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Essential Career and Job Search Articles to Read This Weekend

Make the most of your early fall weekend and catch up on these articles and prepare to get going on your job search

Job Search and Career Advice
Katie icon
By Mediabistro
The Mediabistro editorial team draws on 25 years of media industry expertise to cover jobs, careers, and trends shaping the industry.
2 min read • Originally published September 23, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026
Katie icon
By Mediabistro
The Mediabistro editorial team draws on 25 years of media industry expertise to cover jobs, careers, and trends shaping the industry.
2 min read • Originally published September 23, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026

Whatever you do between now and Monday morning, be sure to carve out a few minutes to for some reading that’ll do some good for your career.

We understand how busy you are at work, so we’ve rounded up our best recent career and job search advice so you can spend some downtime in the next few days fueling your job search.

Employers: How an Elevator Pitch Can Help You Land the Ideal Job Applicant: Here’s why every employer, hiring manager, recruiter or HR representative should have a quick spiel on your company and job opening written, memorized and ready to go at a moment’s notice.

Land the Perfect Job This Fall With These 5 Tips: Want to find a job before December? These are the pointers you need to follow.

How to Do a Video Interview: If you’ve got a Skype call scheduled with a recruiter or hiring manager, follow these best practices to ace it.

Marketing Manager Jobs to Apply to Now: Hey, marketing pros: Now’s a great time make the leap into a marketing manager job, thanks to these postings on our job board.

Check In with Your Network—and Make New Contacts—Now That Summer’s Over: Fall is a peak season to find a job, and to reconnect with your network. Here are some tips on getting reacquainted, painlessly.

How I Turned a Passion for Video Into a Burgeoning Career: Find out how Adweek’s video producer, John Tejada, landed his gig.

What Does a Copywriter Do?: Learn more about the communication and storytelling skills required in this wordsmith role.

Go Back to School—and Make Yourself More Hirable—With These 6 Quick, Affordable Courses: Learn a new skill—and kick your job search into high gear—with these courses that’ll prove you’re up to date and invested in your career.

Have These Stories Ready to Crush Your Next Interview: Make yourself the candidate your hiring manager remembers with these storytelling tips.

How I Broke Into Technical Writing—and Why You Should Too: If you’re looking for high rates and straight-forward assignments, this could be the gig for you.

Managing Editor Jobs to Apply to Right Now: If you know how to inspire and lead groups of writers and editors, now could be the time to find your new gig among these job openings.

How to Find an Employer That Values Diversity: Most publishers and advertising agencies are overwhelmingly white; these tips can help you discover — and work with — the ones that are trying to diversify their ranks.

Topics:

Get Hired, Job Search
Job Search

How Tracking Your Career Wins Supercharges Your Job Search

Because if you don’t brag about your awesomeness, who will?

Track—and Tout—Your Successes For Your Career and Your Job Search
Katie icon
By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
2 min read • Originally published September 26, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026
Katie icon
By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
2 min read • Originally published September 26, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026

Whether you’re searching for a new job or are trying to bolster your career, it’s always a good idea to have a running list of your career wins to prove your worth. We talked with Nicole Williams, career expert and founder of WORKS by Nicole Williams, for tips on tracking your bragging points for your resume, your upcoming interview or even for your end-of-year employee review.

Why You Need to Track Your Successes

Put simply, if you don’t, nobody will.

“No one is going to test you, hand back an A grade and pat you on the back,” says Williams. “You need to promote your own great work. Influence your higher-ups and engage them in conversation about your career wins and how they’ve been helping the company.”

When to Track Your Successes

We all have great moments in our careers, the problem is we can sometimes forget these moments as other things come up at work. Williams’ advice? Track your wins right away.

“Don’t get stuck,” says Williams. “Right after a great client presentation, sale, traffic spike, program—write down your accomplishments. Add it to your resume, LinkedIn Profile, notes on your iPhone. Whatever you do, track it now before substantial times passes by and you can no longer account for it.”

What Counts as a Success?

Haven’t won a major account yet? Or led a project that scored major conversions? No big deal. A win doesn’t have to be huge to be considered a brag-worthy success. The key is to show how you contributed your skills to a project or process.

Here are a few examples:

  • I contributed ideas for the company’s email marketing campaign, which streamlined the process and freed up the creative team to focus on other marketing efforts.
  • I contributed designs to a marketing campaign that led to a 25 percent increase in web traffic.
  • I effectively resolved client issues, helping to maintain our company’s mission of client-focused care.

