Roy's Blog: March 2022

March 28, 2022

Why a job is way more important than your career

Job
Source: Unsplash

Why a job is way more important than your career.

Young professionals leave school with the intent of launching their career based on their study specialty; economics majors look for entry level jobs where they can apply their knowledge of micro economics and demand theory and lawyers migrate to law firms.

This may seem like a reasonable approach, but the reality is that when you begin your career journey you never really know where you will end up.

A career is an unclear destination with an unpredictable journey and a healthy dose of luck.

I graduated with a BSC in mathematics and computer science. I took a management trainee job and ended up as a CMO and president of a company we took to A BILLION IN SALES without any need to use sophisticated computer programming and differential equations that I learned at school to solve business problems.

I arrived in the executive suite after many years of strategic meandering around and up the hierarchy of the organization doing many things, developing and honing the skills necessary to add as much value as I could to the company’s future direction.

And to be positioned as the only logical choice for an opportunity should it arise.

I began as a junior systems analyst where I was required to do time and motion studies to improve the productivity of various departments.

It was a job.

I needed it to pay back my school loans and it was with an organization that was poised to undergo massive market change. But it really didn’t make use of my academic background, and I had no idea if it would result in a meaningful career.

Besides, I was married and I needed to pay bills. I couldn’t get hung up on whether the job was the right thing in the long term.

It turned out that the job was not to be my destination; it was a beginning and a learning point along the way.

When you are just starting your working life, you can’t with any degree of precision determine what your career will be.

I see too many young professionals unable to decide on whether to take a particular job or not. They agonize over whether it fits with their long term career plan; they are paralyzed and can’t make a decision.

They search and they search for the opportunity they believe to be a perfect match with their career ambitions. As a result, they make no job choice and no forward movement towards any career.

The thing is, if you don’t take a job, you will never know if it fits or not.

Every job in every organization presents the opportunity to make it your own and to craft it into something that satisfies your interests which typically are aligned with what you aspire to be ‘when you grow up’.

Find your passion

Your top priority should not be to find a job that’s consistent with what you think your career should be, but rather to look for an organization that excites you in some way and allows you to express your passion.

This is the environmental factor. If the work environment stirs a passion inside you, it is likely to be rich with opportunities and potential. If it doesn’t, it’s unlikely to produce the new challenges that feed a successful career.

Choose an organization that has a culture of mobility

It is critical to target an organization that has a program of moving new employees around and exposing them to different roles and various learning opportunities.

As a function of being a new hire from university, I was put in a management trainee program where I was placed in 6 different positions over a 24-month period.

This experience provided me an incomparable perspective on which areas were interesting and those that I would try to avoid.

Experiencing a variety of roles enabled me to architect my career path. I targeted specific areas and roles to acquire within a certain time period along with an action plan to get there.

My plan wasn’t all about getting promoted; sometimes it made sense to take a lateral move to acquire the added experience necessary to qualify for a promotion at some future point.

Don’t fret over whether a job staring at you suits your long term career goals. Look for an organization with a culture that gets your juices flowing and one that prides itself in providing different job opportunities to employees.

Take the job and it just might lead to a brilliant future if you are willing to take the risk.

Cheers,
Roy
Check out my BE DiFFERENT or be dead Book Series

May 31, 2022 ‘Audacious Unheard-of Ways’ is coming.

  • Posted 3.28.22 at 05:34 am by Roy Osing
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March 27, 2022

Is my new book really audacious in this reader’s view?

Review of ‘Be Different or Be Dead


‘The Audacious Unheard of Ways I Took a Startup to A BILLION IN SALES’ by Roy Osing, Morgan James Publishing, New York, New York, 2022.

Full disclosure, I am a retired TELUS team member who, from time to time, reported through to the author, Roy Osing.

First off, I can tell you this book describes the actual field-tested and unique approaches that Roy and his team successfully employed. I witnessed many of these methods deployed.

They all were absolute game-changers.

Secondly, this is the ‘how-to book’ you need to create an exceptional business and have an exceptional career. I once read the 2013 book “The Three Rules – How Exceptional Companies Think” by Michael Raynor and Mumtaz Ahmed.

That book reported results from a massive analysis across all industries of over 50 years of company performances exactly WHAT decision approaches (rules) make a company exceptionally profitable.

