Friday, November 5, 2010

Your CV - the ultimate marketing tool

Author
:Cathy Sims
Published
:Oct 17, 2007

Your CV is the ultimate marketing tool you have at your disposal to create a lasting impression. It is not a shopping list of information. It is a carefully researched, self assessment of the value you are able to contribute to a company.

The focus is all about achievements and the future - being able to translate this into hard skills that you are able to offer an employer of choice - not just any employer.




A well structured CV should include:

1. Biographical detail:
Your full name, address, telephone number, e-mail address and any other relevant information you need to add.

2. Education:
This should include your academic and extra curricula activities.

3. Work experience:
Detail your vacation, part time and volunteer work that you have participated in. No experience is irrelevant to a job; all responsibilities demonstrate skills. Detail the skills, experiences and learning points you gained.

4. Developed skills:
Detail an account of the skills you have gained, personal and functional skills and their transferable relevance to the job you are applying to.

5. Career objectives:
Indicate your interest for the immediate future, not five or 10 years ahead. What are you looking for now? This can also be done in a covering letter if you choose.

References:
Always check with referees that they are willing to provide information before putting their names on your CV. Between 2 and 4 referees are sufficient. Referees should be able to answer questions on your work ethic while studying, your achievements and your standing in society.



Additional points to consider:
  • Focus on content – not length. Between two and three pages is ideal. The interview is there to elaborate on information.
  • It is used predominantly as a screening out tool for companies – hence the importance of demonstrating achievement and the value you can add to a company.
  • Choose quality paper and ensure your layout is good. Avoid long explanatory paragraphs and choose a font that is easy reading. Always spell check your document and get friends/career service professionals to review and give you further input.
  • Add supporting documents of your achievements and academics results. Use the most recent – generally recruiters are not interested in your results or achievements from junior school.
  • It is worthwhile to start your CV in first year and every year adding to your achievements and experiences so that once you get to final year, you have put together an insightful account of your time while studying.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Branding is where it’s at!

Author
:Rodney Weidemann
Published
:Oct 17, 2007

A bright future lies ahead for individuals in the marketing sector who are passionate about innovation, creativity and in particular, branding.



Michael Farr, communication manager, SAB Ltd

As South Africa begins to move from a knowledge economy to an experience economy, so the marketing sector is realising what a crucial role brand strategy is beginning to play, particularly as more and more of the customer base is becoming accustomed to interacting with the product directly – for example, via the Internet – than through staff or direct experience.

This interactive experience is one of the key differentiators in a highly commoditised market in which a number of very similar players are competing, according to Loren Naish, marketing manager at global brand agency Enterprise IG.

“Branding has moved from being in the ‘pretty picture business’ – which is to a large extent what a brand has previously been perceived to be – to the brand becoming the centre point of business strategy,” she says.

“Another recent development is the recognition of the importance of brand engagement, or recognising the behavioural element of branding, which is in effect that your staff are your primary means of the delivery of your brand and so need to be ‘on brand’ just like your other brand elements. They must be aligned behind brand strategy, purpose and promise.”

What this means in layman’s terms is that if you were planning a career in a traditional advertising agency, you may find yourself disappointed.

“We are beginning to see brand consultancies fulfilling the role of strategic brand building and communications partner, which has led to the mushrooming of more specialised creative and media hot-shops to whom the consultancies then outsource the creative and media planning work,” says Dr Carla Enslin, Cape Town school navigator at Vega The Brand Communications School.

“This shift poses a serious threat to the position of the ‘classic’ advertising agency, since clients are in search of strategic partners, rather than simple service providers.”

Enslin says that the business world is slowly waking up to the role of the brand and branding, since every decision made by a business either adds to or detracts from the value of a brand.

“Building brands is bigger than the classical or perceived act of marketing and advertising. From this point of view the scope of branding and the need for meaningful strategic and creative role players therein is only getting bigger. In tandem the levels of innovation within the world of brand building is escalating as new specialists are born in the shape of – for example – experiential brand agencies and on-line brand building companies.”

Staffing demand

Naish points out that although Enterprise IG is a pure brand design agency, many advertising agencies also have brand strategy divisions.

“Locally, our main competitors are HKLM, Espial, Switch and Ogilvy, which is an ad agency with a brand design wing, for example,” she says.

