Subscribe to Intero and get updates delivered right to your inbox.

  • Content rich
  • Relevant
  • Insightful
  • Authentic

I first wrote, Reinvent Yourself – 37 Ways for Marketing Professionals to Stay Marketable, 2013, updated it in 2016, and now,  it only seems fitting to bring it back again. 

I hate it when people lose their jobs. Not a week goes by that I don’t hear of someone losing their job. My first thought when I hear this kind of news is, “Really?” My second thought is “uggghhh,” which then translates to a sick feeling in my stomach. These are good people who are smart, experienced and high contributors. I guess it makes me crazy because I remember how I felt when I lost my job.

My question to marketing professionals is this: Given what you know about today’s climate in your industry, how do you reinvent yourself to land your next job or lessen the chance of being laid off? If you are among the group who has never lost your job, read on. You want to be prepared, just in case.

More than ever, it’s on YOU to be manage your professional development, to ensure you are staying skilled and relevant. 

Reinvent Yourself — 36 Tips

  1. Understand who you areTake a Meyers Briggs, DISC, Caliper, Predictive Index*, Taylor Protocols*, TTI Success Insights* assessment and know how you are wired. It will help you determine where your strengths are, where you best fit in a company and the amount of risk you are inherently comfortable taking.
  1. Draft your own marketing plan ⎯ Remember, you are a brand, write your own marketing plan.
  2. Look Remarkable⎯
  • Update your LinkedIn Profile with a PROFESSIONAL photo.
  • Create a personal Gravatar.
  • Consider creating a blog if you are serious about building your personal brand.
  • Manage your main social networks professionally.
  • Complete and optimize your LinkedIn Profile (no, LinkedIn does not go under social networks). This is your business base camp.
  • Read our how-to blog.
  • Understand how to navigate LinkedIn well, see above.
  • Start conversations in LinkedIn.

4. Diversify your network Get to know some recruiters and HR managers (value is found in the strength of your network).

5. Tune in and turn up the volume ⎯ And share some content and add value to your network. If your comment or post doesn’t add value, skip it!

6. VolunteerSo many nonprofits, trade associations and more need your expertise. Share it and in return, ask for a LinkedIn Recommendation (not a skills endorsement, a Recommendation) and the opportunity to showcase your work as a Project in LinkedIn.

7. Take an online classFrom YouTube to TED to the Khan Academy to iTunes U to Lynda.com, there are classes and learning opportunities everywhere. Craft a plan and schedule learning time each week. You will be more well versed and interesting. Oh, and don’t forget about inside.interoadvisory.com and amp up your LinkedIn know-how.

8. Create opportunities to experimentYour volunteering efforts (see above) are a great place for experimenting. Ask if they are open to trying something new. If so, treat it like a new campaign. go to work, and then write up a case study.

9. Identify challenger companiesThey are more likely to experiment or be open to talking with someone who has experience and there may be less people applying to these companies.

10. NetworkIf you’re an emerging professional, you should be in network gathering mode. If you are more experienced, you are (or should be) more interested in strategic networking, building a highly-engaged network. Make sure it’s diverse.

11. Understand the skills that are necessary Review LinkedIn’s blog on the profile skills most in demand in 2020; then compare those skills with your own.

12. Translate your skills and experience Know what you know …and own it. How can you translate traditional lead generation to online lead generation? How do you translate leadership of a team into leadership for a start-up? Think it through and become confident in what you know. Your soft skills can be what separates you from others

13. Understand emerging marketsWhich industries are growing? Which trends are sticking and which ones are on the way to hitting their tipping point? I remember when LinkedIn hit its tipping point. It was seven years after LinkedIn launched. Don’t give up too early.

14. Become a practitionerA person actively engaged in an art, discipline, or profession. If you are used to having a team of people executing your strategy think again. In today’s world you need to know which button to push to make it happen. The more you are versed in today’s productivity and business tools, the more marketable you are. This means well beyond the Microsoft suite.

