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INTERVIEW: LinkedIn, The Latest and Greatest

September 6, 2021 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

What are the latest and greatest changes happening on LinkedIn? If you are not paying attention closely to LinkedIn, you may have missed some of these changes. And you may be missing out on the opportunity to take advantage of them. I am thrilled to interview these three LinkedIn “heavy hitters” who share their knowledge and tips that you don’t want to miss out on.

Guests today

Bob McIntosh, CPRW is a career trainer and coach who works at an urban career center and earned the distinction of a LinkedIn’s Top Voices, Hannah Morgan,  Career Sherpa is a trainer and job search strategist and a LinkedIn Top Voice in Job Search and Careers, and Edythe Richards is a career counselor and trainer who has helped thousands of people locate and sustain meaningful employment. She is the founder of A Top Career.

Today I ask our experts

 What are some of the newer and possibly under-utilized features of LinkedIn
 and suggestions on how to leverage them?

WATCH OR LISTEN NOW

Biographies

Bob McIntosh, CPRW is a career trainer and coach who leads more than 15 job-search workshops at an urban career center, as well as counsels job seekers on every aspect of the job search.  His colleagues rely on Bob to critique their clients’ LinkedIn profiles and conduct mock interviews. In addition, Bob has gained a reputation as a LinkedIn authority in the community where he leads workshops for non-profit and for-profit organizations.  Job seekers from across the state attend Bob’s  LinkedIn workshops.  His greatest pleasure is helping people find rewarding careers in a competitive job market.  For enjoyment, he blogs at Things Career Related and contributes to Recruiter.com.  Follow Bob on Twitter and connect with him on LinkedIn.

Hannah Morgan is a trainer and job search strategist. She has worked in outplacement services, a graduate school career center, a department of labor one-stop and as a recruiter/HR generalist. She is a nationally recognized author and speaker on job search trends and was previously a LinkedIn Top Voice in Job Search and Careers. She founded CareerSherpa.net to combine her career expertise with her love of writing, speaking and social media. Hannah is a regular contributor to US News & World Report. She has been quoted by media outlets, including Kiplinger, Forbes and Money Magazine. She is also author of The Infographic Resume and co-author of Social Networking for Business Success. Hannah is active across social media including Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn.

Edythe Richards is a career counselor and trainer who has helped thousands of people locate and sustain meaningful employment. She is the founder of A Top Career, a Washington, DC-based consulting firm that empowers people to clarify values, resolve stressors, and balance personal priorities with professional pursuits. She is also the creator and host of several podcast series, including Myers-Briggs Question Corner, and EQ at Work.Edythe is a Global Career Development Facilitator (GCDF), Certified Professional Resume Writer (CPRW), Myers-Briggs Master Practitioner, certified Gallup Strengths Coach, and a certified Emotional Intelligence Practitioner and Trainer with a Master’s in Counseling. Connect with Edythe on LinkedIn and follow her on Twitter.


Jim Peacock is the Principal at Peak-Careers Consulting and writes a weekly email for career practitioners. Peak-Careers offers discussion-based online seminars for career practitioners focused on meeting continuing education needs for CCSP, GCDF and BCC certified professionals as well as workshops for career practitioners and individual career coaching.

He is the author of A Field Guide for Career Practitioners: Helping Your Clients Create Their Next Move and The Adventure of Finding Me in New Zealand. He is also the recipient of the 2020 Kenneth C. Hoyt Award from the National Career Development Association and the Mid-Atlantic Career Counseling Association’s Professional Contribution’s Award in 2020.

Sign up here to receive my  TOP 10 TIPS WHEN WORKING WITH AN UNDECIDED PERSON.  You will also receive the career practitioner’s weekly email on a variety of career topics, industry news, interesting events, and more. 

Peak-Careers logo

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: LinkedIn, LinkedIn changes

Elephantoms: Tracking the Elephant

August 30, 2021 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

By Lyall Watson

The author grew up in South Africa spending time in the bush hoping someday to see a wild elephant. One day, he and a group of other 12 or 13 year old kids saw one and it changed Lyall’s life. From then on he was obsessed with learning more about this great animal.

He ends up going to college to study more but his love is in the bush. He shows us how elephants great memories help them navigate their shrinking world…how they actually mourn for the loss of one of their own…how they care for each other, and much more.

One of the coolest things I learned was their low-level sound communication that is below what humans can hear and can transmit for miles.

So many interesting small stories within this book, I loved it and have a great appreciation for how amazing this animal is and how concerned I am for their shrinking numbers.

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: Elephants

Journey on the Crest: Walking 2600 Miles from Mexico to Canada

August 25, 2021 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

By Cindy Ross

I hiked the Washington section of the PCT in 1981 for 400 miles and was “hooked” on long-distance hiking. Since then I have completed about 1800 miles of the trail by doing sections of 110-200 miles at a time. Cindy hiked the trail from Mexico to Oregon in 1982 and then finished it in 1984.

She did a great job at describing the feelings and emotions, and the physical parts of hiking long distance. I loved it. I also enjoyed that I had hiked much of the trail over the years and could clearly picture where she was most of the time. In particular I enjoyed the Oregon and Washington sections for some reason. Maybe because I did those early on and the reminiscing was great. Maybe because we were hiking both around the same time period as well.

If you are a long-distance hiker, you will enjoy this book with the various characters who walk the PCT with Cindy.

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: Pacific Crest Trail, PCT

Thinking about starting a career coaching private practice?

August 9, 2021 by Jim Peacock 2 Comments

I started part-time with Peak-Careers while I was working as the Director of Advising & Career at a community college and never thought I’d go full-time with it. After 10 years my consulting business kept growing and growing and I finally took the leap to private practice full-time with Peak-Careers Consulting in 2012.

