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Marketing yourself and your research . Dr Nikki Penhaligon Postgraduate Career Counsellor QUT Careers and Employment. Today’s agenda. Why are we here? Where do we want to go? (And where can I go?!) What’s happening in the world of careers? How do I market my PhD to get that job?!.
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Marketing yourself and your research Dr Nikki Penhaligon Postgraduate Career Counsellor QUT Careers and Employment
Today’s agenda • Why are we here? • Where do we want to go? (And where can I go?!) • What’s happening in the world of careers? • How do I market my PhD to get that job?!
Who are we and why are we here? • Name/PhD topic • Where are you on your PhD journey? • What are you hoping to achieve out of today? • What do you want to know?
The changing world of work • No longer a job for life • More uncertainty in the air • We need to self manage and actively participate in our OWN career journey • Need to identify transferable skills and be adaptable • Need to learn new skills and engage in life long learning • We need learn how to market and promote ourselves
Where can I go? • Universities • Academic • Research only • Professional • Student administration • Student support • Grant assistance • Information management • Research institutes e.g., CSIRO • Public service • Graduate programs • Private • Consulting • Contracting • Not for profit
Tips to effectively market yourself • Self reflect • Define your brand • Develop key statement(s) • Do not wait to be noticed • Present a professional image • Cultivate people skills • Have a vision • Enact your strategy! (Karalis, 2007)
1. Self reflect • Ask yourself: • What motivated you to start a PhD? • Where did you hope it would lead? • What challenges are you facing? • Has anything changed since you first enrolled? • Activity: Write them down in your booklet
Activity: Think Pair Share Understanding my skills! • On the post-it provided, brainstorm as many skills as you can that you have developed during your PhD candidature. Also indicate where you have developed these skills (ie the evidence). You have 1 minute! • Now, grab a partner and brainstorm more. You have 2 minutes! • Share with the larger group
Valued skills • Work experience • Teamwork skills • Emotional intelligence (including self-awareness, confidence, motivation) • Leadership • Activities (including intra and extracurricular) . • Interpersonal/communication skills (written and oral) • Drive and commitment/industry knowledge • Critical reasoning and analytical skills/technical skills • Calibre of academic results • Cultural alignment/values fit • Where might you have developed these skills??? • Data from 2011 survey of over 350 Australian employers. For more information see www.graduatecareers.com.au.
0 Postgraduate Research Capabilities • Advanced theoretical knowledge and analytical skills, including methodological, research design and problem-solving skills • Advanced information processing skills, and knowledge of advanced information and research technologies • Independent research planning and execution • Research health and safety, ethical conduct and intellectual property • Project management, teamwork, academic writing and oral communication • Research results transfer to end-users, publications and presentations, research policy, and research career planning
2. Define Your Brand • How do you stand out from the crowd? • What makes you different from the other applicants? • How do you add value?
Think Outside the Box • The goal of the puzzle is to link all 9 dots using four straight lines or less, without lifting the pen.
How do you self manage, market and promote your skills? • Features versus benefits • Feature = distinctive element: an attribute, characteristic, mark, peculiarity, property, quality or trait. • Benefit = Something that promotes or enhances well-being; an advantage; Something that contributes to an organisation (i.e., enhanced profitability, better efficiency, or reduced risk); Something that reduces hassles or inconvenience Employers buy benefits, not features
Workbook activity: What are my features? How are they benefits?
3. Develop key statements Have an elevator speech. A concise 30-60 sec summary of you and your PhD. Write it in your workbook. Pitching your PhD Pitching yourself • Describe who you are • How you will be a benefit to the organisation? • How are you relevant to the role? • Describe what it is (in universal language) • Highlight specialist knowledge and features • Apply the subject matter to the organisation/uni/role
Remember! • Who is your audience? Identify them: • Academia? • Industry? • Colleagues? • Peer? • Supervisor? • Adapt your language and message to suit • Believe in the product (you!) and what you bring
4. Do not wait to be noticed • Let people know when you are ready for the next challenge. • The more people you talk to about it, the more likely you are to hear about opportunities as they arise.
How can you be noticed? • Step out of your comfort zone into a new and unfamiliar area • Always accept additional responsibilities that can build and diversify your portfolio • If there is a vacancy or assignment you want, ask for it • Be proactive and look for opportunities!
Make connections • Attend conferences • LinkedIn • Join professional associations • Attend events or engage in professional development • Network with others
Volunteer! • Speak at conferences/seminars/organisations • Organise conferences/symposiums • Actively participate in professional organisations • Review for publications; contribute to a blog • Chair a conference stream • Serve on university committees • Be available! • Volunteer outside of QUT • Volunteering Qld http://www.volunteeringqld.org.au/web/ • seek.com.au http://www.volunteer.com.au/ Activity: Turn to your neighbour. Ask them where they would like to work in the future. Spend 2 minutes brainstorming ways they can get noticed! Then swap.
5. Present a professional image • First impressions are crucial • Consider your online presence • FaceBook • MySpace • LinkedIn • Dress for success
6. Cultivate people skills • Good communication and interpersonal skills are crucial • They can enable us to advance at a much faster pace than others with more experience • They help us form positive first impressions
What are good people skills? • Smile • Eye contact • Listen to understand • Call people by their name • Being open and confident • Being positive
But what do I talk about? • Write one topic on the post-it provided
7. Have a vision • Have a broadly defined goal or a career vision • It may be a bit unclear, but having some direction will keep you moving ahead. • Activity: Think about where you want to be in: • 3yrs? • 5yrs? • 10yrs? Write it in your workbook
How do I get to where I want to go? • Have an overall vision of where you want to go • Break your vision down into manageable steps (SMART goals) • Look for opportunities • Record your progress and reward each achievement • Revisit, evaluate and revise as you go
Be persistent! If you don’t succeed get some feedback and work out what you can do differently for next time
8. Enact your strategy – Goal setting activity S = SPECIFIC • Who is involved? • What do you want to accomplish? • Where? - Identify a location. • When? – Establish a time frame. • Why? – Specific reason, purpose, or benefits of achieving a goal. M = MEASUREABLE Helps you stay on track, reach your target dates, and experience achievement. A = ATTAINABLE Break it down into steps - each step should move you closer to that goal. R = REALISTIC Personal and situational factors which may influence your ability to reach your goal. T = TIMEBOUND Define start points and end points to your goal and maintain commitment to these deadlines.
Writing an effective goal statement • Use clear, specific language. • Start your goal statement with TO + a VERB • Write your goal statement using SMART Goal Criteria • Avoid using negative language. Think positive! Activity: Let’s now give it a go!
Contact Careers and Employment PHONE Gardens Point: 07 3138 2649 Kelvin Grove: 07 3138 3488 Caboolture 07 5316 7400 LOCATION Gardens Point Campus: Level 2, X Block Reception: Room X226 Kelvin Grove Campus: Level 4, C Block (Above the Refectory) Caboolture Campus: Student Centre - J Block EMAIL careers@qut.edu.au WEBSITE www.careers.qut.edu.au