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Job Search: Bringing your brand to market

Job Search: Bringing your brand to market

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 23 Feb 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

With many companies undergoing restructuring during the economic downturn, IT professionals who have been laid off, and those who fear they may be, are turning to career services to help boost their images. Career Management Coaching.com and IT-Career-Coach.net share their approaches to job search success

Career coach to IT executives and managers Kim Batson estimates that her customer base is composed of 50 per cent laid-off IT professionals, a noticeable rise from the usual 25 per cent.

Her business, Seattle, Wash.-based Career Management Coaching.com, provides career services primarily to C-level executives, vice-presidents, directors and managers. “There’s been quite an uptick in requests for services,” said Batson who started the business about a decade ago.

But that uptick isn’t solely due to recent victims of technology company mass layoffs, said Batson. Rather, it’s a mix of those who have been “laid off or fear they may be, so they want to prepare just in case.”

When the economy tanked last September, Batson observed a “quiet time for two or three weeks where people were wondering just what is going on” before the floodgates opened, resulting in the past four months being “extremely busy.”

Employee severance packages will sometimes include employer-paid career services like those that Batson offers to individuals. But most often, she said, employers will choose outplacement services that are geared to groups of individuals.

Among the career services that Batson offers are resume preparation, branding and job search. The differentiating factor in today’s job search, said Batson, is a “value position that really outlines what it is they bring to the table that makes them outstanding or extraordinary or exceptional.”

A client, a CEO of a data storage company, after working with Batson, created a value proposition that read: “As a data storage company builder, I bring extraordinary insight into the development of data storage products and services, rapidly propelling companies forward from $25-250 million to $250 million and beyond in revenue.” It might be just a statement at this point, Batson noted, but screaming out this message catches the attention of potential employers. And, of course, such claims, she continued, must be supportable with quantifiable achievements.

Batson also helps the candidate create a plan to market, which is essentially a structured framework for his or her job search. Part of that plan is to exude that brand and become known in the market because, she said, “it’s better to be sought out than be seeking a job.”

But while it certainly is an advantage to get prepared through career services (Batson claims a 75 per cent faster employment rate among coached versus non-coached executives), she did acknowledge that success ultimately does depend on the candidate’s degree of motivation.


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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