Roy’s book answers the next logical question, HOW do you implement this? Both books advocate the same approach, but Roy packs his book with hundreds of implementation recommendations.

‘The Audacious Unheard-of Ways I Took a Startup to A BILLION IN SALES’ is the latest in a series of seven ‘Be Different or Be Dead’ books.
It pulls together Roy’s valuable advice on how to propel an enterprise to be more than resilien; to stand out, despite super fast-changing business environments (such as COVID recently provided).

‘Audacious Ways’ provides unique and innovative approaches to strategic planning, marketing, sales, and customer service. This book is perfect for individuals starting a career, team leaders, or entrepreneurs running any enterprise.

The book contains six sections that permit easy revisiting the task at hand. Each section contains twelve to fifteen whole chapters devoted to detailed implementation approaches supported with clear rationale. Here are the six sections and a quotation as a taste of the content.

Leadership — How leaders can get results in today’s environment…
“It’s not that those textbooks on leadership are wrong, it’s just that they’re not good enough to make a standout leader.”

Careers — How you can have a fantastic career and make lots of money…
“In school, you do well when you follow rules and fit in; in business, you succeed when you’re different from everyone else.”

Business Success — How to make your business wildly successful…
“Long-lasting advantage comes from being the ONLY ones that do what you do.”

Marketing — How to make your marketing powerful and not boring…
“Brilliant marketing is delivering what people CRAVE in a way that is DIFFERENT than anyone else.”

Sales — How the sales team can deliver unbelievably significant revenues…
“The role of sales must change from the flogger of products and services to the ‘gatherer of friends.’”

Customer Service — How to create breathtaking and memorable customer service…
“You service cars: you SERVE people – dazzle ‘em and take their breath away.”

Descriptors from this book to describe the ideas, the approaches, the results are:

Simple. Inspire. Be Contrary. Explain. Stay Humble. Be Loving. Logical. Brave. Face Reality. Helpful. ONLY. Innovate. Empower. Listen. Build a Team. Hire People Lovers. Befriend Clients. Be Proactive. Shed Crap. Kill Dumb Rules. Forget Perfection. Recover Fast. Lead by Example. Hands-on. Learn Customer Secrets. Trust. Amaze. Have fun. Challenging. Practical. Proven. Long-term.

You will find this book gets you on the right path and prepares you for the real world, and with so many successful implementations to choose from, you will return to this book again and again.

Well worth reading, but please don’t stop there. Start implementing this book tomorrow.

— Cam Anderson is a Retired Web Operations Manager at TELUS Digital and Founder of FutureLegacies.ca and MyArtClub.Com

The ebook—‘e-Audacious’— was published Feb 1, 2022 and the print version will be available May 31, 2022 with the audio version later.

If you’re interested in more information please feel free to reach out to me.

Audacious in print form is available to preorder NOW at most of your favourite stores including:

Google Books
Barnes and Noble
Books-A-Million
Indigo.chapters.ca

  • Posted 3.27.22 at 07:23 am by Roy Osing
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March 26, 2022

Three easy ways you can market how you treat your employees

Marketing employees
Image Source: Pixabay

From a business and a human standpoint, you must treat employees well. First, well taken care of employees work better. Second, it takes more than a good product or service to convert today’s consumer into a customer. People look deeper into a brand and business before making a purchase.

Specifically, how a company treats its employees influences a person’s purchase decisions. For example, say a consumer wants to purchase clothing from a boutique. The clothes may be amazing, but if the boutique has a reputation for shady workplace practices and mistreating employees, it will likely dissuade them from making a purchase.

Because consumers focus more on employee treatment and company culture before supporting a business, company leaders should prioritize marketing how they treat their employees.

This article will dive into tips for successfully marketing how you treat your employees, and how treating your workers well gives your business a competitive advantage. But, first, let’s talk about why it’s important to treat employees well.

Why it’s important to treat employees well

It’s important to treat employees well because when they feel supported and valued, they’re more likely to do their best work for your company.

Also, it positively affects your customer service when you treat your employees as more than just warm bodies. They’ll do more than list the functions and features of your products or services. Instead, your employees will become advocates for your customers and do everything they can to ensure your customers get the most out of your brand and their purchases.

On the other hand, when employees are overworked, underpaid, and undervalued, they are unlikely to treat customers well and they’re probably going to leave the company sooner than later.

