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How To Break Into Digital Marketing { 7 Tips To Land The Job }

I’ve recently had a few conversations with people who want to know how to get a job in Digital Marketing.

Whether you’re looking for a career in Social Media or want to get an entry level job as a SEO or PPC professional, there are a few key things I’ve learned over the years that would be helpful to anyone looking to change directions in their career.

When I made the transition to a full-time day job in digital marketing in 2014, I was 30 years old and had no formal training in what I now do for a living. However, as an entrepreneur, I had uniquely positioned myself to get a new job in the digital marketing field.

Here are my top 7 tips for how to break into digital marketing and land the job you want:

1. Get great at marketing yourself.

I created this blog and personal brand Miss Malaprop way back in 2006. While my original goal was to develop it into a brick & mortar and e-commerce store for handmade and eco-friendly goods, a strong personal brand has served many other purposes for me over the years.

If you want to do marketing for a living, you must first get great at marketing yourself. No matter what type of job opportunity you are applying for these days, potential employers will be checking your social media profiles and online reputation.

You are in control of what they see, so make sure your online presence is putting your best foot forward.

Make LinkedIn your career bestie.

If you want to work in digital marketing, and your LinkedIn profile looks abandoned or doesn’t exist, it’s going to reflect badly on you.

Think of LinkedIn as your resume on steroids. Fill out as many of the fields as possible, and use your profile to sell yourself to potential employers.

In sales, people talk about selling benefits over features of a product. You must think about yourself in the same way when writing your resume or updating your LinkedIn profile. Think about the benefits you brought to past jobs, not just the mundane features of the jobs you performed.

Use a professional, but eye-catching headshot, not a photo that looks like it was taken during a night out partying and you cropped out someone else’s head.

If you need more help, my friend Nicole offers a great LinkedIn course and consulting packages called Find Your Sparkle on LinkedIn.

Keep those other social media profiles clean.

If you want to work in digital marketing, you need to keep all of your other social media profiles presentable.

Either lock them down tight so that random people and potential employers can’t find those drunken photos or political rants or better yet, create a public social media presence that you’d be proud for anyone to see.

I’m a pretty private person in a lot of ways. I don’t post a lot of personal stuff to my social media profiles. I do, however, keep all of my profiles publicly visible. And I carefully curate the messages that I want to present to the world.

Your social media message is your calling card. What does it say about you?

2. Create your own website or online portfolio.

Consider creating a personal website, blog or online portfolio to show off your personality, expertise and past experience.

For most companies, personality and how you fit with the existing company culture are just as important as your knowledge and experience. If you come off as rude, entitled or immature online, you’re going to give potential employers reason to pause.

Although some coding experience is definitely a plus if you’re going into this field, you don’t have to be an expert web developer to create a beautiful, professional website. While I’m personally a huge fan of WordPress, I’ve been using it since 2004, way before simpler one-stop solutions like Squarespace existed. If I had to start over from scratch today and needed to build a portfolio, I’d totally go with Squarespace.

Squarespace is a fully hosted solution, which means that you don’t have to figure out the basics of web hosting AND how to set up your website software AND then design and create the content for your website. They offer lots of beautiful templates that make it super easy to create a home base on the web in minutes.

(I’m seriously not being paid to say this, I promise. I’ve seen too many small businesses and solopreneurs pay big bucks for websites that they couldn’t update themselves and didn’t know how to manage. Squarespace is absolutely a better solution for most micro-business owners and freelancers.)

3. Stay on top of industry trends and be constantly learning.

One of the things we pride ourselves on at my day job at FSC Interactive is that we as a company are constantly learning, testing and staying on top of the latest changes and digital marketing industry trends.

Change is a constant, both in life and in this industry. The more you can diversify your skill set, the faster you can move up your career ladder and the more indispensable you will be to employers.

If you feel confident in your knowledge of social media management best practices but aren’t familiar with SEO or paid search strategy, learn more about those sides of the industry. Learn the basics of code. (Codecademy has lots of free, awesome resources.)

Stay curious and be open to always learning new things.

Here are a few resources to check out:

Social Media, SEO & Paid Search Industry News & Trends

  • Backlinko
  • Moz
  • Search Engine Journal
  • Search Engine Land
  • Social Media Examiner
  • Social Media Today

4. Seek out small freelance jobs to build your resume.

If you’re having trouble getting full-time jobs at social media agencies because you don’t have enough experience, seek out freelance gigs for small businesses to build your experience and pad your resume.

Working with smaller companies will usually lead you to learn a wider range of skills. It can also force you to be more entrepreneurial, as you’re usually working with a smaller advertising budget. You’ll need to be more creative to get better results.