How to Develop Stories From Your Successes

After tracking your wins, it’s important you turn them into stories that will capture the attention of a hiring manager.

“Hiring managers do not want to read a list of dry skills. They want those skills to come to life via actionable stories,” says Williams. “Help them visualize you in a role by highlighting your successes and walking them through your accomplishments.”

And, just as you’d use this technique to land a job, you can also use it to show your manager how you’re a vital part of the organization—who definitely deserves that annual raise.

Topics:

Get Hired, Job Search
Interview Tips

7 Things You Should Never Say in a Job Interview

Keep these phrases out of your vocab to steer clear of interview rejection

What not to say at in an interview
Katie icon
By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
5 min read • Originally published September 27, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026
Katie icon
By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
5 min read • Originally published September 27, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026

You’ve thoroughly prepped for your interview by researching the company and hiring manager. You’ve reviewed how to answer tricky questions. You’ve even got a handle on what to do after your job interview.

But just as important as what you do say and ask at an interview is what you don’t—phrases, topics and questions to avoid at all costs if want to move to the next level, and ultimately get the offer.

Before your next interview, give a read to the following of verboten subjects. You’ll up your chances of winning the job—and decrease your likelihood of blowing your chances over an ill-considered choice of words.

1. Industry Fluff

When you walk into your interview, the hiring manager is going to expect you to have a solid grasp of your industry, not just a fundamental understanding.

When a candidate talks about how big social media is, or how much it’s changed the world, it ends up sounding like fluff, says Jodie Cook, managing director of JC Social Media Limited. “We already know social media is huge,” says Cook. “That’s why they’re here being interviewed for a job within the field.”

Cook suggests citing specific examples of when something’s been done really well, or not really well, and your thoughts on how it could be done better.  

2. Negativity About Past Managers

No matter what you endured at your previous job, there is never a good reason to talk about a previous manager in a negative light—especially in the small word of digital media.

“[D]iscussing your previous job in a negative light shows a lack of forethought that could distract from how great of a candidate you are otherwise,” says Juhea Kim, editor in chief of pulsd and co-founder of the healthy living site Peaceful Dumpling.

A good rule of thumb: Focus on the role and not the people.

“When you have left a job for a negative reason,” says Amanda McLernon, director of digital strategy at the Bauserman Group, a Reno-based agency, “it is best to focus on the responsibilities of the job, the role, and perhaps the absence of a career path in the company because those things are not personal and show that you care about your position and goals.”

Want even more help on your interview preparation? The counselors with Mediabistro’s Career Services can help you refine your interview skills in a one-on-one session.

3. Uncertain Career Goals

When a candidate says, “I’m not really sure where I want my career to go next,” a hiring manager hears an alarm.

While you don’t need to have your 5- or 10-year careers goals set in stone, you should be able to express an idea of what you want to do for the next two years, says McLernon.

“I’d like to make sure you want to be in this industry and won’t be hating your life every day at work,” says McLernon, “If you hate your life at the office, I know you won’t be the productive, valuable employee I need you to be.”

4. A Sole Focus on Big Brands

If you’re interviewing for any sort of creative role, you should be ready to talk about your favorite campaigns.

And if you’re prepared to talk about, say, Oreo’s ‘dunk in the dark’ tweet, Cook advises candidates to think smaller. “I want to know a candidate understands building a brand from scratch using social media is a whole different ball game,” says Cook.

Ditch the conversation on the million-dollar ad and opt for a smaller brand’s work, discussing how they became big through digital, “not necessarily because of budget but because of creativity,” says Cook.

5. Vacation Time

Many startups and digital media companies are gaining reputations as office-perk-friendly spaces, but asking about perks at your first interview may raise some red flags.

“It’s not that we want to hire people who plug away at work like robots,” says Kim. “Clearly, we want employees who are balanced, well-rounded, and happy. But we also want people who understand that digital media isn’t all fun and games, and lavish startup perks.”

For Alex Twersky, career expert and Mediabistro’s own resume and cover letter writer, it’s simply a matter of timing. “First, dazzle them enough that they want to hire you,” says Twersky. “Then, when the desire on the employer’s part to have you as part of their team is clear, ask them pertinent questions about benefits.”

6. Lack of a Skill

In a world where learning a new skill is ridiculously within reach, there is no good reason to go into an interview without at least taking a quick online crash course in a required skill that’s listed in the job description.  

“Hiring managers are interested in people who can hit the ground running, so don’t give them any reason to rule you out,” says Kim. “And be ready to give yourself a crash course in anything you don’t know—before your start date.”  

