Hiring For Social Media: What I’d Look For

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In my previous posts on, I pointed out some good and some bad on the social media job front. A few asked what I thought social media jobs should look like, so I’ll do my best. But I’m not going to write this like a typical job description, because I think the content is more important than the format.

Social media-exclusive jobs are okay for now, as foundation building for companies needing to learn the ins and outs, understand intent and strategy, and educate their internal folks. But eventually, these kinds of jobs will fall by the wayside (or at least evolve) when social media becomes part of each and every role in one way or another, perhaps with specialists that have particular experience in application of the tools within their roles. (Think of it this way: we don’t have email managers that do nothing but. The *use* of email and digital stuff touches every role, whether it’s inward or outward facing).

Attributes

In my experience, the folks who grok social media best have a lot of attributes in common:

Curiosity: The desire to explore new ideas, in detail, and without specific direction to do so. Curiosity about the intersection of human interactions and technology is a specific aspect that’s helpful, and a passion for the potential of the work and the organization’s purpose is key to instilling that in others, both internally and externally.

Innovation: Ignore the buzzy nature of this word for a moment and concentrate on what it really means: the introduction of something new. Social media implementation requires new approaches to existing processes, both internally and externally, including communication, strategy, execution, measurement, reporting, and training. (This needs to be carefully balanced with realism and pragmatism, too, but I’d rather rein someone in than have to prod them forward.)

Motivation: Folks thriving in social media jobs are self-starters, often capable of creating clarity from a bit of chaos, and devising their own marching orders without constant direction or specific instructions. If you can instill and nurture this in others, too, so much the better.

Collaboration: “That’s not my job” and “get out of my sandbox” don’t play well in these kinds of roles. They’re far too new to be that rigid, and they definitely need cooperation and work with others across the organization.

Translation: In many companies right now, we need people that have the patience and clarity of explanation to teach others about the impact of the social web, and who work well across departments within a corporate culture. These roles, most critically, need to know how to work and educate across silos, in the terms that make sense to the relevant colleagues.

Humility: The goal here is to elevate the entire company and your colleagues as contributing, valuable members of the community and leaders in the industry. Not you and your “personal brand”.

Diplomacy: Social media roles are today’s change agents. If you expect instant sea change inside your company without a lot of legwork, communication, negotiation, discussion, education, and trial and error, this job is NOT for you. And the outside community will present challenges to you; you need to be able to handle them with patience and tact. It’s a balance of emotional intelligence here.

Connectivity and Awareness: This is a people job, inside and out (and I don’t just mean community roles). You need to be able to talk to people, work with them, socialize with them, connect with them in multiple places. Understand how the network and the people in it need you (and don’t), and how all of those interactions work together to encourage more, deeper, and better connections that ultimately elevate the quality of your work and company.

Expertise

Business Process/Planning and Analysis: From the mid level on up, you want someone who understands financial frameworks for profit and loss, strategic and long range planning (including how to write goals and objectives), and how to map out execution at a tactical level. The key here is the ability to think at a global company level, not within a silo, and not in a linear fashion.

Social Media Anthropology & Participation: If you have someone spearheading social media, I feel pretty strongly that they need to be using it themselves in order to fully understand its implications and unique culture. Yes, that means familiarity with the most widely known tools and technologies, and some of the most consistent and popular applications (for better and for worse) of same, and interest and observation of what’s new on the scene (without the tendency to chase everything new because it is). Academic knowledge is good, applied is even better.

Hedgehog Management: Social media programs that are well thought out have lots of moving parts to manage and drive. People who excel at social media jobs can tackle projects that span multiple networks or areas, and keep all the pieces moving toward a bigger, crystal clear goal (or in Jim Collins’ terms, Hedgehog Concept).

Customer or Client Service: Whether it’s a formal title or not, you really want someone who has experience communicating with customers directly, and fostering those relationships in order to meet their business goals. The most powerful bit of social media is in mobilizing those relationships.

Written Communication Skills: Yep. Sorry, folks. I think this one is really imperative. So much communication and engagement online is in the form of written communication. If you can’t write coherently and professionally, you’re going to struggle. On this note, I also think a lot of social media positions will and should include elements of content marketing, which means that the ability to create and contribute solid content is key.