Keep track of your projects, but more importantly, keep track of your results and wins.

If you manage a campaign for a small company that grows their Instagram account by thousands of real followers in a few short months, create a case study about how you did it and show off the results of your efforts on your website.

This same methodology is often how big social media agencies land big corporate clients, but it can also work for you in your job search.

Here are a few places to look for freelance digital marketing opportunities:

  • Dreamers // Doers: Jobs + Gigs (Facebook group for women)
  • Problogger Jobs
  • Upwork

5. It does matter who you know.

As much as we’d all like to think that it doesn’t matter who you know, it does.

When I applied at FSC Interactive, I had an edge because I’d already worked with the company a few years earlier when I invited them to be on a panel I was organizing at a local conference. I inadvertently made a connection to my potential employer a few years before I needed it.

Knowing the right people helps you hear about opportunities earlier and often gives you a better chance at getting them.

As I mentioned before, many companies hire based on how you fit with their existing company culture. If all things are equal between you and another candidate in terms of experience, but you went to high school with one of the staff and you are a great fit with the vibe of the company, 9 times out of 10 you’re going to be the one to land the job.

Who you know doesn’t just land in your lap however. Especially when you’re just getting started, you need to put yourself out there and make connections.

Here’s the caveat: networking gets a bad rap because so many people do it badly.

Whether it’s an in-person networking event or a Facebook group for like-minded professionals, you can’t just go in and immediately try to sell yourself.

Act like a human. Be nice. Be friendly. Be helpful.

No one wants to help someone who is needy or whiny. People do, however, usually feel indebted to help people who have helped them first.

Givers get.

When you’re young, or in the early stages of a career transition, you must hustle hard but it must come from a place of giving and helping others.

Look for people who have done what you want to do, or people further along in their career.

Don’t just ask to “pick their brain.” Figure out what you can offer them to make it worth their time. And be respectful of their time. (It’s the most precious gift any of us have.)

Here are a few in-person and online resources to check out and start meeting cool people in this industry:

New Orleans Networking Groups & Events:

  • NOLATech
  • PRSA New Orleans
  • Women in Technology – Louisiana

Meet Digital Marketing Professionals Anywhere:

  • American Marketing Association
  • Public Relations Society of America

Facebook Groups for Cool Creative Entrepreneurs & Freelancers:

  • Badass Bosses
  • Being Boss
  • Curious Tribe
  • Miss Malaprop’s #BadassCreatives (the free Facebook group I host!)

6. Get good at interviewing and negotiating.

Okay, so you met the people, you have the skills and you got the interview. Now what?

Nailing the job interview and negotiating the job offer are learned skills, just like anything else.

When I was interviewing for my current job at FSC Interactive, you can bet your bottom dollar that I studied the art of interviewing and negotiation.

For women especially, I cannot stress what an important skill this is. If you don’t ask for what you want, you’ll never get it, and I guarantee you that most men do ask for it.

Here are some job interview and salary negotiation resources I recommend:

  • Salary Negotiation: How to negotiate better than 99% of people
  • Use The Briefcase Technique to earn thousands of dollars
  • Negotiation E-Courses by Lelia Gowland

7. Put it out into the universe, and be persistent.

Most people give up pursuing what they want right before it happens. Half of success is just hanging in there.

If you want something, put it out into the universe. Mention it to other people – you never know who might come across the right opportunity for you and be ready to send it your way.

People are often very willing to help, but you have to make it easy for them. Let them know the types of jobs you’re looking for and the skills you have. Give them a reason to root for you, and they very often will.

Don’t give up. So many people expect things to come easily or fast. We’ve been sold on the idea of get-rick-quick schemes, but those are just that. Schemes.

If there is a job you really want or a company you really want to work for, don’t let one “no” turn into the final no. (Unless, of course, the company has said, it’s not a good fit.) But if you know that you got turned down because of lack of experience or something else that you can work on and change, do it. Go home, study and get that experience and go back to apply again.

Attitude is everything. Most companies would rather hire someone who is motivated and open and willing to learn than someone who thinks they know everything already.

Go forth. Be awesome. Show potential employers how awesome you are (without sounding like a pompous jerk), and get that job.

P.S. If you liked this post, you might also like The Elusive Glamour of Quitting Your Day Job and Create Your Destiny [10 Steps to Start Achieving Your Dreams].

The post How To Break Into Digital Marketing { 7 Tips To Land The Job } appeared first on Miss Malaprop.



This post first appeared on Miss Malaprop: Biz Tips & Inspiration For #BadassC, please read the originial post: here

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