Rather than admitting you don’t know the skill but you’re excited to learn, be able to say with confidence that you’ve taken a course and are excited to apply what you learned. 

7. Industry Buzzwords

In digital media, they’re everywhere: Clickability, ideation, agile marketing…”delightion”. Even though these words seem common tongue, it’s best to avoid them at an interview. Kim says hiring managers do understand how it can be tough to avoid industry cliches, but she reminds candidates to be authentic.

After all, hiring managers aren’t looking for someone who can repeat common phrases, rather, they’re looking for people who can bring real, thoughtful ideas to their business.

See if you can identify where you’re using jargon and do your research so you can actually talk about those topics, rather than gloss over them with catch phrases.

8. Desperation

While it’s necessary to show your enthusiasm for the job, saying that you’ll take any opening can do more damage than good.

“Seeming desperate works against you every time,” says Twersky. “No employer wants to hire someone who is willing to accept any suitor. They want someone who is in demand, or at least perceived to be so.”

Rather than falling into the over-eager candidate trap, Twersky suggests you project a confident, relaxed and focused energy that shows you’re interested not just in any job, but the right one for you.

Looking for more interview pitfalls to avoid? Maybe it’s time you schedule your session with Mediabistro’s career counselor. Whether you’re looking to build your perfect elevator speech, or refine your interview skills, our media career pros are here to make you shine.

Topics:

Get Hired, Interview Tips
Networking

How to Use Video Tools to Stand Out in Your Job Search

You don’t have to be a Final Cut pro to make great video. Check out these tools that will help you look good in no time

5 Simple Tools to Help You Create Great Video Content for Your Job
By KiKi L’Italien
3 min read • Originally published September 29, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026
By KiKi L’Italien
3 min read • Originally published September 29, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026

Just a few years ago, creating well-crafted video content was primarily an expensive and time-consuming process requiring skills that took much time (and the right equipment) to develop.

Today, the barriers to producing attractive and professional-looking video content are breaking down and it is becoming cheaper and easier, which is good since video is one of the most effective ways to reach your audience— even during a job search.

Ignore video for your job search at your peril. Types of video content you may want to consider during your job search, include a demonstration of skills or project stories that show what you can do, your video resume and thought leadership pieces that help identify you as a valuable asset for any employer to have on a team.

A Cisco white paper predicts that 80 per cent of all internet traffic will be video content by 2019. Because of the drive to create more and more video, technology developers are rushing to provide solutions for video content creators.

Take a look at these five tools that promise to make your video projects more effective with just a little effort:

1. Showbox

Showbox is a free service that provides everything from background replacement to story recipes to help develop great video content. Use this to spin your story in a smart, sophisticated way. It’s a great tool for highlighting your best skills or projects.

2. Quik

Quik identifies your best footage and presents gives options for everything from transitions to captions. Use it to create your best explainer video or demo or to create a mixed-media video showing images from successful presentations and projects, all with snazzy transitions and background music if you like.

3. Animaker

Moving infographics could be cool, right? Animaker provides artistic options for how you tell your story. Don’t feel like getting up close and personal with your webcam? Animaker might be the way to go. Animaker provides video resume templates that walk you through the process of creating your own. It doesn’t get much easier—or more fun—than this.

4. Magisto

Magisto is a great tool for people who don’t feel adept at coming up with creative ideas for video. It provides examples and ideas for ways users can take the reigns and develop a video that shows off their skills or business.

Magisto offers even more guidance and resources for professionals and business owners for a monthly price, although Magisto does have the freemium version that works quite well—even better if you know enough about video to have some B-roll and high-quality photographs you can use.

5. Filmora

When your film has captions, you increase the likelihood of your video being watched. Filmora makes adding captions and text to your video easier.

Whether you think you are the next great film director or a complete novice at film technique, using these tools will help make your video content stand out.

 

Topics:

Climb the Ladder, Networking
Be the Boss

Event Planner Success: Career Tips From Industry Pros

Clio’s associate director of events Melissa Shaw on finding what you’re good at and translating it into your dream job

Melissa Shaw
Valerie icon
By Valerie Berrios
@valerieberrios
Valerie Berrios is a published author and senior content manager with nearly two decades of experience in digital publishing, including roles at Audible, Disney Streaming, Everyday Health, and Mediabistro. She specializes in content strategy, editorial operations, and international content launches.
4 min read • Originally published September 29, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026
Valerie icon
By Valerie Berrios
@valerieberrios
Valerie Berrios is a published author and senior content manager with nearly two decades of experience in digital publishing, including roles at Audible, Disney Streaming, Everyday Health, and Mediabistro. She specializes in content strategy, editorial operations, and international content launches.
4 min read • Originally published September 29, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026

Getting your foot in the door and climbing the ladder in media can be a challenge: The industry is always changing, career paths can be ambiguous and social media never sleeps.

