Tuesday, June 16, 2020
Choosing a Marketing Career Path
Choosing a Marketing Career Path Part of what drives us at Enhancv is knowing that our resumes help people do something weâve all done many times: change careers. Of course, every career change is different, but thereâs something to be learned in each one. This is my story of how I came to work in marketing at Enhancv.A career change begins with a questionâWhat does a PR person actually do,â I asked.Without knowing it at the time, this was the first step of my career in marketing. The idea came to me largely by chance and my personal career development was as haphazard as a ballâs journey in a pinball machine. Itâs crazy to think that 11 years later, Iâm still pursuing the same passion for bringing brands and customers closer together.As the great Steve Jobs said, sometimes you can only connect the dots looking back. So Iâll share with you how I got into marketing and how you (unlike me) can have a well thought out career journey.Make sure a marketing career path is right for youFor me, it all starte d with a random conversation. One of my friends, a high-school senior, was planning to do PR in university. It sounded cool â" Iâd be able to talk to interesting people, appear at events, put my writing skills to work. And I wouldnât have to deal with math because yuck, math! (That last one didnât turn out the way I planned.) So I decided Iâd study the same.In retrospect, basing such a decision on a single talk with someone who still doesnât even study the profession is not smart. Today, Iâd do it differently. Iâd talk to people. Iâd try to find someone in the same field, buy them a coffee and talk. Hell, I might buy fifty coffees. (Iâd, too, be happy to answer what digital marketing looks like nowadays, so drop me a line.)Can you imagine yourself in the shoes of the person you talked to? And more importantly, do you see yourself being happy in the shoes of the person youâve talked to?To answer these questions, you need to be sure what are your values and your ideal career plan. Thereâs a long list of exercises about professional development planningthat will help you make sure the marketing field is something you want to get into.I wonât go into the details of how to make the final decision â" youâre fully equipped to do it on your own. But if marketing is your thing, itâs now time to double down on knowledge and experience building.Pinpoint your nicheI started off my communications career in event management. To be frank, this was the first offer I got when I was a junior in university, so I didnât really give it much thought â" hey, itâs experience, right?Several years later, I realized event management is not my field. The stress of it all, the constant phone calls and the lost weekends were not something that balances itself out with the thrill of an actual event gone well. At least for me â" I know great professionals who thrive in such an environment.Iâd say I couldâve figured it out earlier. But you can only con nect the dots⦠yeah, you know My point is, marketing is a big-big country. Thereâs brand management, corporate communications, thereâs promotion development, thereâs content, thereâs community management, product marketing⦠So much to try!To get off to a flying start, think about your core interests and how they overlap with different marketing sub-fields. I really mean it! Create a list of your strengths and interests and compare them against the different marketing domains. Once you have everything in writing, itâs easier to compare:Based off on that, pinpoint what niche you might be interested in and start there.Plan how to become a T-shaped professionalThinking about so many marketing domains is enough to get your head spinning. But fear not! There are only 2 fields you really need to master.Which ones, you ask? Thatâs a harder question to answer. You have to define them on your own â" hopefully, through some value assessment and through some experience.The poin t is, nobody expects you to know everything. You should have a basic understanding of the core marketing skills, but you should excel only in a few. Thatâs what we call a T-shaped professional.The T-shaped marketing professional has three degrees of knowledge:Base knowledge: you need to have at least a basic understanding of these fields. They will include the oldies and the goldies like storytelling and behavioral psychology, as well as the new and trendy stuff like UX and HTML.Marketing foundation: you need to have a deeper understanding of these skills, which may include machine learning, analytics, copywriting or statistics. Weâre now getting closer to the core marketing skills, but still, are touching the surface.Channel expertise â" acquisition and user lifecycle: the first part of skills here is related to tactics that fall squarely in the marketer role like SEO, performance advertising or social media. The second group of skills has to do with the new trend that lets ma rketers work on the full customer funnel â" activation techniques, customer lifecycle management and more.More than marketingAs you already noticed, marketing is more than a way to attract users to our product. Itâs also a way of retaining and delighting those users. With the rise of growth marketing, we are expected to work on all parts of the funnel. Thatâs why Growth Tribe put many different digital skills in the growth marketerâs skills roadmap:A âTâ or a âPâ or an âMâMany people assume thereâs only one true way of developing your marketing skills. But thereâs a good point made by Buffer that marketing people will do deep specializations in different fields depending on their role or interests. Hereâs an example of what a PR Strategistâs skills framework would look like:And hereâs what my profile looks like:Of course, this histogram of skills doesnât come straight away. After all, you can only connect the dots⦠you know that already, donât you? Becoming a T-shaped professional requires experience and time â" not only to get that deeper knowledge but also to get a feel for each domain and learn where you thrive and