Asked where she feels the major demand is for new blood in the industry, Naish says that as far as her organisation is concerned, because it has a number of divisions or departments under one roof, it employs a wide range of specialists.

“There are opportunities in what we call the 2D field – namely graphic designers, from junior through middleweight up to senior and creative – and design directors.”

“We also have the 3D field, which includes architects and interior designers, again, ranging from juniors to design directors, while we also look for people who understand strategy. These members of staff have classic brand training and have worked in strategy before. Interns may grow into this role, but these positions are almost always staffed by trained and experienced specialists.”

Naish says they also look for client service staff, with positions ranging from account executives to account managers, and from brand consultants to client directors, which are filled by individuals with marketing backgrounds.

“The account executives are the most junior, and some marketing interns grow into this role with a view to becoming an account or brand manager over time, and then step into an executive management role, based on broad experience,” she says.

“The qualifications for the above obviously depend on the role, but marketing graduates with branding or marketing training, and project management skills have the opportunity to enter the client services department, which handles relationship development, new business and project management.”

Enslin’s advice for would be entrants into the marketing game is to contact the marketing and public relations / communication departments of companies and the relevant departments within advertising / communication agencies.

“Start off by identifying marketing and communication strategies and creative work that you admire, and then identify what companies and agencies are behind the work,” she says.

“As far as qualifications go, it really depends on the position you want, but a degree and ideally a relevant honours qualification would be necessary if you are aiming at strategic planning in an advertising agency, or at brand or marketing management in a company.”

“A relevant three-year diploma or, ideally, a degree is vital if you desire to enter the creative department in an advertising, design or communications agency.”

Big brand players

Marketing has become one of the most exciting arms of the business as SAB continues on a consumer-led journey, and this department specifically concerns itself with understanding the market, and researching what it is that consumers want and are all about, says Michael Farr, communications manager at SAB Ltd.

“Based on this knowledge we build our brands by developing brand campaigns and other marketing tools, and we focus our communication on our target markets using both standard and non-conventional media, as well as extensive in-trade activity.”

“We are very selective in terms of whom we recruit, because we look for particular talents and qualifications in an individual. We are a high performance company and our people are passionate about the business and its brands, so new recruits need to fit with this profile,” says Farr.

He points out that SAB has a graduate programme that looks for specialised people each year and the marketing sector has always been a part of this recruitment, with graduates with sales and marketing qualifications usually starting their employment as trainees or coming into the organisation as sales representatives.

“We tend to find that it is mostly people with undergraduate and post-graduate degrees majoring in sales and marketing that seem to fit into the SAB’s marketing function best, although graduates placed within the sales and marketing function have degrees varying from BCom Economics (Marketing Analyst as a future job) and pure scale BCom Marketing.”

“Typically, we seek people who show drive, the potential to develop and learn, and those that can bring leadership, competence and fun into the organisation and be able to carry this same vibe to our consumers,” Farr continues.

He says that you must be prepared to put in a lot of hard work to advance in the company. SAB does, however, do career-pathing with all individuals. This allows each employee to participate in his or her own development and advancement within the organisation.

“The future is very promising for those marketing graduates who are passionate about innovation, creativity and branding,” claims Enslin.

“In order to succeed in this industry, you need to be something of a big picture maverick with a hunger to explore your creative and strategic conceptual skills. Be an individual who does not believe that success lies in one or the other but rather in an integration of the two – a creative strategic thinker or strategic creative thinker. If you challenge the status quo and show that you can add value to the lives of people, you cannot go wrong,” she concludes.

A BA is more than OK!

Author
:Clairwyn van der Merwe
Published
:Oct 17, 2007

Disparaging comments are often made about the value of a BA. Don’t listen!




“People dissed my BA all along. I didn’t pay any attention,” says Estelle Jobson, whose BA from the University of Cape Town consisted entirely of languages.

Ten years after graduating, does she wish she’d stopped to listen? “I have no regrets,” says Estelle, who has worked as an editor, journalist, researcher and multimedia trainer for companies in New York, Switzerland and South Africa. She is currently senior editor at Soul Beat, a Johannesburg-based Web site that specialises in development communications.

