Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Personal Branding Interview #2 Penelope Trunk - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Personal Branding Interview #2 Penelope Trunk - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Today, I spoke to Penelope Trunk, who I interviewed back in 2009, and shes also guest blogged here. When youâre looking for unorthodox advice, transparency, and an authentic voice in the career management, only one personal brand comes to mind: Penelope Trunk. Penelope is a student and teacher of how the new economy is shaping our careers. Recently, she released her latest book about how to be more successful in your work. There is no book title because sheâs performing an experiment to see if her followers purchase the book based on her reputation and relationship with her. Her experiment has already succeeded and she is on her second print run. You can purchase the book here. This interview was featured on my Forbes blog today. Whatâs the best way to find out if youâve chosen the right career? Thereâs not a single career thatâs perfect for us for the rest of our lives. Thereâs a career that feels good for what we want to learn now, what we want our days to look like now. If weâre growing all the time, weâre outgrowing careers all the time. The best career paths are flexible and winding and thatâs what makes them fulfilling. Does it make sense to go to graduate school? Graduate school worked when career paths were singular and stable. It no longer makes sense to invest five years getting a PHD to get a job that you are likely to leave after ten years. Careers are too dynamic today to invest so much time training for a career. Training should be on the job, which is exactly what graduate school is not. We know people who go to graduate school for entrepreneurship or business to not do better in business. So why do people keep going? Graduate school is too expensive in terms of both time and money. How do you become a better networker? Whatâs your secret? The best careers are built on kindness. Kindness in every job, and kindness to people who donât work wit you but need you, at one point or another. You never know who will help you next, so assume all the goodness you give out will somehow come back. For example, i have received so much help from interns who I trained. I never expected to be able to rely on that person later in life, but i could. Whatâs the biggest mistake people make when theyâre looking for a promotion? Work harder. Promotions donât come from getting more done or doing a wider range of work. Promotions come from being likable. Promotions are a popularity contest, which seems completely reasonable when you realize that we have to be at work with each other eight hours a day, so we may as well like being together. You get a promotion by figuring out which work matters to people around you and doing the work that is important. you donât need to do every little thing perfectly. People donât care. Your main job is being nice. The next part of your job is doing work your boss cares about. Donât get derailed by your supposed to do list at the office. Is there a career safety net? Your own skills are your safety net. Your ability to adapt and your resilience to bad turns will take you very far. When things feel bad in your career, recognize it as a time when you are building your safety net â" youâre practicing bouncing back. The more you can rely on yourself to bounce back, the more risks you can take because you have confidence you can deal with failure. The career safety net of todayâs workplace is a combination of passion and resilience. - Penelope Trunk is the CEO of BrazenCareerist.com, both the largest online community of Generation Y professionals and a consulting firm that helps companies reach young professionals. Her clients rely on her to help them understand Generation Yâs priorities and passions so they can better build and manage their young workforce. Penelopeâs breadth of experience encompasses ten years as an executive in the software industry and three companies of her own, and she has navigated an IPO, a merger, and a bankruptcy. And before all that, she played professional beach volleyball. She is also the author of Brazen Careerist, the New Rules for Success, published by Warner Books in 2007.
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