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Sean Cook featured in "101 Ways to Enhance Your Career"  Book

Sean Cook featured in "101 Ways to Enhance Your Career" Book

A while back, I sent in an article to David and Michelle Riklan, the operators of SelfGrowth.Com for possible inclusion in their cooperative book project, titled “101 Great Ways to Enhance Your Career”. This is a compilation of 101 articles with practical, solid advice on how you can take action and improve your career.

I am extremely excited to be a part of this, and am equally excited to be a contributing author along with Tory Johnson, Laura DeCarlo, Brian Tracy, Charlotte Weeks and many more of the world’s leading career experts.

To get more information, go to http://www.1shoppingcart.com/app/?Clk=4210054

This book was created by David and Michelle Riklan, the  founders  of the #1 Self Improvement website in the world, SelfGrowth.com. They tapped into the minds of today’s greatest career experts and pulled together a nice collection of 101 insider secrets that shows you how to instantly and positively enhance your career!

In these days of decreased professional development budgets, many higher education professionals are having to scale back their funding for conferences and events. This book offers a practical alternative. All the articles are short, thought-provoking and easily digested–perfect for a professional development reading group, or to share with your staff during team development meetings.

David and Michelle have also bundled the book with some “bonus gifts,” and  have created a package of $1,500 worth of absolutely free gifts that you get by purchasing just one copy of our book. I’ve contributed one of the bonuses (my “Mastering the Job Interview” presentation), and have been impressed by the range of topics covered in the other bonuses.

SelfGrowth.Com is so confident you will love it, that  they are  backing it up with a completely solid guarantee.

Go there and take a look for yourself – and make sure you check out the bonuses.

Here’s the link for you to go directly to this offer: http://www.1shoppingcart.com/app/?Clk=4210054

(Please note that all links above are affiliate links. Sales of books made through these links will support the growth of this site, and help bring career coaching and resources to those who need it. In this vein, I plan to apply all profits made from affiliate sales of this book toward providing free coaching sessions to  unemployed or financially disadvantaged higher ed job seekers.)

 

Imagining Your Perfect Career: Think Like a Five Year Old

Yo-ho let’s go!

My five-year-old son Brendan is a real fan of a new show on Disney Junior called Jake and the Neverland Pirates. Set in the magical world of Neverland, home to Tinkerbell and Peter Pan, the show follows three young pirates (Jake, Izzy, and Cubbie), as they regularly foil the evil plots of Capt. Hook and his sidekick, the bumbling Mr. Smee.

I’m not usually one to like the retelling of classic stories from my youth, but I have to admit that I have a great deal of affinity for Jake and his cohorts, mostly because my son enjoys the show so much.

The other day a friend asked me if I ever thought about when children lose their sense of imagination. He remarked that he could keep himself occupied and happy with the simplest of things when he was a child. And I know this to be true, because it was true for me, and because I see it daily with my two children.

It may seem cranky for me to say this, but I think the world beats it out of us and makes us too serious for our own good. I spend quite a bit of time trying to explain things to my son, that seem so intrinsic to functioning as an adult, that I regularly find myself questioning the logic of adult behavior, and the ways in which we cling to procedures, policies, rules, and the ever-present “just the way things are.” And I realize then that I am spouting nonsense. And the saddest thing about it is that this nonsense is very much the accepted status quo.

As a coach, one of the most important things I do is to help each client imagine what aspects would be included in their perfect career. And often what this means is that we return, together, to childhood, and spend some times exploring what they enjoyed doing most, what they were most interested in, and what kind of people and places they were most comfortable being around. In many of these explorations, I have found that clients have abandoned doing what they most enjoy in pursuit of material gain, increased influence in their field, titles, positional authority, control over their organizations, and when possible, their personal destinies.

The “Ah-ha” moment usually comes when they realize that their goals are complete bullshit, and that they have nothing to do with who they’re meant to be, and everything to do with a fiction and fantasy that society calls success. We work together to face each client’s fears, anxieties, and the practical, emotional, and circumstantial blocks in their path. You can only do this by picking them apart, holding them up to the light, and seeing them for what they are. Only then can a client move forward and meet himself or herself truly and deeply and genuinely, as who they are meant to be.

My friend Tommy Walker, a social media strategist I’m working with to develop a more engaging Facebook strategy, has a favorite saying: “I don’t do bullshit.”