Social Media Roles And Responsibilities

Again, let me say that I’m writing this from the POV of a job that’s heavily or exclusively social media, and I don’t think these jobs will exist like this forever. And this is a broad, sweeping list that’s not meant to tie to any one job description (though I’m quite certain I have experience bias), but instead give you things to consider if you’re in need of a role like this in your company. A few things that might fall under this umbrella:

  • Establish and use listening platforms to gauge the health of the brand online, and potential for participating in new communities
  • Build outreach initiatives outside of sales or marketing goals to give our brand a personality and voice within the industry and the communities we care about
  • Engage the community actively and responsively, both in relevant outpost communities and existing resident channels (like brand communities), and teach and empower team members to do the same, with consistency and clarity
  • Build training programs to help other areas of the company learn and tap the potential of social media for their roles
  • Collaborate on internal communication programs to inform and educate around social media initiatives and their broader implications
  • Create and facilitate content in multiple media to further engagement goals, both internally and externally, and contribute resources and expertise to prospective and existing community members
  • Consume, curate, and share relevant, interesting industry information and content with internal and external communities.
  • Understand and observe the parallels and implications of other online activities, including web analytics, email, and search
  • Communicate and collaborate on how social media activities impact other business operations, including customer support, human resources, product development, sales and business development, and translate online community and social learnings into business insights
  • Establish relevant metrics (new or existing) to map the impact of social media activities in both a qualitative and quantitative fashion, and amend strategies based on learnings and patterns

Reporting wise, I’d put this position under whomever is charged with driving customer experience and a sustainable, positive company presence through online channels, and whatever business function is being most heavily supported by these initiatives. That might be someone in PR, marketing, customer service, client or donor relations, even product management. It needs, in whatever case, to report in to someone who gets the importance and potential of this, even if they don’t necessarily understand the “how”.

Your Turn

There’s no way my list can be exhaustive, nor can it possibly cover every subtlety and nuance of individual positions based on unique business needs. I’m painting with a broad brush, with the hope that it gets the gears turning for all of us to think critically about how these positions fit into business, from multiple perspectives.

So I need to hear from you! What’s missing? What would you included or have you included in your job descriptions? What have you seen that articulates the need for these jobs well? I can’t wait for you to weigh in. Comments are yours.

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  • http://brandonzeman.com Brandon

    Awesome compilation here, Amber. I love reading your stuff, and this list in particular is helpful, to benchmark myself and see where I stand in the social world and how much more I need to learn and experience.

    p.s. I’m excited to finally get my hands on using Radian6 once I start at Edelman this week :)

  • http://brandonzeman.com Brandon

    Awesome compilation here, Amber. I love reading your stuff, and this list in particular is helpful, to benchmark myself and see where I stand in the social world and how much more I need to learn and experience.

    p.s. I’m excited to finally get my hands on using Radian6 once I start at Edelman this week :)

  • http://www.deetergallahergroup.com Anne Deeter Gallaher

    Thanks for sharing, Amber. The Attributes and Expertise lists are thorough and clear. I don’t think we can overemphasize “Written Communication Skills” as necessary and critical to a social media agent. Sometimes we think that 140 characters means we can accept grammar amnesia and our followers/friends will forgive us. On the contrary, with only 140 characters to showcase our message, our brand, and our value, we can’t afford to confuse or miscommunicate. A successful social media agent has to be an excellent communicator + marketer + PR pro + brandbuilder + information-sharer + people-lover. Nicely written!

  • http://www.deetergallahergroup.com Anne Deeter Gallaher

    Thanks for sharing, Amber. The Attributes and Expertise lists are thorough and clear. I don’t think we can overemphasize “Written Communication Skills” as necessary and critical to a social media agent. Sometimes we think that 140 characters means we can accept grammar amnesia and our followers/friends will forgive us. On the contrary, with only 140 characters to showcase our message, our brand, and our value, we can’t afford to confuse or miscommunicate. A successful social media agent has to be an excellent communicator + marketer + PR pro + brandbuilder + information-sharer + people-lover. Nicely written!

  • http://www.brandonsutton.com Brandon Sutton

    Nice work Amber. One of the things that I think often gets glossed over is that all the tools and tactics are great, but the marketing ideas are still a critical component to the equation. It sounds so obvious, but you don’t have to look very far to see examples of lovely social media execution with bad ideas. I just think it’s easy to get dazzled by what the tools allow us to do and lose sight of the creative thinking that starts the process of connecting with consumers.