Companies that fail to treat their employees well are losing them in droves.

How customers view companies that treat their employees well

Customers view companies that are good to their employees as trustworthy.

Trust is the foundation of every relationship, including customer relationships. When customers see how much your employees trust your business, they feel more comfortable moving forward with your company.

All in all, when you create trust-filled relationships with potential customers, they’re more likely to become actual customers and loyal ones at that. And you can use marketing how you treat your employees as a vehicle for creating that trust.

Three easy ways you can market how you treat your employees:

#1. Create content around your company culture

One of the main things to focus on when marketing how you treat your employees is content. You must create content around your company culture, employees, and the behind-the-scenes of your operation.

For example, let’s say you’re making remote work a permanent part of your workforce. In that case, you must be mindful of people who are skeptical of remote work because of the lack of support for these employees. If you’ve built a comprehensive employee recognition program for remote workers, create content about it and market it.

You can also create content that focuses on the following to highlight how well you treat your employees:

● Compensation and benefits packages
● Your company’s mission and values
● A day in the life of each employee
● What each team in your company does
● How each employee contributes to excellent customer service
● Employee accomplishments and milestones
● Personal employee stories
● Company culture

#2. Share how you support your employees on social media

Company leaders worldwide can attest to the power of social media in their businesses. You can boost brand recognition and awareness, in particular, on social media by connecting with potential and current customers.

Social media is also beneficial when sharing content on how you treat your employees. For instance, one of your employees can do a social media takeover and share a day in their life at work. You can tell your brand’s story in a series of posts. Or you can create content that talks openly and honestly about things most companies don’t talk about, like wages and benefits.

Whatever content you share on social media about how you take care of your employees, be sure it’s emotionally intelligent, genuine, and that your company culture is embedded in it.

#3. Appeal to the “anti-work” crowd

Anti-workers are focused on ending work as we know it. They aren’t against making money. They’re against the mistreatment, inadequate support, and toxic work habits that find their ways into many workplaces.

If you treat your employees so well that even the “anti-work” movement says, “If you have to work somewhere, work here,” customers, potential employees, and the like will come running. 

Focus on how the “anti-work” crowd perceives you. What are people who hate work saying about your company, its culture, and how you treat employees? Create a workplace environment that makes a person who despises working for someone else want to work for you.

Ultimately, if you can get the “anti-workers” to say nothing but good things about your company culture and employee treatment, it will go a long way with your customers.

Conclusion

Attracting customers by marketing how you treat your employees can’t be achieved overnight. Consumers are more knowledgeable and empowered than ever before. So, you must connect with them in ways that don’t involve selling your products and services.

Start by showing them who you are by highlighting how well you take care of your employees.

Jori Hamilton is an experienced writer residing in the Pacific Northwest U.S. She covers a wide range of topics but takes a particular interest in covering topics related to wellness and mental health. To learn more about Jori, you can follow her on Twitter and LinkedIn.

  • Posted 3.26.22 at 03:34 am by Roy Osing
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March 21, 2022

Why brands that don’t say how you’re different are useless

Brands
Source: Unsplash

Why brands that don’t say how you’re different are useless.

I recently did a podcast with Shannon Peel of BrandAPeel on the subject of branding, and it reminded me that there are shortfalls (with solutions) in the way branding is currently done that need to be covered once again.

I’ve written on the problems that I see with organizational mission statements and generally with relying on general aspirational statements of intent to define what people/organizations do and the value they create for others.

What Google says

If you Google ‘examples of brand statements’, this is the type of information you get.

“I help individuals reassess their life choices to discover their true paths to success.”

“I develop sustainable business models and marketing strategies to fuel small business growth.”

“I help manufacturing organizations improve their processes to reduce waste and grow profits.”

“Let’s build job free income.”

“Helping you build a big brand with your small business.”

“Chipotle provides premium, real ingredients for customers looking for delicious food that’s ethically sourced and freshly prepared. Chipotle’s dedication to cultivating a better world by cutting out GMOs and providing responsibly raised food sets them apart in the food industry.”

“Starbucks offers the best coffee and espresso drinks for consumers who want premium ingredients and perfection every time. Starbucks not only values every interaction, making each one unique, but the brand commits itself to the highest quality coffee in the world.”

“Disney provides unique entertainment for consumers seeking magical experiences and memories. Disney leads the competition by providing every aspect of related products and services to the world and appealing to people of all ages.”