To help you find your way, we’re talking to media pros with a few years under their belts. Our Advice From the Pros series gives you real-world insights and advice you can apply to your job search, job interview, and—when you land that next gig—your new job, too.

Then when you’re ready, check out our job board.

Melissa Shaw is energized by the intensity of her job. As associate director of events for the New York City–based Clio Awards, which hosts three annual competitions that celebrate creativity in advertising, Shaw heads the operations team and executes all related events from start to finish.

At any given time, she could be coordinating international travel for 80 judges or scouting a location in Bali. The native of Hayward, California, has been in the role for two years and lives in Elmsford, New York.

So how’d she get her current position, and how’s she getting ready for the next stage of her career? Read on. (And look for her on LinkedIn.)

What was your first job? And your first job in your chosen career?

My first job ever was cleaning houses with my godmother during summer vacation. My first job in my chosen career was an events coordinator at events services company IQPC, based in New York City.

How did you land your current job?

I applied to a job posting online. During the interview process, I was charismatic, and I just clicked with the president of Clio, who’s now my boss.

Is this where you always thought you’d end up?

I initially wanted to be a lawyer. I definitely have the qualities for one—I’m assertive and always questioning everything—but around my fourth year in college I decided that profession wasn’t for me.

Meanwhile, I planned various events at school through various clubs and organizations I was a part of, and that’s where I excelled.

Now that my career in event planning has taken off, one of my strengths is contract negotiation. I always get the best deal possible at the lowest rate!

What made you want to pursue this role?

A mentor talked me through the process of event planning and helped me realize this is what I enjoyed doing and that I was good at it.

What about your job gets you excited to jump out of bed every morning? What makes you want to hide under the sheets?

I like that not one day is the same; every day has new challenges. I love the stress of events and do not shy away from it. When I’m not busy, I feel useless.

What’s your favorite thing about working at your company?

My team—it’s so hard to find great people to work for you. When I was hiring for a position in operations, it had taken some time to find the right person, but I have and she makes work so enjoyable.

How do you stay on top of trends in your field?

I follow some of the big names in the industry on social media, including Variety and BizBash. I also follow the Kardashians because they are always out and about at awesome events—and because I love them. The creativity of events people and seeing what they can do with huge budgets blows me away.

What are you reading right now?

Grit to Great: How Perseverance, Passion, and Pluck Take You From Ordinary to Extraordinary, by Linda Kaplan Thaler and Robin Koval.

What’s the biggest misconception people have about your role?

That it’s glamorous. Truth be told, it’s a lot of sneakers, hair in a ponytail and rolling up your sleeves to get the job done.

What skills should you have when applying for an event planner job?

Passion and work ethic. Skills can always be taught, but if you don’t have that drive there’s no point.

What advice would you give someone looking to break into this field?

Everybody wants to be an event planner. They plan a wedding and think they’re experts in the field. Corporate life is different. It’s long hours and very demanding, so be sure this is for you.

What tips do you have for those seeking mentorships?

Find someone who is truly invested in your well-being and who inspires you. They might not be the president of a company just yet, but knowing that they will get there—and take you along the ride—is so beneficial.

Check out our job board for openings in event planning; operations and strategy; and advertising.

Topics:

Be the Boss
Journalism Advice

How to Become a Six-Figure Freelancer: Proven Secrets

Want your freelancing to really bring home the bacon? Learn from these pros who do it

Six-Figure Freelancer Secrets
Katie icon
By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
4 min read • Originally published October 5, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026
Katie icon
By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
4 min read • Originally published October 5, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026

If you’re a freelancer, you may have given up your day job because you found the pay and the hours better than your old 9-to-5. Or maybe you’re working freelance because you haven’t been able to land that dream full-time gig.

Either way, you may not be making as much as you like, and find your income routinely comes in south of $100K a year. If you’re looking to break through that barrier, read on: We’ve got the secrets to hitting and surpassing that magic six-figure mark, from freelancers who do it year after year.

1. Sell Yourself

What you might have failed to consider as a freelancer is how much time you’ll need to spend marketing your services.