    I’ve heard on several accounts companies say ‘we need an iPhone app’ or ‘we need to be on Facebook’ without really knowing if it makes sense or if anyone will care/take action. I think we should start with questions like ‘how can we provide value to the consumer and make their experience with our brand more enjoyable’ or ‘what can we do to empower our passionate customers to spread the word about our brand to others.’ I think having people that think along these lines, and don’t skip straight to the ‘fun stuff’ are important to have on the team. Not sure how that fits into the list, but it’s what came to my mind when I was thinking about what I might add. Honestly, you did an excellent job of hitting the key points. I appreciate the effort that went into the post. I hope a lot of people read it and pay attention. Did you submit it to SMT?

  • http://www.brandonsutton.com Brandon Sutton

    Nice work Amber. One of the things that I think often gets glossed over is that all the tools and tactics are great, but the marketing ideas are still a critical component to the equation. It sounds so obvious, but you don’t have to look very far to see examples of lovely social media execution with bad ideas. I just think it’s easy to get dazzled by what the tools allow us to do and lose sight of the creative thinking that starts the process of connecting with consumers.

    I’ve heard on several accounts companies say ‘we need an iPhone app’ or ‘we need to be on Facebook’ without really knowing if it makes sense or if anyone will care/take action. I think we should start with questions like ‘how can we provide value to the consumer and make their experience with our brand more enjoyable’ or ‘what can we do to empower our passionate customers to spread the word about our brand to others.’ I think having people that think along these lines, and don’t skip straight to the ‘fun stuff’ are important to have on the team. Not sure how that fits into the list, but it’s what came to my mind when I was thinking about what I might add. Honestly, you did an excellent job of hitting the key points. I appreciate the effort that went into the post. I hope a lot of people read it and pay attention. Did you submit it to SMT?

  • http://ramine.net Ramine Darabiha

    I liked the points about the expertise.

    The attributes thing wasn’t so relevant imo. I mean, you could want those skills from basically any worker in any field.

    Good read anyway :)

  • http://ramine.net Ramine Darabiha

    I liked the points about the expertise.

    The attributes thing wasn’t so relevant imo. I mean, you could want those skills from basically any worker in any field.

    Good read anyway :)

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  • http://twitter.com/tamaruk Henry Elliss

    A very comprehensive list – I’d say one I like to insist on is “Patience”. Both from the angle of what you labeled “Diplomacy” for internal communications and change, but also from the point of view of not over-reacting or ‘biting’ to comments or negative situations online. As the old saying goes, Patience is a virtue… especially when dealing with the average Joe online!

  • http://twitter.com/tamaruk Henry Elliss

    A very comprehensive list – I’d say one I like to insist on is “Patience”. Both from the angle of what you labeled “Diplomacy” for internal communications and change, but also from the point of view of not over-reacting or ‘biting’ to comments or negative situations online. As the old saying goes, Patience is a virtue… especially when dealing with the average Joe online!

  • http://blogs.dix-eaton.com/measurementpr-spectives/ Chuck Hemann

    Amber – this list of qualifications is fantastic. I’ve long thought that social media (and even digital communications) job descriptions have focused too much on the technology and not enough on the analytical skills. You’ve written here several times about the importance of being able to report out results (read: measure your progress). That’s an incredibly important point. I’d also add that social media folks must, to some degree, be able to digest market research, customer satisfaction data and the like. They don’t necessarily need to be primary research experts, but being able to take the data from a survey and implement it into some meaningful format will be important going forward.

  • http://blogs.dix-eaton.com/measurementpr-spectives/ Chuck Hemann

    Amber – this list of qualifications is fantastic. I’ve long thought that social media (and even digital communications) job descriptions have focused too much on the technology and not enough on the analytical skills. You’ve written here several times about the importance of being able to report out results (read: measure your progress). That’s an incredibly important point. I’d also add that social media folks must, to some degree, be able to digest market research, customer satisfaction data and the like. They don’t necessarily need to be primary research experts, but being able to take the data from a survey and implement it into some meaningful format will be important going forward.

  • http://noteasytoforget.com James Ball

    Everybody does want a social media “job”, don’t they? I know I aspire to make $100K as a professional tweeter(not). I appreciate you saying out loud that these types of jobs will fall to the wayside and evolve. I think that there are many who are excited by the idea that every company will have a corner office for the social media guy/gal. We are seeing some of this, but you are so right in reminding that this will all ultimately become integrated will all aspects and personnel in the work place. Very informative and helpful article all together!

  • http://noteasytoforget.com James Ball

    Everybody does want a social media “job”, don’t they? I know I aspire to make $100K as a professional tweeter(not). I appreciate you saying out loud that these types of jobs will fall to the wayside and evolve. I think that there are many who are excited by the idea that every company will have a corner office for the social media guy/gal. We are seeing some of this, but you are so right in reminding that this will all ultimately become integrated will all aspects and personnel in the work place. Very informative and helpful article all together!

