Social Media Savvy

Social media is the new wave of connectivity.  Billions of dollars are spent on research determining the best days, times, and platforms for engaging with business and consumers.  For most of us building brands for our small businesses, this strategy looks a little bit different. But if you ever hope to have a successful brand, you better have a very well thought out strategy to get you there.  I'm no expert, and I'm also no social media star.  My brand is in its very early stages of infancy, which is even more reason to develop my approach strategically.  As someone who consistently does her research, creates a plan, and then evaluates the plan, I like to think I know a little bit about being social media savvy.

So whether you're creating an empire, or simply looking for likes - create a plan for engagement and while this doesn't always ensure your success, it does increase your chances.  

Create your Voice

Who are you?  What is your brand?  What do you want your presence to say?  My blog is authentically my voice.  How I speak on here is eerily similar to how I speak in person.  I knew I wanted to be a brand that speaks to keeping it real to my experiences, values, and personality.  Whenever I write, I keep that voice consistent.  Don't confuse your base by being inconsistent.  If your followers cannot figure out who you are, they're very quickly going to lose interest in trying to find out.

Define your Audience

I get it - you want to appeal to the masses to maximize your following.  Realistically, that's not how it works.  If you don't define who your consumer is, you won't appeal to anyone.  Define what your brand is, define who that brand best relates to, and target your voice to that audience.  For example, my peers (millennials) are who spend the most time engaging with my content.  That includes young professionals and those in their early 30's.  I know that's where my strength lies and that's who I write to.  

Set a Goal

Every single thing you do in life should have a goal.  A very clearly laid out goal.  Stop saying "I want to be famous."  Having "millions of followers" is not a targeted goal.  Create a series of goals based on where you are in the building process and up your goal every time you reach success. I'd like to write a book one day.  To do that, I'd like to create a fan base - a group of people who consistently engage with my content.  In my mind, that looks like a minimum of 10,000 blog subscribers.  Everything I do for my website - I keep these goals in mind.  Of course there are many more layers to my goals, but a girl can't share her master plan with everyone.

Follow Through

I know far too many people who always want to do something.  They're going to start a fashion line, become a photographer, start a consulting firm.  But 98% of those people don't do any of those things.  They're not even mediocre at their day jobs and if you're barely keeping your main hustle, your side hustle doesn't stand a chance.  Treat your side hustle (your dreams) like a real job - because it is.  Dedicate time, hold yourself accountable to that time, and remain organized.  Sure, you could leak a sex tape and maybe be a Kardashian one day - but for 99.9% of us, that's not happening.  You're not getting discovered.  Nobody is waiting to give you a deal.  Everyone is talented, and everyone has an idea.  Not everyone is willing to put the time and effort in.

As short a list as that seems, that's a lot to do.  It's a lot of time, discipline, and making the choice to give up some fun for some good ole fashioned work.  Sure, some people get lucky.  But luck only gets you so far.  Even if you're the 1% who breaks in, I can promise you that without a plan, a brand, and a goal - you'll be just as quickly back to being a nobody before your next IG post.

 

Career Journey: An Update

I'm officially 6 months into this new journey in Texas and as I'm settling into my new apartment, I thought I'd update you all on my new career! 

A lot of people see my social media posts with my travel every other day and the events that I've been working on and I've gotten a lot of "What the heck do you do?" questions. So lets start with what I do:

I work at a marketing agency.

But my agency isn't like other agencies I'm told (I have no frame of reference so I just smile).  We have different procedures and specialties and are more diverse and all encompassing than other agencies.

SO - I am an account supervisor at this agency and specialize in experiential marketing.  That means I supervise activations (events) for various brands and ensure that we are meeting (exceeding) all expectations for the brand goals. 

Whether it be a media event, product launch, food truck tour, movie partnership promotion or PR stunt - I help to figure out how we do it, how to give it a wow factor, and then make sure we deliver on all promises. 

Essentially I'm still planning events - but I'm doing them in a different way.  I'm less hospitality, more consumer or media based.  I'm working with big brands to tell their stories and build consumer engagement worldwide.

Got it?  GREAT.