Okay, so maybe that’s not all that original. But it is authentic. And if you’ve ever had the opportunity to speak with Tommy, to read his thoughts on his blog, or to chat with him on the Internet, you just understand the Tommy has developed and cultivated a true sense for who he is as a person, and matched that, as best he could, to a career which brings out his best.

So what are you doing to align your career with who you were meant to be?

Close your eyes. Remember the joys you had in your life. Not just the joys of accomplishment in your career, or those adult milestones that many of us strive to achieve (like getting a first job, having a first apartment, buying a house, buying a new car, getting married, having children, etc., etc.) Go back, go deep, and go long.

Then say to yourself, loudly “Yo Ho, let’s go!” And get back to where you once belonged.

 

March Madness of a Different Kind: Placement Exchanges And the Higher Ed Hiring Season

March Madness of a Different Kind: Placement Exchanges And the Higher Ed Hiring Season

Go time! March is finally here, and we all know what that means. It’s time for March Madness!

For most Americans, “March Madness” signifies basketball games on television, betting pools with friends and colleagues, and the mind-numbing fun that comes with working through your brackets, watching early contenders fall, and ending with an overhyped contest, resulting in the emergence of one champion.

When you work in higher education, “March Madness” means something different: the great kickoff of hiring season. Candidates practice their pitches, don their uniforms, and put their game faces on. But the reward that comes at the end of this contest is not a trophy, but a job.

If there are any significant tournaments during the hiring season, they are the placement conferences, both regional and national. The largest of these is the Placement Exchange. TPE, as it is often abbreviated, is the “300 pound gorilla” of placement conferences for higher ed administrators. The Placement Exchange is a partnership of NASPA, ACUHO-I, NACA, NODA, ASCA, AFA, and HigherEdJobs. This event is expected to draw over 1200 candidates and has 463 positions already posted.

If you have never been to a placement conference, it can be a bewildering and confusing experience. But with a little preparation, some context, and the right attitude, attending a placement exchange can be a great experience.

This Friday at 11 AM, I will have the pleasure of hosting Nathan Victoria, Assistant Director of Educational Programs and Social Media for NASPA on my BlogTalkRadio show, when he will answer some common questions about the placement experience and offer some practical tips and encouragement for job seekers attending TPE this year.

If you would like the opportunity to hear more about the Placement Exchange experience or ask questions or offer your perspectives and advice for candidates attending a placement conference this year, please join us!

To listen to the show go to http://tobtr.com/s/1610677 or click on the BlogTalkRadio player below. During the show, you may call in your questions to (347) 989-0055 or connect to the show via Skype by clicking on the Skype click to talk “S” logo once the show is on the air. If you cannot join us at 11 AM Eastern time this Friday, you are welcome to submit your questions and comments in advance by e-mailing Sean@higheredcareercoach.com or sending a tweet to Sean at @hiedcareercoach. The show will also be available for download and streaming after the show concludes.

Listen to internet radio with Sean Cook on Blog Talk Radio

Creating a Killer Resume: Webinar Replay, Part 3

Creating a Killer Resume: Webinar Replay, Part 3

This is part 3 of my recent “Creating a Killer Résumé” webinar, where I did a sample coaching session for a second-step job seeker in Student Affairs. If you find it informative, please share, like and re-tweet the link, and “like” it on YouTube.

More segments are coming next week.

Also, please consider joining my mailing list, where you will get periodic “insider only” content, and special offers. Subscribers also get, for a limited time, access to my auto-responder e-course “Planning Your Career in Higher Ed” for free.

Creating a Killer Resume: Webinar Replay, Parts 1 and 2

The other day, I did a free webinar on “Creating a Killer Resume” to give job seekers some ideas about how to put together a résumé that flows well, is visually appealing and has great content. The webinar was over an hour long and featured an overview of the résumé coaching process, some tips on design, flow, logic and content, and a sample coaching session with a mid-level/second-step job seeker.

In order to take advantage of my YouTube channel, I’m forced to break the presentation into chunks of 15 minutes or less, so I will be posting the webinar replay as a YouTube playlist with multiple shorter segments and posting them to this site over the next week or so. The entire video will also be available soon through my e-Junkie store as a digital download with some worksheets.

Video 1: Creating a Killer Resume: The Resume Coaching Process

Video 2: Visualization Activity-Using Wordle.Net

Sean Cook is a Certified Life Purpose and Career Coach from Athens, GA. Before earning his certification from the Life Purpose Institute, he earned his M.Ed. in Counseling and Guidance Services from Clemson University and spent 15 1/2 years working in higher education.