  • http://soloprpro.com Kellye Crane

    Wow, this is the magnum opus on this topic (thanks, Amber). As for suggestions, under Attributes, it could be useful to add strategic thinking, which as you know is key. And rather than list “innovation,” perhaps some would understand better if we used the word creativity – a creative approach to doing things in new ways with better outcomes.

    Perhaps most importantly, folks in social media need a sense of humor. I’ve seen many talented folks derail in social media because they get defensive or angry in the face of 2-way communications. It’s not listed on many job descriptions, but perhaps it should be.

  • http://soloprpro.com Kellye Crane

    Wow, this is the magnum opus on this topic (thanks, Amber). As for suggestions, under Attributes, it could be useful to add strategic thinking, which as you know is key. And rather than list “innovation,” perhaps some would understand better if we used the word creativity – a creative approach to doing things in new ways with better outcomes.

    Perhaps most importantly, folks in social media need a sense of humor. I’ve seen many talented folks derail in social media because they get defensive or angry in the face of 2-way communications. It’s not listed on many job descriptions, but perhaps it should be.

  • http://www.nancyvanreece.com Nancy VanReece

    Thank you Kellye for mentioning the importance of humor. The user experience should be always in the front of your mind. Having the creativity to make the communication enjoyable is paramont … and more fun.

  • http://www.nancyvanreece.com Nancy VanReece

    Thank you Kellye for mentioning the importance of humor. The user experience should be always in the front of your mind. Having the creativity to make the communication enjoyable is paramont … and more fun.

  • http://www.thesocialmediahandyman.com Paul Chaney

    You are writing the book on social media jobs/hiring. Good stuff! Keep it coming.

  • http://www.thesocialmediahandyman.com Paul Chaney

    You are writing the book on social media jobs/hiring. Good stuff! Keep it coming.

  • http://custservicestories.blogspot.com/ Barry Dalton

    This is a keeper. Thx Amber. In the enterprise customer service world, I’m witnessing companies giving these roles over to internal employees based solely on an interest/desire or because a panic attack over social is causing them to throw this at someone so they are at least doing something. I’ve seen several companies recently that have appointed a ‘social [fill in the blank]‘ who possesses none of these characteristics. If the enterprise believes this is not a fad and in fact a quantum shift in the buyer-seller dynamic, then why not recruit and staff accordingly? At last glace, surgeons needed to go to med school. Treat this role as a profession. thx again.

  • http://custservicestories.blogspot.com/ Barry Dalton

    This is a keeper. Thx Amber. In the enterprise customer service world, I’m witnessing companies giving these roles over to internal employees based solely on an interest/desire or because a panic attack over social is causing them to throw this at someone so they are at least doing something. I’ve seen several companies recently that have appointed a ‘social [fill in the blank]‘ who possesses none of these characteristics. If the enterprise believes this is not a fad and in fact a quantum shift in the buyer-seller dynamic, then why not recruit and staff accordingly? At last glace, surgeons needed to go to med school. Treat this role as a profession. thx again.

  • http://kevinfentonbiz.wordpress.com Kevin Fenton

    Amber, my experience shows that the attributes you list are as important as expertise. A social media person can easily alienate people who might have been allies through an all-or-nothing, out with the old, take no prisoners approach. From a substantive standpoint, I simply don’t think it’s true that social media will (or should) completely oust traditional approaches. But such an attitude simply tells people who have been practicing a craft for years that what they do is suspect and the skills they use to pay their mortgage are obsolete. This violates Henry Kissinger’s first rule of diplomacy: never back a dog into a corner. I think the trick is combining zeal with tolerance and, as Kellye said, humor. On a personal level, you and David Alston model this.

  • http://kevinfentonbiz.wordpress.com Kevin Fenton

    Amber, my experience shows that the attributes you list are as important as expertise. A social media person can easily alienate people who might have been allies through an all-or-nothing, out with the old, take no prisoners approach. From a substantive standpoint, I simply don’t think it’s true that social media will (or should) completely oust traditional approaches. But such an attitude simply tells people who have been practicing a craft for years that what they do is suspect and the skills they use to pay their mortgage are obsolete. This violates Henry Kissinger’s first rule of diplomacy: never back a dog into a corner. I think the trick is combining zeal with tolerance and, as Kellye said, humor. On a personal level, you and David Alston model this.

