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Ryan Erskine

Brand Strategist, Author, Online Reputation Expert
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What Potential Employers Want to Know Most Is Not On Your Resume

May 30, 2016

I recently had the opportunity to speak with Evan Varsamis, the CEO of Gadget Flow, a platform that helps people discover, save and buy awesome products. Varsamis is a 25-year-old entrepreneur with a big vision for humanizing that process. Every product on the Gadget Flow site is personally curated and customized, and Varsamis pushes that value into the company’s branding and social media as well.

“We have a specific person dedicated to Twitter, one for Instagram, one for Pinterest,” he told me. “Ecommerce is so noisy and crowded so we try to stand out by bringing humanity back into a world of automation.”

With so many choices in the marketplace, consumers are increasingly drawn to exceptional value, trustworthy brands and incredible experiences. But exceptional companies don’t make themselves -- they require exceptional employees.

And the classic way of sorting prospective workers -- via resumes -- makes it extraordinarily difficult for companies to find those standouts. It also makes it difficult for the standouts to find the amazing companies that value them most.

The result is a hiring system that rewards mediocrity. On paper, the clock-in-clock-out type looks as good as the standout. The two employees may have the same experience, the same job title and perhaps the same job responsibilities. The resume hides the passion you bring to your job, the creativity you bring to problems, your can-do attitude and your ability to execute under pressure.

Resumes are great at one thing -- framing you as a replaceable cog in the machine.

The shift away from resumes.

As companies strive to stand out, they look for better ways to find those exceptional employees -- the indispensable workers that marketing guru Seth Godin calls “linchpins.”

One of the easiest ways to do that? Google search.

Already, 75 percent of HR departments are required to search job applicants online and 70 percent of them have rejected candidates based on something they found.

Simply put, the resume -- and even the cover letter -- are no longer enough. Companies are looking for more information and actually making hiring decisions based on that additional information.

At Gadget Flow, human interaction is everything. So when they look to hire, they research the applicant online to see how active they are on social media and how great they are at interacting with their audience. "Being able to hire passionate people who are active on Snapchat or Instagram or Twitter is a huge advantage," Varsamis said. "It’s better than spending thousands on marketing; those employees become our biggest brand advocates.”

At BrandYourself (where I work) we also research our applicants to see what kind of presence they maintain online. The nature of our work is to help people look great online, so what better way to gauge applicants than by checking out their own digital footprints?

It all comes back to providing exceptional value. You can’t break through the noise with employees that just follow the rules and do the bare minimum day in and day out. Those kinds of employees are easy to replace but not great at innovating, solving problems and taking a company to the next level.

Breaking through the noise.

Startups and big businesses everywhere are already showing interest in providing exceptional value. So how can you meet them halfway? As a linchpin applicant, how can you break through the noise? How can you make your value known to the companies that care?

If you can get a few extraordinary letters of recommendation from people your employer knows or respects, that goes a long way. So does an impressive project that employers can see or touch.

But those aren’t always possible. One way that’s completely within your control is building up a stellar online reputation.

Companies are already looking you up online. You spend hours perfecting your resume only to forget the very next place employers look -- the internet. Why not spend some time actually differentiating yourself online and crafting a killer personal brand?

When employers do a quick search, imagine how much you’ll stand out when they find your huge following on social media. Imagine how impressed employers will be when they see an active blog that’s so compelling and insightful that they feel obliged to follow up. Imagine how valuable you’ll be when they find you’re a published author on big-time publications.

At the end of the day, a company’s employees can be its most important asset or its biggest liability. Resumes help organizations usher in an endless parade of average employees. This is bad for the company, bad for business and bad for consumers.

If you’re a linchpin, don’t let yourself be defined by a resume. Take the hiring process to the next level and prove your worth. Get your employers -- and clients -- excited about the value you provide.

Is any employee truly irreplaceable? Probably not. But if you can demonstrate that you’re so valuable, so risky to lose, so difficult to replace, you can get pretty darn close.

This article was originally published on Entrepreneur.com.

In Reputation Management, Personal Branding Tags Search Results, Personal Brand, Online Reputation Management
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The Most Effective Paid Campaigns for Better Search Results

January 28, 2016

What’s the best use of your money to alter your search results and improve your online brand? Google Adwords certainly comes to mind, but it’s typically not the best paid promotion option out there for us.

Google Adwords is best if you’re selling a specific product or service. People who are looking for a specific solution search their problem on search engines -- businesses can determine those keywords and target users with their ads.

Why is this no good for us?

We’re trying to change what shows up for our names, not a competitive keyword. When people search Ryan Erskine, they’re already going to find results for my name. I don’t need to advertise for my website on top of those results. Doing so might look weird and would definitely not be the best use of my cash.