What’s missing?

These statements address what the brand owner intends to deliver: entertainment, coffee, food ingredients, brands for small business, job free income, improved processes, business models, marketing strategies and ‘true paths to success’.

As a consumer, however, what these statements DON’T tell me is how each brand is different from their competition, and why I should buy their brand and not their competitor’s. My eyes glaze over when I read these claims because for most of them I could substitute their competitor’s name in each statement and they would be valid.

In other words these (and most other) brand statements focus on what the brand owner intends to produce with no comparison with the other choices available to the targeted consumer.

Disney’s reference to ‘leads the competition’ and Chipotle’s to ‘sets them apart in the food industry’ are modest competitive references but they are so vague they don’t offer any concrete and meaningful comparisons to their competitors.
In fact the use of terms like ‘premium real ingredients’, ‘best coffee’, and ‘highest quality’ I find to be high level aspirations that offer little clarity and an abundance of ‘fog’.

How do you create an effective brand?

There are two basic principles I’ve used to develop brand statements that resonate with customers and position the organization as compelling and unique among alternatives.

#1. Create a tight strategic fit for your brand

Your brand must be tightly bound to the Strategic Game Plan—SGP—of your organization, it cannot be allowed to ‘float free’ to be on its own.
You need to be able to ‘see’ the organization’s strategic intent when you assess their brand statement.

If you can’t interpret the strategy being pursued by the brand, it means the brand is too cloudy and vague; it lacks strategic relevance.

Successful brands have a direct ‘line of sight’ to the strategy of the organization.

My SGP process makes it easy to establish the strategic imperatives the brand must serve.

By answering three questions it’s done.

HOW BIG do you want to be? —
defines your growth objective for the ensuing 24 months.

WHO do you want to SERVE? — identifies the customer groups you intend to target to generate the revenue from the HOW BIG question.

HOW will you COMPETE and WIN? — defines your competitive value proposition.

Questions #2 and #3 are particularly useful in establishing strategic context for a brand. They not only define the target for the brand message—WHO to SERVE—they also describe how the competitive encounter will be played—HOW to WIN

My next point examines the importance of question #3–HOW to WIN—more closely.

#2. Declare the differences that define you

The second principle to follow to create an awesomely effective brand is define in the brand statement the difference between you and your competitors.

It’s interesting to me that most brand pundits ignore that people choose one organization or individual over another based on the differences between them, not by the absolute singular claims they make.

Declaring “I develop sustainable business models and marketing strategies to fuel small business growth.” may accurately describe what you do for small businesses, but it says nothing about how you are special or unique among your competitors and hence why I should pick you to help my small business and not any one of them.

An amazingly effective brand shouts out how you are different from everyone else.

Your unique qualities need to be woven into the brand statement, otherwise the recipient of it is left to their own devices to figure out why they should choose you out of the herd.

The ‘HOW will you COMPETE and WIN?’ question addresses this challenge unbelievably well because it involves the creation of ‘The ONLY Statement’ for your organization.

I invented The ONLY Statement precisely for the purpose of declaring how an organization—or an individual —was different from their closest competitors.

“We are the ONLY ones that…” declares what separates your organization from the crowd around you and hence why customers should choose you.
And, furthermore, it is the key to directing how your brand statement should be written in order to have a tight strategic fit.

So if your organization had an ONLY that read:

“ABC Ambulance is the ONLY First Aid Advocate that provides safety solutions anywhere, anytime.”, the brand statement possibilities are straightforward.

In the First Aid Advocate example, their brand statement could read:

”ABC Ambulance provides safety solutions anywhere they’re needed, whenever they’re needed, and we’re the only organization that does.”

Or, the brand statement could incorporate ONLY directly:

”ABC Ambulance is the ONLY First Aid Advocate that provides safety solutions anywhere, anytime.”

My last word

Brand statements are not just about YOU!

In a world where people have so much choice of who to do business with, who to hire for a particular job, which charity to give their donations to and which causes to support, your ‘ask’ of them must paint you as the ONLY choice.

If not, your declaration—brand— gets lost.

Cheers,
Roy
Check out my BE DiFFERENT or be dead Book Series

‘Audacious’ is my latest…

  • Posted 3.21.22 at 06:00 am by Roy Osing
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