Pull Self-Marketing Can Attract Your Next Career Opportunity
You’ve probably heard this comparison before: A job search
is in essence a marketing campaign with you as the product. Your career
communications tools are your marketing collateral, and your executive job
search strategy equates to your marketing campaign. A smart campaign hones in
on specific targets with specific marketing messages built around a specific
career brand aligned with specific proof points.
In the world of marketing there are two ways to get your
message out. One is to send or “push” your collateral directly to your target
market through product samples, on-site demos (remember the Fuller Brush
Salesman?), direct mail, and email. The other is to attract your target market
organically through “pull” strategies that entice customers to in-store sales,
online contests, and Facebook “like” campaigns. This is often accomplished via
advertising, flyers, newsletters, Twitter streams, YouTube videos, and blog
posts.
career_management_pull_self_marketing_strategyThe
differentiation of push/pull marketing works for job searches, too.
If you’re like most job seekers, you’re quite familiar and
even comfortable with push job search marketing, which is the act of propelling
your personal marketing materials directly to your target market via
recruiters, hiring professionals, and prospective employers:
Submitting resumes for open positions on job boards or at
recruiter or company websites.
Applying for jobs on an employer website.
Sending emails about your candidacy to executive recruiters.
Inviting recruiters and hiring executives to connect on
LinkedIn.
Approaching a target employer with custom-designed career
communications tools without a specific opening.
Pull marketing works in the opposite direction to attract
target markets to the marketer. In an executive job search, pull marketing
means finding ways to meet your target market where they work and entice them
to check out your social media profile, request a copy of your resume, or pick
up the phone and call you. Instead of assuming interest in you, you cultivate
that interest and provide pathways to learn more about your brand:
Sending your comments on an industry blog post to a
recruiter in your target sector.
Building referral relationships with recruiters in which you
promote other candidates for roles the search consultants are currently
filling.
Authoring keyword-rich status updates on LinkedIn two to
three times weekly.
Commenting on a relevant discussion in a LinkedIn Group.
Launching your own blog or writing guest posts on industry
blogs.
While push marketing is more direct, it is also overdone to
the point of saturation. Pull marketing is less direct and underutilized; it
therefore represents a stellar way to stir interest in your candidacy in your
chosen sector of the economy.
Pull executive job search marketing…
1. Seeds social media with mentions of your brand.  Recruiting can sometimes resemble the search
for that proverbial needle in a haystack. By spreading your brand through
appropriate social media, you create brand “outposts” that can drive recruiters
and companies to your brand “HQ” (your online resume, your Visual CV, your
LinkedIn profile, or whatever you’re using as your brand hub).
2. Increases your Google search rank.  Recruiters search Google to source or
research candidates much more frequently than most job seekers realize, so
capturing a Top 10 ranking for your own name is a very, very good thing. This
also helps if your online identity is clouded by negative links or confused
with someone else’s. Although your LinkedIn profile can help place you in the
Top 10, gaining additional high-scoring footholds can only improve your brand’s
visibility.
3. Bypasses Applicant Tracking Systems used by recruiters
and companies to screen incoming candidates. 
Did you know that 50 percent of resumes submitted via job boards and
company sites are screened out (according to Forbes.com: "7 Things You
Probably Didn’t Know About Your Job Search") and never viewed by a human?
With odds like that stacked against you, it’s critical to work around such
talent management systems when possible. Pull marketing strategies help you
capture the attention of recruiters and hiring executives in value-added ways
while simultaneously differentiating you from the hundreds of other candidates
pushing materials at them.
4. Jumpstarts interviews and initiates job discussions at a
higher level.  If you submit a resume for
a job, you have automatically focused the discussion very early in your
acquaintance, which is like proposing marriage before you’ve even had a date.
You may not get an opportunity to discuss other roles in which you might
contribute to that employer. Pull marketing broadens the conversation at its
start and allows you to build connections with recruiters and hiring executives
before focusing on specific titles or roles. This, in turn, can help open up
discussions on the types of roles that would best leverage your gifts,
experience, and capabilities.
5. Works in a down or up economy.  When the job market is depressed, competition
for jobs increases exponentially. In this scenario pull marketing helps
distinguish you in a crowded marketplace. When the job market is sizzling,
employers have to work harder to attract great candidates. In this situation
pull marketing helps catalyze unexpected opportunities by making you the
candidate to beat.
Pull job search marketing may be unfamiliar to you, but it’s
remarkably easy to learn; key activities can even be automated to help you
achieve a wider reach in your campaign when you have limited time to look for a
new role. The BlueSteps Executive Career Services team can help in a number of
ways, from the creation of non-resume career communications tools such as bios
and personal marketing briefs to social media profile development and analysis
of your online identity.

 
 
 
Comments
Post a Comment