  • http://www.crossingmarketingandit.com Elmer

    Well done, Amber.

    Being a forward thinker is extremely important. While it’s important to know “what’s hot and what’s not” right now in the social media tool belt, it’s even more so to be able to see what’s coming and evaluate new tools as they get more (or less) popular.

    Measuring results is also very important, as you rightly point out. One needs a way to measure results so they can know if they’re on the right track and what adjustments in strategy might be needed. Too often we just “fly by the seat of our pants” in this business and don’t look for ways to measure success and need for improvement.

  • http://www.davidsfinch.com David Finch

    Weaving the attributes with the skill-set was brilliant, as well as the importance of being able to communicate directly with a client. Often times, you’re the only one in your organization that “gets” social and if you can’t communicate it then it’s doesn’t matter what your strategy is. It’s common that the “social media guy/gal” has to be able to create strategy, sell it and then execute and measure it.

    As always, thanks for your expertise!!

  • http://www.crossingmarketingandit.com Elmer

    Well done, Amber.

    Being a forward thinker is extremely important. While it’s important to know “what’s hot and what’s not” right now in the social media tool belt, it’s even more so to be able to see what’s coming and evaluate new tools as they get more (or less) popular.

    Measuring results is also very important, as you rightly point out. One needs a way to measure results so they can know if they’re on the right track and what adjustments in strategy might be needed. Too often we just “fly by the seat of our pants” in this business and don’t look for ways to measure success and need for improvement.

  • http://www.davidsfinch.com David Finch

    Weaving the attributes with the skill-set was brilliant, as well as the importance of being able to communicate directly with a client. Often times, you’re the only one in your organization that “gets” social and if you can’t communicate it then it’s doesn’t matter what your strategy is. It’s common that the “social media guy/gal” has to be able to create strategy, sell it and then execute and measure it.

    As always, thanks for your expertise!!

  • http://www.tommartin.typepad.com Tom Martin

    Amber

    Great list — definitely a bookmark’d post. To this list I’d add one more, what I feel is imperative quality — passion. Not passion for social media, but a real, heartfelt passion for your brand and your brand’s category.

    As the social media person(s) will in effect become your brand’s spokesperson, and do nothing but speak of and about your brand all day, every day, they just have to love it if they are to be successful IMHO.

    I had a post along these lines a few months back, http://budurl.com/mnqg, I’d be interested to hear your take on it… if you get a few free min.

    @TomMartin

  • http://www.tommartin.typepad.com Tom Martin

    Amber

    Great list — definitely a bookmark’d post. To this list I’d add one more, what I feel is imperative quality — passion. Not passion for social media, but a real, heartfelt passion for your brand and your brand’s category.

    As the social media person(s) will in effect become your brand’s spokesperson, and do nothing but speak of and about your brand all day, every day, they just have to love it if they are to be successful IMHO.

    I had a post along these lines a few months back, http://budurl.com/mnqg, I’d be interested to hear your take on it… if you get a few free min.

    @TomMartin

  • http://www.thedatarevolution.com Dan Murray

    Amber;

    Very interesting post. I have an interest in developing social media for communicating business information using tools like Yammer or blogging tools like WordPress. I think it is possible to do these things in a secure way.

    The attributes you describe in this article are not commonly found in accountants and database folks. Your post has really stirred my thinking about social media, data visualization, database schema an how these different developing areas can be merged to create a new way of analyzing and communicating business information of all kinds.

    Thank you for the thought-provoking post.

  • http://www.thedatarevolution.com Dan Murray

    Amber;

    Very interesting post. I have an interest in developing social media for communicating business information using tools like Yammer or blogging tools like WordPress. I think it is possible to do these things in a secure way.

    The attributes you describe in this article are not commonly found in accountants and database folks. Your post has really stirred my thinking about social media, data visualization, database schema an how these different developing areas can be merged to create a new way of analyzing and communicating business information of all kinds.

    Thank you for the thought-provoking post.

  • http://www.bajdesign.com stephanie

    great dissection of information on social media! thx!

  • http://www.bajdesign.com stephanie

    great dissection of information on social media! thx!

  • Mary Danielsen

    This is a great piece. Thank you.

  • Mary Danielsen

    This is a great piece. Thank you.

  • Leslie Moon

    Well thought out and presented. Thanks for giving us more to consider.

  • Leslie Moon

    Well thought out and presented. Thanks for giving us more to consider.

