The Story of My Process

Not long ago, Terrence Gargiulo complimented me on all the care I put into sleuthing out items for A Storied Career. My dirty little secret is that it’s not difficult at all to find material. I never cease to be astonished at all the material that continues to emerge on … Continue reading

Blog Action Day Wrapup

Last week, I was proud to participate in Blog Action Day 2008 against poverty. I learned this week just how big the day was: 12,800 Bloggers, including the folks behind 17 Top 100 Blogs 14,053 Blog Posts 13,498,280 Readers To listen to a 12-hour Talkathon for Poverty Relief, see a … Continue reading

Stories of PhD Mamas

I was pretty much past the hands-on mothering stage by the time I entered my PhD program in 2003 as my kids were almost grown and one was already out of the house. But I remain interested in the stories of PhD holders and students, especially those who share the … Continue reading

Making Your Blog Recruiter Friendly

The Wall Street Journal‘s Sarah Needleman recently reported on how blogs are changing the recruiting landscape (this article may not be available free to nonsubscribers for long). Recruiters are surfing blogs not only for expertise in bloggers’ career fields but for writing skills and well-roundedness, Needleman reports. The article discusses … Continue reading

Use Your Blog as a Resume: Part II

Editor’s note: This article is the second of two parts.
Part I discusses the pros and cons of using a blog as a resume.

If you’ve decided you’d like to experiment with using a blog as a resume, consider these tips:

Include elements you can’t include in a traditional paper resume. Linked from his blog, The Bryper Blog, social media blogger Bryan Person offers what he has coined his Social Media Resume and notes that the resume include items not found in a conventional resume, such as:

  • a link to Person’s portfolio on del.icio.us (a social bookmarking website), which in turn links to Person’s blog posts, podcast episodes, and conference presentations
  • a pointer to his profile on LinkedIn, a business networking site
  • a photo of Person
  • an embedded episode of a podcast, a link to his shared items in Google Reader
    (another social bookmarking site)
  • a link to his photos on Flickr (a photo-sharing site)
  • a link to messages on Twitter (which enables friends, family, and co-workers to communicate and stay connected through the exchange of quick, frequent answers to the question: What are you doing?)
  • a link to his profile on the social-networking site Facebook
  • A commenter to Person’s blog further suggested an audio or video interview with one of your references as a valuable Social Media Resume component. Others have suggested case studies, links to must-read blogs, and links to buzz and testimonials about the blogger. Continue reading

    Use Your Blog as a Resume: Part I

    Editor’s note: This article is the first of two parts. Part II provides tips and examples for using a blog as a resume.

    Through the use of a variety of online tools — blogs, wikis, social-networking sites, portfolios, podcasts, Youtube videos, and more — individuals, especially younger people, are socially constructing their identities in ways unimagined a dozen or so years ago.

    Where a dedicated careerist of old constructed a job-seeking identity through a resume and a few other printed materials disseminated to audiences that seem puny by today’s standards, postmillennial upwardly mobile types are establishing their career identities to vast global audiences using the tools of the so-called Web 2.0, defined in part by Web guru Tim O’Reilly as comprising an “architecture of participation.” The concept of Web 2.0 “suggests that everyone … can and should use digital media to express and realize themselves,” writes Andrew Keen in The Daily Standard.

    And recruiters are responding. Case in point is the notion of the blog as a replacement or accompaniment for a resume. Sarah E. Needleman reported on the Career Journal site that Ryan Loken, a Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., recruitment manager, had filled an estimated 125 corporate jobs by reading blogs. Well-known recruiting blogger Heather Hamilton, a staffing manager at Microsoft, noted in her blog that “recruiters are searching blogs specifically for resumes.” Recruiters who responded to blog postings on the topic of blogs as replacements for resumes made such comments as:

    “We’ve hired two people fresh out of college in the past four months that we found through their blogs — one didn’t even have a formal resume. Frankly, he didn’t need one. A blog trumps a resume every single time.”

    “Our stance is that blogging is important — at least in our medium — and we are developing a strategy around it. We are conducting a search for a Marketing Director right now — if an applicant doesn’t blog, or at least contribute heavily, it’s fair to say that we are going to pass them by.”

    The concept of the blog as resume has been the subject of several articles in 2006 and 2007, most of them, appropriately, blog postings with numerous follow-up comments by blog readers and posters. Dave Lefkow’s 2006 entry on ERE.net (a site for executive recruiters) entitled My Blog is My Resume (registration may be required to see the full article), talks about “the changing dynamics of the Web’s second generation.” His article’s implications for job-seekers are apparent in these excerpts:

    Privacy is no longer an issue. This generation seems quite comfortable
    publishing all of the gory details of their lives online. Some of these details will shock you. Get used to workers who are perfectly functioning members of the work world, but who perhaps make decisions in their personal lives that you find appalling.

    Many job seekers, growing up in the level playing field that is the innovation economy, will often expect to be judged by their ideas, not their experience. Resumes will become irrelevant (or at best, a meaningless formality that describes your work history, not who you are).

    Why are some employers and recruiters coming to see tools like blogs as more revealing and authentic than resumes? One blog commenter explains: “Think about it — a resume is one or two pages, of flat, static information. A blog is an interactive space where you can
    really see inside of a prospect’s head — their ability to innovate, think, and communicate. You not only find out what they’ve done for work, but what their passions are, and frankly if they’re the type of person you think would fit into your organization.”

    Another commenter noted that the new generation craves personal contact. A blog provides a way to move beyond a resume’s “one to two pages of flat, static information” and create a sense of personal contact. When you reader a blogger’s work, you often have a sense of
    knowing him or her even though you’ve never met.

    Lefkow’s blog entry and indeed the entire discussion of the idea of blogs as replacements for resumes seems to have originated with an entry on Scobleizer, the blog of Robert Scoble, who noted that he hadn’t needed a resume to get his most recent job and implied that he didn’t expect to need one in the future. Scoble also asserted that his Wikipedia
    entry takes the place of a resume. This brief posting elicited 59 comments. Similarly, Adam Darowski in his blog, Traces of Inspiration, submitted an entry entitled The Blog is the New Resume, and Joshua Porter followed with an identically titled posting on his blog, Bokardo, both of which generated extensive comments that provide glimpses into a future in which blogs — or other tools — might take the place of resumes ­– or not.

    Darowski wrote, “Wouldn’t it be nice to have more than a vague bulleted list of accomplishments before actually picking up the phone to call the person? There is. There’s blogging. Blogging is the perfect way for a candidate to give an employer a more detailed sales pitch — to show they can ‘talk the talk’ (as opposed to just fill a resume with buzzwords).”

    Porter added a five-point list of the advantages blogs have over resumes, including a blog’s ability to represent the individual, its archival quality, and the blogger’s editorial control over it. One of his commenters noted that the editorial control enables the blogger to
    go back into archived entries and update or revise them. Continue reading