Now Business Schools Join Big Business in Screening for More Than Skills, Experience

According to The Wall Street Journal, “measuring EQ — or emotional intelligence quotient — is the latest attempt by business schools to identify future stars.”  So now if you’re hoping to set yourself apart with an MBA you’ll need to be able to demonstrate empathy, motivation and resilience as well as academic credentials and career achievement.

The senior associate director of M.B.A. admissions at the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business is quoted as saying, “Companies select for toImagep talent with assessments like this.  If we are selecting for future business leaders, why shouldn’t we be similar tools?”  The school’s 206-item online questionnaire screens for traits found in successful students and graduates, such as teamwork and leadership abilities.

The Yale School of Management’s 141-item test measures how well applicants might manage or understand their own emotions through questions about everyday scenarios.

This trend is an extension of the increasing data collection used to analyze the traits companies look for in hiring.  The emerging field of workforce science adds data analysis, a k a “big data” to guide hiring, promotion and career planning.

For example, Google is applying data-driven decision-making to human resource management, according to an article last month in the New York Times.  It reports that since 2007 Google has conducted extensive surveys of its work force and found “the most innovative workers… are those who have strong sense of mission about their work and who also feel that they have much personal autonomy.”

Google’s VP for People Analytics Prasad Setty explained, “Our people decisions are no less important than our product decisions, and we’re trying to apply the same rigor to the people side as to the engineering side.”

Of course, data-gathering technology raises questions about worker surveillance.  As Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center points out in the Times’ article, “The larger problem here is that all these workplace metrics are being collected when you as a worker are essentially behind a one-way mirror.  You don’t know what data is being collected and how it is being used.”

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Minute Mentoring with WWPR and Edelman/GWEN

Debbi Jarvis of Pepco Holdings, Inc. mentoring a group of young communications professionals at Minute Mentoring with WWPR & Edelman/GWEN

Debbi Jarvis of Pepco Holdings, Inc. mentoring a group of young communications professionals at Minute Mentoring with WWPR & Edelman/GWEN

I love planning events and have had the chance to organize many over the years, but one of the most rewarding programs I’ve ever helped coordinate was Minute Mentoring with Washington Women in Public Relations (WWPR) and Edelman/GWEN held Thursday, April 25 at Edelman’s Washington, DC office.

Much of the credit for the hugely successful event goes to the amazing group of mentors who volunteered their evening to meet with small groups of young communications professionals coming up through the ranks. Sixty mentees participated in the event and received tips on leadership and management, career path and work-life balance from communications pros at the top of their field. Mentors included:

  • Alicia Aebersold, Associate Director, Aligning Forces for Quality
  • Carrie Fox, President, C. Fox Communications
  • Nancy Gravatt, Senior Vice President, National Mining Association
  • Amy Malerba Hemingway, Senior Vice President, Edelman
  • Debbi Jarvis, Vice President Corporate Citizenship & Social Responsibility, Pepco Holdings, Inc.
  • Cary Lawrence, Vice President Business Development, SocialCode
  • Kate Mikesell, Director Corporate Communications, Hilton Worldwide
  • Barbara Semedo, Strategic Communications Advisor
  • Bridget Serchak, Chief, Public Affairs, Inspector General, Department of Defense
  • Debra Silimeo, Executive Vice President, Hager Sharp
  • Vicki Tarallo, Independent Consultant, Korn/Ferry International

A huge thanks to the mentors and to Edelman for partnering with Washington Women in PR to make this event possible. The feedback from the mentees was extremely positive and the WWPR news feed was overwhelmed during the event with participants tweeting about how much they were enjoying the program.

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#1 Bargain in PR Professional Societies = WWPR

WWPR continues to offer the best membership value of any communications profeImagessional society.  Non-members who sign up for membership at the free May 15 Open House will receive a 10% discount on the already low $85/yearly membership.

Members and prospective members can network and mingle with the new 20Image13 WWPR Executive Board, learn how to get involved and win a chance for a wine and chocolate prize. Committee chairs will be available and Director of Public Relations and National Spokesperson for Goodwill Industries International, Lauren Lawson-Zilai, will welcome attendees and share her personal connection to WWPR and how it helped shape and change her career.

The WWPR Open House will be 6:30-8:00p.m. at Ketchum’s DC office.  And men are welcome to become members of Washington Women in Public Relations, too.  Registration is now open.

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Odds of Employment Worsen With Time Unemployed

With 4.7 million Americans currently who have been out of work for at least 27 weeks, new research done at Northeastern University suggests that employers will almost never consider hiring them.

As reported in Washingtonpost.com, when 4,800 fake resumes were sent in response to 600 job openings, the researcher found that employers would rather call someone with no relevant experience but who has only been out of work for a few months to interview than someone with more relevant experience who’s been out of work for more than six months.

This makes part-time, contract and temporary work even more vital because it keeps resumes current, demonstrates that skills and current job knowledge are not being lost and can provide permanent job-seekers with new contacts and additional areas of experience.Image

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Nominations for 2013 WWPR Emerging Leaders Awards

Emerging Leaders AwardsThe 2013 Washington Women in Public Relations Emerging Leaders Awards Committee is now accepting nominations for this year’s young, rising PR stars in the D.C. area. If you know female PR professionals in the D.C. area between the ages of 23-30 who have demonstrated outstanding leadership skills and the potential to have a significant impact on the industry in the future, don’t miss this chance to nominate them (or yourself).