She loves being in publishing and she earns a pretty decent salary – contrary to earlier warnings that she wouldn’t be able to earn a living with a BA.

She concedes that business science or commerce could have led to a more lucrative career. “But I didn’t have a flair for that and I would have struggled. If I had been bullied into something I wasn’t good at, I would have produced mediocre results. I wanted to excel so that I could get scholarships, and eventually go overseas and do my Master’s.”

She graduated cum laude, got several academic prizes, obtained her Honours in African Studies, and completed two adult literacy diplomas.

Then along came the plum she’d been working towards: a Fulbright Scholarship to study at New York University, where she graduated in 2002 with a Master of Science in Publishing.

Prepare carefully

With all this and experience as a voluntary adult literacy teacher, proofreader, copy-editor and French conversation teacher, Estelle has never battled to find work. She emphasises, though, that nothing in her career has happened by chance. “I started looking for work early and I prepared over a long time.”

This involved carefully chosen part-time jobs, including voluntary work, and making full use of her university’s career development office. She says about the role played by her career counsellor at the time, Mervyn Wetmore (who is now at Rhodes University): “He has helped so many from my generation grow into great careers. Just about all of my school and varsity friends went to him and they all ended up gainfully employed.”

Rianee Kamies of Cape Town graduated with a Bachelor of Primary Education but threw in the towel after just one week of teaching. “It wasn’t for me,” she says. She went back to university to do a postgraduate diploma in business management, then joined Foschini as a retail planner, moving quickly up the ladder from trainee to central planner.

Her education degree hasn’t been wasted, however. Subjects such as Mathematics 105, educational psychology, sociology and needlework, coupled with her business management diploma, gave her a good combination of the people, business and analytical skills that retail planning demands. “I have diverse interests and my degree reflected that,” she says. “Flexibility within your degree gives you broader options and makes you more versatile.”

Her working experience also helped. “I worked at Groote Schuur Hospital in paediatrics and maternity for five years as a volunteer. I liked it. I like being with people.” She also did vacation work as a supermarket accounts clerk, assistant nurse and receptionist at a medical practice.

Guy Lundy originally started off studying business science, but switched to social sciences as it offered more flexibility.

People issues

“Business science is very mathematical. I believe business has an element of that. There is also the human side, of interacting with people and understanding the way they think,” he says. He majored in economics, choosing a mix of business and humanities-type subjects. “I would strongly recommend that anyone doing an arts or social sciences degree should also try to take some business courses, such as accounting, marketing, economics or the principles of management.”

This approach has paid off. He now runs Centric Consulting, a management consulting company that specialises in customer relationship management. He is a professional speaker, published author and book editor. His first book, which he co-authored, was titled ‘SA: reasons to believe’, and is selling well. The second book, ‘SA 2014’, which he co-edited, is doing even better.

Another social sciences graduate got involved in management consulting is Moira-Lisa Harvey, who runs her own consulting company in Johnnesburg.

“I was interested in many things … hotel management, journalism, a career in foreign affairs…but I actually didn’t know what I wanted to do. I was going to varsity to expand my mind and learn and grow. Social sciences allowed me to put together a combination of fun-sounding things that I would enjoy, and would help me clarify my career goals.”

Her eclectic choice of courses included economics and industrial psychology as majors, and Greek and Roman literature, English and Xhosa. “Actually, a lot of my learning took place extramurally, such as on the student representative council,” she says. “Without even realising it, I developed really useful business and leadership skills – communication and marketing skills, planning and organising skills, delivery, analysing problems and really drilling down to the real issues.”

This got her into retail management and then into management consulting for a top Johannesburg firm, which she left recently to start her own business. In between, she completed her MBA, and spent two years working and living in London.

Looking at Guy, Rianee, Estelle and Moira-Lisa, you’ll note a number of common denominators. They all have above-average academic records. They all held down vacation and part-time jobs while studying. They all used career counselling services at university. They all studied further. And none of them were afraid of change.

Follow their lead and your arts or humanities degree could take you anywhere.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Top Tips for Career Success

Author
:Press Release
Published
:Oct 17, 2007

The day has finally arrived, you have prepared for this since you graduated. You have your all-important qualifications in hand, you have sweated out and made it through five job interviews and now the time has come to start your first job.