Here are a few paid promotional options I’d recommend instead:

 

Facebook Ads

There are three primary kinds of Facebook ads and each is useful for different purposes. The big benefit with Facebook ads is that you can choose the audience you wish to target based on age, gender, location, education, and other demographic information.

Boost a Post: This option is great for earning more traffic and engagement on a particular post. If you got an important article placed on a third party publication, this might be a great time to give a big push here.

Promote Your Website: This one is self-explanatory. Use it to direct more people to your website. If you come up with a compelling ad and can deliver on value once people click through, you have a high chance of earning returning visitors in the future.

Promote Your Page: Promoting your page is useful for driving up your page’s likes. Moz has a terrific article that argues compellingly for spending at least $1 a day promoting your page. As they say, “They are the lowest cost per 1,000 impressions ad in history. They average around $0.25 per 1,000, which is only 1% of the cost of TV.” A no-brainer if you have the cash.

 

Twitter Ads

Here are the two types of Twitter campaigns I find most useful:

Engagement Campaigns:

These campaigns are useful for earning more engagement or activity for a particular tweet. If you want to spread the natural reach of your tweet -- perhaps to get more traffic to your latest article -- then this is the right campaign for you.

You can tailor these campaigns on a number of factors, such as language, location, and keywords. My favorite is ‘followers,’ which allows you to target specific @usernames. Your tweet will then reach users with interests similar to followers of any of those accounts. It’s a great way of ensuring your content reaches the right eyes.

 

Followers Campaigns:

Followers campaigns are great when you want to increase your Twitter profile’s audience. This is not just for cosmetic reasons; a larger audience means your tweets are naturally pushed to more twitter feeds.

You can tailor these campaigns in the same way, but the best practices differ. Although tweets often do better with hashtags or links, Twitter has found that followers campaigns without these distractions do better. Also remember to be direct and include “Follow” or “Follow us” in your tweets.

NOTE: For personal campaigns (as opposed to businesses), I find Twitter’s engagement campaigns to be much more useful than followers campaigns. Growing your audience is easy enough using tools like Crowdfire, so I’d rather save that money to promote important content.

 

 

Stumbleupon Ads

People still use Stumbleupon?

Yes, it’s true. Stumbleupon actually drives 3x more traffic than Reddit and it’s the 4th highest social channel driving traffic, right behind Twitter.

Stumbleupon’s campaigns are great for getting more eyes on your content. And the best part is that those folks are pretty engaged -- a recent campaign for a client kept people on site for 2:44.

Here are some fun facts about Stumbleupon.

  • Over 30 million people are active on StumbleUpon on a monthly basis

  • The average Stumble session for women is 30 minutes, 22 minutes for men

  • 15% of B2B marketers use StumbleUpon to distribute their content

The demographic information for Stumbleupon campaigns isn’t as impressive, but it’s enough to make your campaign reach the right users. And the analytics also leave something to be desired, but I still find myself using this platform for the consistent traffic again and again.

 

Outbrain Ads

Outbrain describes itself as a content discovery platform.

What does that mean? Outbrain basically places your content as an ad on another platform. You know when you’ve seen “suggested content” on BuzzFeed or CNN once you’ve finished reading an article? That’s probably thanks to Outbrain.

Outbrain is comparatively expensive -- you have to pay a minimum of $10 a day -- but I’ve seen some good impact.

Here’s a recent campaign for one of my clients that’s still in the works. I’ve spent $60 so far and earned 365 clicks out of 380,000+ impressions. Not the most impressive click through rate (just about 0.1%) but a few hundred clicks is nothing to sneeze at.

And Outbrain also tells you where your articles are getting picked up. Sure, Ghana web wouldn’t be my first choice, but I’m definitely impressed by the next few publishers on the list. Plus, now I can see what's working (and what publications I want to scrap) and make my next iteration that much stronger.

My favorite thing about Outbrain campaigns is that you can test multiple different titles and pictures for the same URL. Then you let Outbrain figure out which combination is earning the most engagement and continue serving that combination to users.

 

Closing Note

Remember, ad campaigns are not a quick fix to improving your search results. They are only as good as your content.

If you focus on creating quality content — useful content that adds real value — you’ll have a sustainable source of traffic for months and years to come. Got some disposable income for your campaign? Then try strategically using paid campaigns to increase your content’s reach.

If you have some other favorites, let me know in the comments below or hit me up on Twitter.

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In 28 Day ORM Challenge, Reputation Management Tags Paid Promotion, Branding, Online Reputation Management, Search Results
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