Now 6 months in is still early - but I love my job.  I love the company, I love the people (most), my boss is awesome (unclear if I'm too much sparkle for him), and I'm constantly learning.  The biggest thing for me is feeling challenged. 

I miss hospitality, I miss "planning parties" for every event - but every day I'm growing my skillset and I get to actually choose projects that excite me.  I'm less informed on the agency life and I'm sure a complete frustration to operations at times - but I like to think I bring a level of excellence to the team that makes them ok dealing with my shenanigans. 

I'm lucky that my team is one of the strong ones in the company.  Meaning we are treated like adults, I have a lot of responsibility, a lot of flexibility, and a really powerful support system (Our VP is my actual boss babe life goals, she's truly superwoman).  Having a leadership team that I respect and want to work hard for is a gam changer that I've never experienced before. 

Do I have days I'm unhappy?  Absolutely.  Am I frustrated?  Certainly.  Would I ultimately rather be on a yacht sailing the world?  Obviously.  But as far as being happy with my decision to move to Texas, take a risk on a job that I really didn't meet all the qualifications for - I made a solid decision and I'm happy this team took a chance on me. 

So career journey: an update?  #CrushingIt

Networking

I know what you're thinking and I apologize.  I know you've been waiting for business advice from me and I'm sorry its taken me so long.  Today, we are starting with networking.

Networking scares a lot of people.  They worry about how to approach strangers, what to talk about and why its important.  And while I understand the fear behind the experience, I love networking. 

It's all in how you look at networking.  Take business out of it.  Remove the formality.  Networking at its most basic form is relationship building.  When you realize that there's no special way to act or perfect thing to say - a lot of the pressure is taken away from the situation. 

Ashley's Steps to Networking Success:

  • Be Authentic: In business I believe being authentic is the best way to build real, long lasting relationships.  Don't fake interest, don't ask a question without listening to the answer, don't pretend to be someone you're not.  You don't have to remember anything if you stick to who you are and speak the truth.
  • Actively Listen: Take an interest in what people tell you.  Learn the quirks that make people different and what drives them to succeed.  Try to remember small details about people you meet and utilize them in future interactions.  Be honestly interested and engaged.  Most people can tell when you aren't listening and don't care.  It's bullshit and it's a huge turnoff.
  • Always Be On: I don't mean this how traditional businessmen mean this.  I mean realize every situation is an opportunity to network.  Every happy hour, sporting event, dinner with friends is an opportunity to meet new people and build new relationships.  So continue to be your best brand.  Be you at all times and you won't ever have to worry about acting in a way that keeps you from building an important relationship.
  • Put in the Effort: Realize that if you only keep in touch with people when you need something - you'll lose a lot of contacts.  You don't need to be friends with everyone but you do need to put the effort in to keep in touch with your contacts.  Shoot a quick check in email, send a birthday card, engage on LinkedIn.  Keep the relationship going and don't be the person that only reaches out when they need something.
  • Be a Mentor: As you grow and become seasoned in your field, be a mentor.  Help the next generation to succeed without expecting anything in return.  I continue to mentor some of my past student workers to this day and seeing them succeed, helping in any way I can - is the most rewarding thing I've ever done.  These kids are going to change the world, and if I can help guide them, that's the best thing I'll ever achieve. 
  • Ask for What You Want: Need a reference?  Looking for a mentor?  ASK.  Building a relationship is about reading cues and creating a long term engagement plan.  If you've met someone who you would love to learn from, tell them that.  Figure out a way to make it work for their schedule and your needs.  Applying for a new job and need a good reference?  Look to the people around you that you have spent the most time with and who believe in your work.  The point is - if you don't ask for it - you won't get it.

The most important thing to remember about networking is that it's not limited to an event.  It's not something you learn to turn on and off.  Networking is not what it used to be.  It's not name tags and awkward happy hours.  It's who you sit next to on the bus.  It's the guy you meet while getting your hair cut.  It's everywhere and its all times of day.  It truly never stops.  And while that can be daunting - don't let it be.  Focus on your brand, being authentic to that brand and commit yourself to realizing networking is simply engaging with people in a real way.  Networking is opportunity and opportunity is everywhere.