an instrument. Decorate a cupcake. Put a little energy into being creative everyday - and you may start to look at things differently.

1o) Learn the art of saying YES. It's unbelievable what can happen.


Keep Clicking,

Michelle

Monday, June 20, 2011

When to Dial It Back.

Is your online presence too big?

Don't guffaw - it just might be. Is Kim Kardashian too big? Wait, don't answer that.
But I think you might get what I'm saying. Over exposure can hurt your brand. The trouble isn't really SEO - there are so many measures and rules in place these days to prevent "buy outs" however, that is not always the perception. SEO and other online marketing is still being "figured out" by a lot of people - many of whom are skeptical, and prefer to seek out rather than be pursued.

So you finally achieved top SEO billing and your clicks are looking great. The PowerPoint you shared and metrics are impressing everyone but it's not translating to sales? Yeah, well maybe it's because you got yourself to the top of a list, but you're not exactly what people are looking for. Hey, that's okay - you don't want those guys - you want the people who are actually going to BUY. Trust in the fact that people are looking for you, and that SEO is an important PART of the puzzle, but it is not the only part. A little digging to find you can actually work in your favor. This is what we use to call a "qualified lead".

Being over-aggressive online is not going to get you more customers...at least not in the long run. Pushy sales people are annoying...and remember...online is still contact with a customer, and it's more intimate than you may realize. When I'm at home shopping online for flooring in my pajamas, face cream on, eating ice cream and you keep popping up at the top of my search and you're not what I'm looking for, I almost feel angry at you. Even worse are all of the annoying ads popping up based on my recent statuses, blog posts, or searches that make me feel like I'm being stalked. It starts to feel more like an attack than a pitch. If you thought showing up was the main strategy, here is a simple way to dial it back.

1) Lead with INFORMATION (tips about installation, trends in flooring, how to choose the right floor for your home). This is VALUABLE to people, and establishes a positive association with your brand.

2) Follow up with COMMUNICATION. Don't be pushy, but check in - see if I liked the INFORMATION. I like surveys - everybody has an opinion - most people like to share them.

3) OPEN YOUR CHANNELS. I may have found you online, but want to touch and hold the samples in person. Maybe I want to talk to a sales rep, maybe I don't. Make your pitch, and then BACK OFF. "Channel conflict is good" can sometimes just mean I want "Interactive to get the credit for this". Stop siloing yourselves companies...just help customers when/how/if you can and share in the profits.

The other thing that turns me off because it feels too aggressive is anything that is "promoted". It's not even trying to hide "we're paying for you to see this". It's like the invites into those "Who's Who" Annuals (which are of course worthless, no one gives them any credibility.) It also looks like you're being proactively defensive. For example, when the movie "Friends with Benefits" was trending on Twitter "promoted" a couple of weeks ago - it really turned me off from seeing it. Seems desperate, and kind of defeatist. How about open the movie, see how people react and then launch a campaign based on reactions? I could see this working for anything - no matter how bad (anyone hear about "The Room" via social media? I did. Gawd AWFUL. Still saw it based on the fun people were having discussing its awfulness online.)

So just keep in mind, Avis may have been onto something when they didn't claim to be #1, they only claimed to "Try Harder." That still counts whether you're online or in line.

And remember - perception is what I'm talking about here - just because technically speaking SEO and other methods are helpful, work, and have checks and balances in place, doesn't mean that potential customers understand that - or trust them.

Keep Clicking,

Michelle

Thursday, June 16, 2011

10 Ways to Get More Followers on Twitter

10) Offer special deals/discounts to RTers, Followers

09) Create prizes for specific milestones: 100th follower, 10th RT, etc.

08) Follow pros & copy what they do (@BillyDec is great to his tweeps)

07) Post CONTENT - not just pithy statements (PROVIDE VALUE!)

06) Post PITHY STATEMENTS - not just CONTENT (DON'T BE A CRUMMY COMMERCIAL!)

05) Share news about whatever interests you - tweeps will enjoy it too!

04) Don't expect people to follow you if you never tweet. It's give & take out here!

03) Don't worry if you don't have 1000's of followers, quantity AND quality matter!

02) Click on profiles of people you enjoy following for ideas on who to follow next.

01) Get on TWITTER. (DUH)

Find me on Twitter @michelletweet