15. Outline your personalized professional development planKnow what you know (see above) and know what you DON’T…and own it all. Write up a professional development plan for what you need to know, where and how you are going to learn it, and attach a date of completion. Many companies have slashed their training budgets. No worries, create your own ONGOING training plan.

16. Be curiousLook at different industries, talk to and know professionals in different roles, learn about various cultures and ask questions. See #7, click any video, step out.

17. Learn, learn, and learn some moreTell someone you don’t have time for reading and learning, and it tells them all they need to know. You won’t move them ahead because you don’t move yourself ahead. It’s a knowledge economy and information abounds, there is no longer an access issue just an attitude issue.

18. Leave your office or your house ⎯ oh wait, that might not work. Be out there virtually.  Set up a Zoom account if you haven’t, test it and get comfortable. Test it with a family member, friend or colleague. Set yourself up with good audio, background and invest in a a web camera. Let people know you are comfortable working remotely and 

19. Change the lensLook at your role from the position of the CEO, owner, or human resources director. What type of person and skills do they need to move their business forward, to reach their next big goal? Consider what you might have to do to adjust your skills to meet those business needs.

20. Connect the dotsHow do you work with others? How do you move beyond your functional silo and collaborate with other areas in the company? Connect the dots so that you are seen as important to the entire organization.

21. Research trendsRead trend reports and consider how comfortable and ready you are for what’s coming.

22. Watch TED talksOne of my favorite sources of insight, knowledge and inspiration. People are doing amazing work. Watch and then think about how you can apply what you saw to your world and experience.

23. Inspire othersTurn dust into energy. See the blessing you have and pull yourself up. Practice positive thinking.

24. Find someone who has done this successfully, ask them how they did itWhen I lost my job I asked everyone who was out on their own how they transitioned and what the hardest part was. It was invaluable insight.

25. Find someone young to meet with regularly for mentoringI meet with young professionals in various industries because I want to learn from them. I want to know the apps they use, how they work, the tools they use. I love learning from them. 

26. Determine your level of entrepreneurshipNot everyone wants to be an entrepreneur. That’s ok, but you should be in control of your career. Decide whether you’re more comfortable in a start-up, small to mid-sized, large business, or government. They all require different skill sets and levels of risk.

27. Redefine who you areYour past success is no longer an indicator of your future success. Realize it and redefine who you are. As long as you have something to support and substantiate your success, you will be fine.

28. Change the role Define business development vs marketing. Some of the best salespeople I know and have hired have a marketing background. In my opinion, one of the biggest differences between business development (sales) and marketing is that business development lands in the revenue column and marketing lands in the expense column. Can you craft a new role?

29. Consider yourself a brandSocial media promotes this idea and LinkedIn takes it to another level. Scope out who you are and be it.

30. Identify your value propositionWhat do you bring to every conversation, every business encounter? What do people remember about what you deliver, what you say? That’s your value proposition.

31. Craft your own personal/professional mission statementThis was hard for me but in the end I think my mission sticks. My mission is to empower others to empower themselves. Good personally and professionally.

32. Quantify what you deliverHave some metrics that you can use to discuss and highlight your analytical and measurement skills. This is increasingly important for marketing professionals. Because there was so little marketing measurement ten years ago, marketers didn’t realize fast enough that they are as responsible for numbers and results as sales professionals.

33. Specialize in somethingWhether its CRM, a particular software program, coding, marketing automation, compliance law, etc., have a specialty to highlight. 

34. Change the conversation Start the conversation by sharing what you offer and how you have helped others increase results or decrease costs with your expertise.

35. Watch The Start-up of You, Visual Summary from Reid Hoffman

36. Now read The Start-Up of You.

For a more in depth look at How Valuable is Your Network? check out our blog posting from October 2019!

People often comment on how I have continued to reinvent myself. I laugh because four years ago people asked me why I had so many different jobs. I am nothing if not adaptable. Reinventing is not easy. It takes work, thought, and vigilance. But it can be done. What have you done to stay relevant or reinvent yourself? Send us a comment with your story, or a favorite resource or book.