Here are a few tips I have learned over the years that I wished I had known when I was starting out.

private practice
Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay
  1. Begin now.
    Don’t worry about what you have not done or what you “should” do. Start now and write down what you want to do and how you want to do it. What is your “super-power” that makes you unique? By writing it down it helps you take it out of your head and make it more real. (link to journaling)
  2. Take the time.
    The most powerful gift I give myself is my monthly, or bi-monthly, tech-free day-long retreat. You need to find the time to sort out the many details of what you want to do, how you will do it, when you will do it, and who needs to help. Find at least a half of a day where you can leave all the “to do’s” aside and really focus on what your private practice could be.
  3. Set goals.
    Just like you do with your clients or students, writing down goals and creating concrete, measurable steps that need to be done is important for yourself as well. Give yourself deadlines on when things need to be done so that you see progress.
    And then, share them with someone who can keep you accountable.
  4. Seek advice.
    Starting your own business has a lot of moving parts to it. How do you set yourself up? How do you handle collecting money? What legal considerations do you have? How do you write a business plan? How do you market?
    Talk to other people who have a private practice – there are lots of social media groups out there.
    Consider hiring a business coach.
    Definitely check out the Small Business Administration free support near you. Your independence may be important to you, but don’t do this alone.
  5. Trust Your Instincts.
    Make the best decisions based upon facts, research, and advice but trust your instincts too. Know when to move forward and when to change directions by listening to the voice…that gut feeling…your guardian angel who is watching over you. 
  6. Take the time to evaluate.
    Yeah, I know #2 is “take the time” as well but after you get started in your private practice, take the time to evaluate what is working, what didn’t work, and why, what other opportunities might exist. Even if you are busy juggling a full-time job and your side-gig, find the time to think about your business. My regular tech-free retreats are great at allowing me the space to reflect on my business from the 10,000-foot view.
  7. **Added 7 & 8 after original went out because my good friend Scott Woodard pointed out these two important thoughts.

    One I would add is to remember that it’s a business. To me, the term “private practice” doesn’t carry enough “heft,” it’s almost like a hobby rather than a business. Scott.

    Having come from higher education and K-12 education…I was clueless on running a business! This is such a great point that Scott makes. It really is a business and it really was a ‘mindset’ change for me to think like a business.
  8. The other thing I’ve learned is that I tend to spend a LOT more time in my business (admin, marketing, etc.) than on my business (coaching, consulting). Scott.

    I was shocked at how much time I spent on the business side compared to the time I actually provided career coaching. If I wanted to do more career coaching, I should have stayed at the community college where I would see 5+ students every day and more when I taught the career decision making class.

I wish you the best in your adventure of private practice.

I know I will never work for someone again 40-hours per week. I love the independence and creativity of owning my own business.

If you’d like more assistance (see #4 above)  you may want to check out the 5-week, discussion-based online seminar Mark Danaher and I are offering in October – November. Building Your Coaching Business.


Jim Peacock is the Principal at Peak-Careers Consulting and writes a weekly email for career practitioners. Peak-Careers offers discussion-based online seminars for career practitioners focused on meeting continuing education needs for CCSP, GCDF and BCC certified professionals as well as workshops for career practitioners and individual career coaching.

He is the author of A Field Guide for Career Practitioners: Helping Your Clients Create Their Next Move and The Adventure of Finding Me in New Zealand. He is also the recipient of the 2020 Kenneth C. Hoyt Award from the National Career Development Association and the Mid-Atlantic Career Counseling Association’s Professional Contribution’s Award in 2020.

Sign up here to receive my  TOP 10 TIPS WHEN WORKING WITH AN UNDECIDED PERSON.  You will also receive the career practitioner’s weekly email on a variety of career topics, industry news, interesting events, and more. 

Peak-Careers logo

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: career coaching, private practice

Blue Collar Cash: Love Your Work, Secure Your Future, and Find Happiness for Life

August 6, 2021 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

By Ken Rusk

I am a former guidance counselor and a career counselor at the college level, but one of my soap-box issues is the fallacy that all people need to go to college. There is no way we need everyone to college as only about 20-30% of all jobs requires a college degree. It is a cop-out to send this message to our youth and Ken Rusk does a great job at sharing his blue-collar perspective…and success.

Blue Collar Cash book

He and I both agree that college is a great option for some people. And equally so are the many blue-collar jobs.

Ken Rusk does a great job at showing the advantages and disadvantages of going to college. Disadvantages being the 4-year commitment (and 4 years out of the workforce), the student loans (average person has $40,000 in debt when they leave), but also the fact that many college students would simply be happier in a blue-collar job.

A Harris poll showed that 86% of blue collar workers were happy with their jobs and 85% believe they are headed in the right direction! This is contrary to many other polls I’ve seen that show so many people are UNhappy in their jobs.

He does a great job at helping people see that happiness can look differently for each person and that using skills in a wide variety of blue collar jobs can bring happiness to many people…and a good salary as well.

His advice at setting goals is very good and his belief that we should all help each other by sharing our own super-powers with others, is great.

This is a book I will be recommending to my clients who are unhappy at college, may have started college and dropped out, or for someone who never attended college and needs a confidence boost to know that there are other options out there.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Greenlights

July 20, 2021 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

By Matthew McConaughey

The actor Matthew McConaughey is quite the introspective guy. He really marches to his own drummer and was willing to give up millions of dollars in “rom-com” movies just so he would not be bored. He has taken off in an RV and drove around the country, sped off to the Amazon (which he thought at one point was in Africa), and then he eventually went to a remote site in Africa…just to explore himself.

He is a thinker and a person who is on a mission to improve himself in anyway he can…all while doing it his own way.

Fun book to read and I have more respect for Matthew now than I did before.

Filed Under: Book Reviews

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