Four types of contacts you need to build a valuable LinkedIn network.
Here is a guest blog post that I wrote for Post University. Make sure to attend the free webinar this Wednesday, November 16th at 11:30 EST.
Four types of contacts you need to build a valuable LinkedIn network.
Here is a guest blog post that I wrote for Post University. Make sure to attend the free webinar this Wednesday, November 16th at 11:30 EST.
Posted on November 14, 2011 in Career Development, LinkedIn | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Strategic Leadership Coaching presents LinkedIn Quick Tips with Robb Pardee. Robb has spoken to hundreds of people at companies and professional organizations on the subject of Leveraging LinkedIn for personal branding, business development, and career search. In this video Robb shares four easy ways to grow your network on LinkedIn.
Posted on September 23, 2011 in Career Development, LinkedIn, Professional Development | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Career coach Robb Pardee explains how social networking can accelerate your career
Many working adults make the choice to return to school and earn their degrees to take their careers to the next level. And once you’ve returned to school, there’s even more you can do to enhance your professional life.
Robb Pardee is a nationally recognized expert on LinkedIn and social networking for business, and founder and president of Strategic Leadership Coaching, a career and leadership development firm in Warminster, Pa. In the podcast below, he talks about how social networking can accelerate your career growth as an adult learner.
Whether you are working toward your degree now or planning on going back to school in the future, listen to the podcast below to learn about how networking has changed, the role of social media, and the everlasting importance of building relationships. Robb shares advice on how you can utilize both face-to-face and online networking tactics to build your professional network, develop your personal brand, and enhance your future career.
Click link below to go to the podcast
via www.philly-adult-learners.com
This is a clippling from the Philly Adult Learner website sponsored by Pierce College. The recording is a podcast interview with Rich Levin on using social networking like LinkedIn to accelerate your job search.
Posted on May 16, 2011 in Career Development | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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If you attended the DMA Insert Media Day 2011 and heard me speak on Leveraging LinkedIn please download these two resources. The LinkedIn Business Development Checklist is a great reminder of some of the points that I stressed in my talk on using LinkedIn to develop your personal brand and grow your business. The second is a short list of resources to help you develop new skills to Leverage LinkedIn.
Download LinkedIn Bus Dev Checklist
These two resources will only be available for a limited time so download them today.
Posted on May 10, 2011 in Career Development, Personal Development, Professional Development | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Posted on January 04, 2011 in Career Development | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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A SMART resume is the way to avoid the ambiguity trap of overused buzzwords and make your resume stand out to hiring managers.
Put these simple tips into practice to start your 2011 resume makeover.
Posted on December 28, 2010 in Career Development, Professional Development | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Posted on August 10, 2010 in Career Development, Personal Development, Professional Development | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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I don't really care for the term work life balance; mainly because it implies that there is some magic formula that will suddenly bring peace, balance, and harmony to your chaotic life. I have not met anyone so far who has found this secret formula. The underlying assumption of work life balance is that you can do and have it all at once. Right now you should be enjoying a satisfying career, a full family life, and a hobby you love or so the message goes. Nothing in life really works that way though. We have been fooled by our consumer culture that life will be happier if we just ___ fill in the blank. We keep trying to fill in that blank with a wider range of things placing more and more on the scales of work life balance. The reality is that good things, things really worth having or achieving, almost always involve sacrifice and deliberate focus. Intentional planning is involved to determine the sequence of the small steps taken to move one closer to a goal. This contradicts what most mean by work life balance today.
Jack Welch, former CEO of GE, recently said, "There's no such thing as work-life balance, there are work-life choices, and you make them, and they have consequences." So the skill to learn here is, understanding our choices and the consequences they may have. We need to say "no" to a great many things and "yes" to only those things that refine our focus on what is important. The Olympic athlete says "no" to all of the choices that take her away from training. And she really only says "yes" to the training and short term pain it brings to move her toward her long term goal. The limiting, in the short run is worth the long term end gain. That is what we need in life, to limit or say "no" to the choices that are not important to us or take us away from our end goal. So we need to get into training and strengthen our ability to say "no". What makes it hard for you to say "no" to those things that are not important to you or do not move you toward your goal?
Posted on August 04, 2010 in Career Development, Personal Development, Professional Development | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Have you been taken hostage by the myth of multitasking. Everything in our technology driven culture pushes us to multitask with the promise that "you will get more done and be more productive". Well to quote Dr. Clifford Nass from Stanford, "It turns out multitaskers are terrible at every aspect of multitasking. They're terrible at ignoring irrelevant information; they're terrible at keeping information in their head nicely and neatly organized; and they're terrible at switching from one task to another." Dr. Nass has been researching how multitasking works in the human brain and his findings pretty much go against the conventional wisdom of our day. I talk with clients all the time that are overwhelmed by the constant barrage of digital messages from all fronts. Well its time to take action and get some control back in your life by exploring the power of focus. Put some fences around your time and space particularly if you have a project to get done. You can do this by blocking out chunk of uninterrupted and undistracted time on your schedule. Then turn off your email, TV, and smart-phone for an entire hour and see how much you can get done on one specific task. Let me know if you see any difference in the quality of your work.
If you would like to read more about the research being done at Stanford you can read the full Frontline interview here.
Posted on February 17, 2010 in Career Development, Organizational Development, Personal Development, Professional Development | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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is celebrating the 2009 graduating class by hosting "Seek Week" a campaign to help grads launch their careers. "Seek Week" features a number of articles from career experts and students published on the LinkedIn Blog addressing issues new grads face when beginning their job search. In addition to the articles LinkedIn has put together a couple of other resources to support grads. One is the '09 Grad Guide, a step by step guide to online professional networking with LinkedIn. Something I recommend for every new grad looking to establish a network of professional contacts. The second resource is the '09 Grads Group that connects grads with career experts who can answer questions or provide services.
As a part of "Seek Week" I wrote a guest post entitled Surviving the Transition from College to Career: A Guide for Parents and Graduates check it out for a few tips on navigating parent/graduate relationships during this important period. To further support new grads, Strategic Leadership Coaching is offering a free Career Search Survey built around the key skills that every job seeker needs to master. The survey comes with a free 30 minute coaching session to interpret the results.
Posted on May 01, 2009 in Career Development | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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