This is your first career-focused position. You may have had a few internships during varsity, a part-time or full-time holiday job but this one is different.

You are surrounded by co-workers of all ages. You're the new kid on the block coming into a situation where relationships have already been formed. You're the only one who can't find the restroom, doesn't know where the supply room and printers are located and doesn't know not to talk to the boss until she's had her first cup of coffee.

This is nothing like the long lost days of waiting tables surrounded by friends. How do you make this awkward transition easier?

First impressions are very important - especially in the first 90 days. You feel like you are on probation; that all eyes are on you. In some ways, this is true. So, why not start off your first job with strategies to help your career move forward, with momentum.

There are very simple guidelines that career experts offer such as:
  • Plan your wardrobe – make sure that black suit is pressed and your favourite top is clean.
  • Plan your travelling route to work – make sure you know where you are going and that you have your map book in the car in case of emergencies.
  • Ask for help and ask questions – don’t be shy, rather ask if you are not sure.
  • Be thirsty for knowledge – do not stop learning, ask about the company, its policies, clients etc.
  • Stay away from risk situations – don’t get caught up in office politics.
  • Be polite and nice to everyone – be yourself.

However in today’s “Biz World” technology, mobile technology plays a significant role. Having the right mobile technology at hand will not only aid you in making a good impression but connect you to the business world quickly and efficiently.

Speaking of mobile, the latest trend in the biz industry is that office workers are no longer a requirement. No, don’t worry – your future prospects at the new company are not being replaced by automated robots (although many bosses might wish this could be the case). Mobile workers are the trend of tomorrow, simple put this means employees are no longer required to be office bound. Thanks to the latest mobile technology you can work from anywhere, anytime with out compromising on productivity.

However, every employee who wants to become a mobile worker and have the opportunity to work from anywhere at anytime needs the essential tools.

With the dawn of 3G technology, and now high-speed download packet access (HSDPA), you can use products and services like video communication and video conferencing, the Vodafone 3G Broadband Mobile Connect Card, fax-to-email and voice-to-email services, picture messaging, graphics and voice and data communication.

3G HSDPA delivers superior performance to today's ADSL and wireless LAN services, but has the added benefit of mobility. It is 3G on steroids!

If you’re committed to being a mover and shaker, then BlackBerry is the solution for you. BlackBerry is a unique mobile phone combining easy access to email, calendar and contacts, in an innovative and stylish format. The device is easy to set up and use, with BlackBerry push technology e-mail delivered direct to the handset without the need for manual dial-up.

As well as providing effective voice services, BlackBerry opens and forwards e-mail attachments and enables fast and easy access to a wide range of additional attachment formats (including Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Adobe Acrobat). And you can make calls and send SMSs too, so it’s an all-in-one getting-ahead-tool.

Make sure you are equipped with a BlackBerry and Vodafone 3G Broadband Mobile Connect Card and show your new boss that this new kid on the block is indeed upwardly mobile! Your colleagues will envy you, your productivity will increase and you will make a great first impression as you define your reputation as a mobile worker!

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

It is more than a job but your life…

Career development is a complex and continuous problem-solving process by which you equip yourself to make informed decisions about your work life.
Sibusiso Mbhele
Last time we highlighted the importance to “Know who you are”. Today we’ll be looking at making you understand that career development is a journey. It is not a once and for all thing but a process that needs revisiting and molding. There is a saying that says, “If you do not know where you are going any road will take you there”. Be responsible for who you become and how you become. Keep in touch with your career because it is what directs you.
It is time you start developing the career development plan. The plan outlines all the steps that you need to embark on to reach the highest peak of your career. The plan ensures that you do not find yourself at the wrong turn. There are many things that influence you to have a concrete or weaving career. Therefore, if you a have a plan about who you become, you won’t find the stress of the growing rate of unemployment and retrenchment because you will be highly equipped to stand beyond the odd odds.  If you are creating a career development plan, it is important that you understand your own values, especially in relation to organizational values.  In order to achieve a good organizational “fit,” there should be significant overlap between your values and the organization’s values.  You are most likely to thrive and be comfortable in work and an environment that is compatible with your values.
You are the driving force behind your career.  Actively engaging in the development of your career will give you an opportunity to discover and understand where you currently fit within your organization.  More importantly, it allows you to see where you can go in the future if you take the initiative to develop a realistic strategic career plan and acquire the essential competencies.
The career development process allows you to:
·    Develop a greater awareness of yourself and your work environment,
·    Gather relevant information through career exploration,
·    Set realistic career goals,
·    Develop and implement career strategies to achieve your goals, and
·    Appraise the effectiveness of your efforts.
Most of the time individuals usually focus on career development as upward movement within an agency or department.  They fail to see the opportunities available to them in their current jobs.  If you are currently in a job you enjoy and upward movement is limited or non-existent, there may be alternative ways to help you develop a satisfying career.  You will have to think creatively and look at career development from a non-traditional view. This means, you have to be interchangeable or flexible in the work place because by so doing, you are creating an enough space for you to grow.
The success of your career is dependent upon you.  Although your manager/supervisor and others in your organization will provide assistance, you are ultimately responsible for your professional growth and for managing your career.  Therefore, make it a point that you stay focus and ready for any changes that come along your career path.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Few steps ahead…