Nomination instructions and more information can be found at http://wwpr.org/events/emerging-leaders-awards/. The deadline for submissions is May 31.

I thoroughly enjoyed serving as a judge for the 2012 Emerging Leaders Awards and can’t wait to meet this year’s finalists! Be sure to save the date on your calendar for the event on Thursday, July 18, 6:30 PM at the National Press Club. Hope to see you there!

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6 Mistakes to Avoid When Dressing for an Interview

The devil can be in the details when it comes to making the right choices about what to wear to an interview. After selecting the right clothes, try to avoid some of these accessory pitfalls: 

  • For women, don’t wear open-toed shoes. Choose a conservative, closed-toe heel.
  • Avoid strong fragrances. Don’t wear perfume or cologne and don’t eat pungent foods before interviewing.
  • Choose simple jewelry, nothing too large, trendy or noisy. Wear no more than one ring on each hand, one set of earringsImage and no noisy bangle bracelets that could distract the interviewer.  
  • Remove visible body piercings and cover tattoos. You may view them as showing your creativity but the interviewer could be negatively influenced by them.
  • Don’t have unkempt nails, chipped polish or wear dark or trendy colors.  
  • Avoid wearing anything low cut, sheer, too short or too tight.   
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Can We Create Standards for PR Research, Measurement and Evaluation?

Despite recent workshops on measurement by DC area communications professional societies, today’s PR Week headlines Industry Faces Long Road to Uniform Measurement Standards.

Ketchum CEOImage Rob Flaherty, who will be addressing the AMEC (International Association for the Measurement and Evaluation of Communication) Fifth European Summit on Measurement  in June, believes that industry measurement standards need to be created to answer “three fundamental questions”: 

1-      Did you reach the right people with the right message?

2-      Did their behavior or attitude change?

3-      Did, your effort produce some economic benefit?

Fleishman-Hillard president and CEO Dave Senay says that “Many agencies have their own proprietary forms of measurement. There was no standard before, so a lot of agencies had to invest in creating their own,” and adds “The industry will in time realize moving away from proprietary measurement and adopting a standard is in its best interests.”

PR Week reports that the Coalition for Public Relations Research Standards, created by industry stakeholders including the Institute for Public Relations, is seeking feedback on measurement to use in creating a toolkit of consistent, reliable, and comparable PR metrics.

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What to Wear When Interviewing for a Communications Job

In the nearly 20 years we’ve been interviewing communications professionals, we’ve seen the good, the bad and the downright scary when it comesImage to interview attire.  

You only have moments to make a good first impression so here is our advice on what to wear to get off to a good start when interviewing for a communications position:

  1. A suit is always appropriate. It conveys the message you are a professional and will take the job seriously. Choose a conservative color-black, navy or grey-which won’t distract the interviewer from focusing on your conversation and skills.
  2. It is better to be overdressed than underdressed for an interview, no matter what the culture of the organization and its dress code.
  3. Clean and pressed counts. The right suit, shirt or blouse can make the wrong impression if it’s wrinkled or has food stains.

For examples of what to wear to a communications job interview:

Find us on Pinterest

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Mistakes to Avoid When Dressing for an Interview

From the March issue of “Smart Solutions”, PRofessional Solutions’ e-newsletter:

The devil can be in the details when it comes to making the right choices about what tojob interview suit-women wear to an interview. After selecting the right clothes, try to avoid some of these accessory pitfalls:

  • For women, don’t wear open-toed shoes. Choose a conservative, closed-toe heel. For men, wear black, not brown, shoes.
  • Avoid strong fragrances. Don’t wear perfume or cologne and don’t eat pungent foods before interviewing.
  • Choose simple jewelry, nothing too large, trendy or noisy. Wear no more than one ring on each hand, one set of earrings and no bangle bracelets that could distract the interviewer.
  • Remove visible body piercings and cover tattoos. You may view them as showing your creativity but the interviewer could be negatively influenced by them.
  • Don’t have unkempt nails, chipped polish or wear dark or trendy colors.
  • Choose a neat, simple hairstyle.

    Save edgy hairstyles for the weekend.
  • Avoid wearing anything low cut, sheer, too short or too tight that could distract from your skills.

For examples of what to wear to a communications job interview:

Find us on Pinterest

Posted in Dress to Impress, Employment Tips, Interview Tips, PRofessional Solutions News | Tagged | Leave a comment

What to Wear When Interviewing for a Communications Job

From the March issue of “Smart Solutions”, PRofessional Solutions’ e-newsletter:

In the nearly 20 years we’ve been interviewing communications professionals, we’ve seenjob interview attire the good, the bad and the downright scary when it comes to interview attire.

You only have moments to make a good first impression so here is our advice on what to wear to get off to a good start when interviewing for a communications position:

  1. A suit is always appropriate. It conveys the message you are a professional and will take the job seriously. Choose a conservative color-black, navy or grey-which won’t distract the interviewer from focusing on your conversation and skills.
  2. It is better to be overdressed than underdressed for an interview, no matter what the culture of the organization and its dress code.
  3. Clean and pressed counts. The right suit, shirt or blouse can make the wrong impression if it’s wrinkled or has food stains.

For examples of what to wear to a communications job interview:

Find us on Pinterest

Posted in Dress to Impress, Employment Tips, Interview Tips, PRofessional Solutions News | Tagged , | Leave a comment