whatâs not your cup of tea.Find the right educationIn marketing, you need to learn constantly. The field is developing so fast itâs hard even for experienced professionals to keep track. So education doesnât only happen at the start of your career anymore.The good news is there are much more options to learn.No matter if Iâm a recent grad or someone transitioning into marketing, Iâd always dedicate my time to two main directions.Old knowledge that still holds upSocial psychology, influence mechanisms, storytelling, copywriting⦠All of this is old-old news. But that doesnât make it less impactful. It gives you a strong foundation. It can actually give you an edge against fancy âgrowth hackersâ who only chase short-term success.As a podcast addict, Iâve listened to hundreds of interviews with high profile marketing professionals. When asked about their favorite books, they always quote some old foundational reads. Examples include Cialdiniâs influence, Hopkinsâs Scientific Advertising, and Campbellâs The Heroâs Journey.Never forget the classics. Otherwise, you risk losing the strategic perspective in a vast sea of new channels, hacks, and experiments.Cutting-edge tacticsItâs easy to see the digital landscape is developing with lightning speed. It might be harder to comprehend how hard it is to keep ahead of the curve.Iâve been in marketing for more than 10 years now. And every day, my routine consists of listening to 2 marketing podcast shows on my daily commute and going through 50+ marketing articles on blogs, social media, news aggregators.Thereâs an increasing digital skills gap between what you know now and how quickly the technology landscape is evolving. Hereâs a slide from a Growth Tribe presentation that shows pretty clearly what we mean by that :This clearly shows that even if youâre good at âtraditionalâ digital marketing domains like SEO, e-mail marketing, or social media, you now need to get more technical, go into development, machine learning, and more.If youâre ready to learn, here are some of the places Iâd recommend starting with:Googleâs Digital GarageUdemyâs Marketing coursesGoogleâs Academy for AdsGoogleâs Analytics AcademyFacebook BlueprintHubSpot AcademyThese will give you a head start and also show a potential employer youâre really serious about marketing.The good news is that the skills gap leaves a lot of room for new entrants in the job force â" what you know and what youâve done is more important than what university you went to and how many years of experience you have.The bad news is once youâre on the treadmill, you need to keep running. It doesnât stop â" and the pace is now getting even faster.Welcome to our robot overlords!Youâve already seen I mentioned AI, machine le arning, and automation. Letâs first get this out of the way: Iâm highly doubtful that the marketing profession will disappear any time soon.Still, as a marketer, youâll need to familiarize yourself with some AI-specific topics. On the one hand, you need to know how all of this crazy AI stuff works â" at least on a general level. Then, you should make sure you have the right complementary skills. You canât beat AI, so why not work together with it, providing the skills that are still hard to master:Soft skills like customer empathy, semantic nuance, storytelling.Hard skills like data science, discerning between good insights and bad data.My favorite data person Avinash Kaushik has a great piece on marketing career development in the age of AI and automation that will give you additional perspective.Practice is a differentiatorMy early career mightâve happened haphazardly, but the key benefit was that I started working as a marketer at age 19. This gives me a strong advanta ge â" there arenât many 30-year-olds with 10+ years of professional experience.So the best advice I can give you is: get stuff done!Find an internship â" even if itâs unpaid, youâll gain valuable experience. Whatâs more, youâll gain inside knowledge of what that specific marketing field looks like. Youâll also forge some handy connections.Volunteer at a local organization â" they are surely understaffed and they will gladly accept help, even if itâs coming from a person with one completed online course behind their back. The best option is to find an organization that does something youâre passionate about â" then work is not a chore, but a pleasure.Help friends â" in the age of startups, you surely know someone starting a business. Help them out! Itâs not just good karma â" it will also guarantee you a lot of freedom of execution and breathing room to test new stuff.You may think only paid experience matters, but youâre deeply mistaken. A potential employe r will recognize your unpaid efforts as proof of your drive to learn and your proactivity. Those sometimes matter more than the right certificates.Above all else, find your callingIâm keeping this as the last point, but itâs the most important one. Find something that truly makes you happy. We have only about 80,000 working hours in our lives, so youâd better make them count.Make sure youâre following your Workplan and your Lifeplan and youâve found a position that corresponds with your values. Benefits and higher pay are easy to find, but doing something that matters is rare. To find out what really matters to you, follow the steps I outlined for creating a professional development plan.And donât forget to have funIf youâre just starting your career in marketing, donât take it too seriously. If you mess up and take the wrong turn in your career, you will lose some time, but youâll also learn an invaluable lesson. Iâve been through 7 different positions in 11 ye ars. Still, I donât think about any one of them as âtime lostâ. Theyâve all helped me learn how to better follow my passion. But, if youâre looking for advice on how to change careers with a resume or just create the best marketing resume possible, weâve got you covered.Share your journeyItâs hard to travel alone. So Iâd love to hear your journey in marketing â" share it in the comments!
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