The world of careers can be confusing to the new job seeker, considering there are so many avenues to explore. However, armed with the right information, those avenues can be used to your advantage.  
Sibusiso Mbhele
The growing trends in unemployment and lack of skills among job seekers have made it tough to get a job. Whether you are a graduate or just an ordinary job seeker finding a job is very competitive. ‘Entry level career seekers need to understand the job market’, says Kris Jarzebowski, MD of online recruitment agency Career Junction. ‘It isn’t just about gaining the skills, but gaining the right skill set for the market.’
Jarzebowski says that getting a job is about much more that just having a certificate. ‘People need to be active career –seekers and work on finding opportunities.’ The key to finding the right job, it appears, is to arm yourself with knowledge and to be persistent.  However, while the skills shortage may be dire, graduates who are willing to do some research into where the skills gap lies and act on that information can benefit greatly.
Fundamentally, it helps if you know the area in which you’d like to work and the kind of company that appeals to you. Focus on the companies that are appropriate for your qualifications and career goals but retain some flexibility as first jobs are notoriously difficult to find even if you have a degree as most employers are looking for workers with experience. Therefore, being at the fore front of your career will ensure that you are relevant to the market.
Due to economic transformation, the need for skills changes with the demand of the market. Consequently, that is why for the job seeker it’s very crucial to be updated with the demands of the market. One will say, but what about the argument that it’s difficult to find work in South Africa? Schaffer has an interesting answer; ‘South Africa is undergoing a severe skills shortage at the moment. We desperately need people who can perform in areas like engineering, construction, ICT, healthcare, education , financial services , management and hospitality.’  However, it remains a challenge to the ‘previously disadvantaged groups to find themselves in such fields due to past imbalances. At the same time it’s the matter of argument because even those who are from universities are finding it hard to get jobs. Only the strong survives the competition! Work out your unique abilities beforehand.
So even though the job market for graduates is tighter than ever before, graduates in specific areas may not find themselves struggling as much as they may have expected. However, more emphasis than ever before is being placed on not just having the right degree but having the right attitude as well. Verily, the market demands that you show unique elements than just an ordinary job seeker.  Joanna Preston, head of recruitment and development at First National Bank listed four top characteristics as self-management, interpersonal skills, self-motivation and self-insight as crucial for recruitment. Preparing yourself before finding yourself in the edge of growing percentage will do you a favour and be few steps ahead.

Two masters students jump over the counter

Author:David MacGregor
Originally Published by     :Daily Despatch
Published :Aug 30, 2010


GETTING good grades and spending hours in the pub are two things every student dreams of mastering. Although most invariably fall short one way or the other, two Rhodes University masters students are living the life – studying and successfully running their own campus residence pub.

“This is the perfect student job,” super-sized Tafadzwa “Beef” Mutengwa chuckled – between sips on an ice cold beer. Nodding in agreement, petite 27-year-old Zambian Chishala “Chish” Lukwesa says the odd couple got the plum job after clocking up “many hours” propping up the pub as customers. “Last year we spent all our time on the other side of the counter buying drinks, now we sell them.”