  • http://socialbutterflyguy.com/ DJ Waldow

    Amber –

    Love that you are on a roll with killer posts again. Thanks for that. Keeps me busy, engaged…and thinking

    Adding to your list:

    1. Passion (as Tom Martin said)
    2. Industry knowledge (thought leadership?)
    3. Name synonymous with brand/company/industry
    4. Be human. Robots need not apply.
    5. Add humor and keep it light (as Kellye said)
    6. Patience (as Henry said)

    DJ Waldow
    Director of Community, Blue Sky Factory
    @djwaldow

  • http://socialbutterflyguy.com/ DJ Waldow

    Amber –

    Love that you are on a roll with killer posts again. Thanks for that. Keeps me busy, engaged…and thinking

    Adding to your list:

    1. Passion (as Tom Martin said)
    2. Industry knowledge (thought leadership?)
    3. Name synonymous with brand/company/industry
    4. Be human. Robots need not apply.
    5. Add humor and keep it light (as Kellye said)
    6. Patience (as Henry said)

    DJ Waldow
    Director of Community, Blue Sky Factory
    @djwaldow

  • http://www.convinceandconvert.com Jason Baer

    Just quit Radian6 and go into the “I’ll write your job description for you” business. Great post. Massively useful. A classic. Bookmarked, Printed, emailed to clients, tweeted, worshiped.

  • http://www.convinceandconvert.com Jason Baer

    Just quit Radian6 and go into the “I’ll write your job description for you” business. Great post. Massively useful. A classic. Bookmarked, Printed, emailed to clients, tweeted, worshiped.

  • http://www.puredriven.com Patick Garmoe

    Thanks for a great post Amber,

    I would encourage those looking to hire a social media manager to at least keep an eye on reporters and advertising staffs of local newspapers. Many of them are being laid off in droves these days (as I was in March after 10 years in newspapers). I recently became a social media manager. And my personality and experience fits just about all the attributes you mention here, and I absolutely love my job. I say this, because many fine reporters have the skills, abilities and desire to do exactly this kind of work, but simply don’t even know these kinds of jobs exist.

    Thanks,
    Patrick Garmoe
    Social Media Manager at Pure Driven
    @puredriven

  • http://www.puredriven.com Patick Garmoe

    Thanks for a great post Amber,

    I would encourage those looking to hire a social media manager to at least keep an eye on reporters and advertising staffs of local newspapers. Many of them are being laid off in droves these days (as I was in March after 10 years in newspapers). I recently became a social media manager. And my personality and experience fits just about all the attributes you mention here, and I absolutely love my job. I say this, because many fine reporters have the skills, abilities and desire to do exactly this kind of work, but simply don’t even know these kinds of jobs exist.

    Thanks,
    Patrick Garmoe
    Social Media Manager at Pure Driven
    @puredriven

  • http://www.rebirthofpr.com Jeremy Fischer

    I don’t think training others can be emphasized enough. As the saying goes, “a rising tide lifts all boats”. As someone who was laid off back in May and is currently in a job search, I think that offering your expertise to help others and the company as a whole is a tremendous selling point.

    Training others in the company to successfully use social media and become an advocate for the company they work for (and for their own personal brand as well) is something that I think most corporations will be looking for in the future. Sending their employees to a webinar or seminar will only get them so far.

    And yes, in order to effectively train others you better know how to communicate in both the online and offline worlds. That means written and oral communication is going to be critical. Some things will never change. The need for great written and oral communication skills is one of them.

    Great article Amber.

  • http://www.rebirthofpr.com Jeremy Fischer

    I don’t think training others can be emphasized enough. As the saying goes, “a rising tide lifts all boats”. As someone who was laid off back in May and is currently in a job search, I think that offering your expertise to help others and the company as a whole is a tremendous selling point.

    Training others in the company to successfully use social media and become an advocate for the company they work for (and for their own personal brand as well) is something that I think most corporations will be looking for in the future. Sending their employees to a webinar or seminar will only get them so far.

    And yes, in order to effectively train others you better know how to communicate in both the online and offline worlds. That means written and oral communication is going to be critical. Some things will never change. The need for great written and oral communication skills is one of them.

    Great article Amber.

  • http://www.DavideBenjamin.com David Benjamin

    Amber,

    I think you have a future in social media job postings. I hope many companies looking to hire such a professional (or a team) find this post.

    Awesome work!

  • http://www.DavideBenjamin.com David Benjamin

    Amber,

    I think you have a future in social media job postings. I hope many companies looking to hire such a professional (or a team) find this post.

    Awesome work!

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