| aka: HOME - - STRATEGY - project management - technology - design - tools - Blue Sky Radio - klogs - community - staffing - shortage watch - - LIFE - events - food - Bloggers for Hire - shrub - public policy - books - Obituaries a la Blog | |
| |
| Phil Wolff's subversions... |
|
Thursday, June 20, 2002
klogs staffing
Dear Klogger: Over the last five years, how many hours have you spent on your resume or CV? One? Two? Ten? Let's say 2 hours a year out of 2000 working hours, being generous. Now how much time have you spent writing to your blog? Ten minutes a day, one day off? That's 50 hours a year. Time spent describing yourself, whether that was your intention or not. So at least an 10 times more information lives in your weblog than your résumé. And it is fresher. And in your voice. And covering a broader range of topics. And hyperlinked. And linked-to. So there is more of you in these documents. How does this create value, from a worker lifecycle view? It improves search. I'm looking to fill a present or future job. That job needs the person doing it to know things. It helps if they have experiences (stories) that prove they can do what we'll ask of them. We want them to fit not only the job, but the people with whom they will work. And we hope they bring points of view that complement the existing/prospective team's strengths and weaknesses. Before, I had to try to find the right interview list working off of 500-1000 words of advertising on your stale résumé (updated on average 2-3 years' ago). Now I can use Google and other tools to find many small connections that sum up to the job's requirements. Your blog's oodles of datapoints say who you are better than any darned résumé. What interests you? What you've been reading and studying? Who you know, how you think, how you face social challenges and life obstacles. This is richer information. And you are more likely to turn up correctly in a search even if some darned "keyword" is missing. So more of the right people show up in the short list. Start with just your own small to mid-sized business. This value is massively important in knowledge driven enterprises, like law firms and other professional service orgs. It helps manage careers, assign projects, coordinate work, solve problems, plan for succession. Or, looking outside your firm, to find your circle of prospective employees and business partners. HR pros spend fortunes managing résumés. Google applicant tracking system, job ad distribution, and job board for examples of this $billion industry. Klogs, and tools that help you mine them, improve your marketability (as employer or worker) over those who only use résumés. Now is the time to understand the medium. Time to develop and integrate those mining tools. Time to klog.
klogs
community strategy
Are you listening, Richard Bolles? Rusty at K5 pioneers the non-profit model for collaborative Websites. Not a bad way to make a salary to do something you love to do. [via John Robb] He's doing this by starting a not-for-profit corporation to operate the Kuro5hin (pronounced corrosion) site. So far the donations are coming in. This is the emergence of something like public radio and public television, but for Internet community. I hope it works, becoming a model for other communities who don't want to compromise the spirit and voices that brought them together.
life
Cosmiverse reports it. This explains my brilliant brother (electric bass), my novelist father (trumpet), my cousin the opera singer, her brother the cantor, his son the pianist. I have a big elbow.
|
||||||||||||||||||
Editorial Policies | Privacy - Editorial - Corrections - Syndication
FAQ | About Phil - diJEST mailing list - Contact Write to&nbps;me
This is my Blogchalk: United States, California, Oakland, Adams Point, English, Phil, Male, 41-45.
HOME - - STRATEGY - project management - technology - design - tools - Blue Sky Radio - klogs - community - staffing - shortage watch - - LIFE - events - food - Bloggers for Hire - shrub - public policy - books - Obituaries a la Blog