And, if you think running a student pub is one big party, think again. When they are not hitting the books themselves or pouring shots for fellow students, Chish and Beef still find time to do other part-time work – like tutoring second year students – to earn extra money. “My mom had to take a R120 000 loan to pay for me and my sister to both stay and study at Rhodes, and there was no money left for us to live on every month,” mathematical statistics student Beef explained. Instead of sitting around waiting for handouts, Mutengwa took any extra work he could find so he could support himself and his third year pharmacy sister Tendai. “I also give her some money every month so she can survive,” he explained.

Although Chish is on a scholarship, she could also do with extra cash. Standing behind the dark wood bar counter at the Flare Path Pub in the Gavin Relly Postgraduate Village on the outskirts of Settler City, the duo joked they got the year-long pub concession based on their track record there.
When Rhodes University bought the Settlers Motel several years ago, the popular pub was part of the deal. Instead of closing it down, a year-long concession was given to post graduate students – based on written submissions to the warden.

Chish and Beef won the rights to operate the pub on Wednesday, Friday and Saturday nights based on their written submission and undying support of the pub the year before. “Running the pub, we are assured of getting some bread – and a bit of bacon now and again as a treat.” With the pub open from “7.30pm ’til the last patron drops”, the duo – who both know how it feels to be “financially broke” – often dish out free drinks to patrons, like the previous “owner” did for them last year. “We can’t forget that we are also students and we live here,” Chish explained.

A melting pot of nationalities, the 80- plus students in the post-grad village can unwind with a few cut-price drinks, some intellectual debate and a game or two of pool or darts. They also do not have to run the risk of drinking and driving – considering home is a short stagger from the pub.
Besides making much-needed money, the duo is also learning valuable life skills. “I want to work in investment banking … but I think I also want to own my own bar one day,” Mutengwa explained.

Tertiary education: A means to an end

Recent research offers some welcome news for final-year students. There will be more jobs available next year in most sectors, provided you can show recruiters what makes you special. While you’re sending out your CV be careful not to ignore the new companies on campus. Also remember that your degree doesn’t define your destiny, so keep an open mind while you’re doing your homework on where you want to work. - Fay Humphries
Sibusiso Mbhele
It is time tertiary students/graduates come to understand the nature of the environment they are in. Being in the university is not just a privilege but a learning curve that our students should discover.  The university requires someone’s transformation of mind, to understand why it’s essential to go through it? 
Their lives are not in relation to what the working environment expects from the graduates. However, the shortage of skills has been on top of the agenda. Graduates rarely expose themselves to programmes that provide them with skills. What happens is students are involved in activities that are not of benefit to their careers. This results with a lack of information on the changes that takes place in their respective fields. A month ago we had a 2010 Fifa Soccer World Cup, and then if you could research the students/graduates that took place in the voluntary programme are not from the hospitality industry. At the end of the day you ask yourself, do these students/graduates have career development plans? Why is it that they allow opportunities slip in their own hands like that?
Tertiary institutions do have structures that provide assistants to such issues but students/graduates are not involved. The point is you build experience while you at tertiary, you make yourself relevant to the working world. “Prevention is better than cure”. While still at tertiary you should mold yourself to fit in the company or department that you want to be. You should be able to spot opportunities while at a distance. Regarding fitting to the right spot Fay says “Apart from investigating the more non-traditional employers and organisations, students should also be aware that sometimes their degrees can lead to jobs they may not have initially considered. For an example, many believe that an engineering degree is required to build a successful career in the motoring sector-but that’s simply not true”.
It should be highlighted to students/graduates that employers are definitely looking for the right people that will be the future of their companies. Therefore, it takes a well equipped personality to grasp such chances because recruiters are more in terms of soft skills than degrees hence qualifications also play a major role.  “We’d like to see more South African-based students take advantage of our International exchange programme. There is no upper limit to the numbers here and we focus on selecting the best students for the internships that best match their needs” Says Nyaladzi Putecho from AIESEC.
Therefore, it is all about recognizing programmes that are in place to enhance the skills that are needed at a workplace. Students who put the necessary time and effort into becoming employable and get serious about the recruitment process will secure themselves a position anywhere. Make it a point that you develop in you skills that are essential for the market. 
For questions  
Cell: 076 461 3810
sibusisombhl327@gmail.com