In a guest post on Six Figure Nurse, Elizabeth Hanes—a registered nurse and freelancer raking in over six-figures by writing for health brands—says freelance writing is about 75% marketing and 25% writing.

“If you aren’t willing to sell yourself,” she writes, “then you probably won’t succeed in this arena.”

So while the ability to write is, obviously, key, just as non-negotiable is a talent for getting out there and marketing yourself and your talents.

2. Work Your Connections

Just like anything in life, it’s all about who you know. In his blog, Joel Klettke, a freelance copywriter who banked over $200k in two years, says to treat everyone you meet with respect, because you never know where that person may wind up, or where that relationship could lead.

“Never write anyone off because they’re in a position where they can’t immediately help you or give you a job,” he writes. “You never know where that person might wind up, or that relationship might lead.”

Whether the person is a client, a fellow freelancer or just an acquaintance, Klettke adds, be helpful first, and to listen more than you speak.

Get inside information on what to pitch niche publications, up-to-date contacts for magazine editors and more. Join AvantGuild, our exclusive membership program for freelance writers and other media professionals.

3. Identify Speaking Opportunities (and Pounce on Them)

Speaking at events is an excellent way to gain visibility and credibility in your field.

In a guest post on Sujan Patel’s blog, Ross Simmonds—a freelancer who made over $250k last year—recommends looking for events in your niche area and ask to be a speaker.

“Public speaking is a super power in the world of freelancing,” Simmonds writes, “because it’s a tactic that works” in generating new stories, leads and assignments.

Not sure where to start? Simmonds recommends looking at projects that did really well and see if you can find a central theme—say, perhaps content writing—and scout out those conferences.

4. Follow Up With Past and Potential Clients

Jennifer Goforth Gregory, a freelance writer who broke six figures in 2015, wrote a post on her site listing reasons freelancers are not breaking $100k themselves.

Freelancers’ biggest mistake? Not following up after sending out an initial letter of introduction.

“The majority of the gigs that I land through letters of introduction come on the follow-up,” Goforth Gregory writes. “I recently heard of a writer who has been following up with a client for three years and was recently offered a huge project. Yes, it can take months or years, but I personally believe that when you don’t follow up that you are leaving money on the table.”

Goforth Gregory recommends making a note on your calendar every time you send initial letters reminding yourself to follow up in three weeks (and then again three weeks after that).

5. Get a Niche

Specializing—honing in on an industry or topic—is one of the best things you can do as a freelancer.

On the Freelance Transformation podcast, six-figure freelance writer Bryce Bladon says by specializing, you’re able to develop an expertise, and develop content for clients within your niche more efficiently.

“When you specialize in one thing, you can start anticipating the needs of your client,” Bladon shares. “You appeal to one type of client, and the potential clients who don’t fit in your niche will disqualify themselves. That way you only work with the clients you want and become even more efficient in helping those clients in your niche.”

Bladon suggests making your niche very clear by only displaying work in your portfolio that’s within your specialization, focusing on the positive outcome of your efforts.

Topics:

Go Freelance, Journalism Advice
Resumes & Cover Letters

Why You Need an Updated Resume — Even When You’re Not Job Hunting

A clean, concise, targeted CV is your key to being ready for any opportunity that comes along

Why You Need a New Resume—Even If You’re Not Looking for a Job
Katie icon
By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
3 min read • Originally published October 6, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026
Katie icon
By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
3 min read • Originally published October 6, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026

If you’re settled and happy in your job, there seems little use for an updated resume. The whole point of a resume is to help you land a job, right? 

Why would you need a resume that’s up to date if you’re all set?

Surprise: A resume can do a lot more than power your job search. A spit-and-polished CV can enhance your media career in a multitude of ways.

Here are just a few reasons why you should always keep your resume current—even if you’re not looking for a job.

To Kick Off Your Side Hustle

If you’re looking to moonlight in the field by picking up some freelance gigs, an up-to-date resume that effectively markets your skills is going to help you snag the work.

And when a client is looking for a freelancer, chances are they need this person yesterday. Don’t hold up the process or ruin your chances of landing the work by having to take extra time to update your resume. Instead, hand over your ready-to-go updated resume and get on with the project, creating the killer work your resume boasts about.

Want even more help on your resume? Get started with a FREE resume evaluation from Mediabistro’s Career Services. Our counselors and writers with can help you update and upgrade your resume so you can confidently apply for the job you want.

To Be Prepared For Change

Even though your job is going well, you never know what can happen—especially in digital media where turnover and layoffs are unfortunately still going strong. “The Boy Scout motto, ‘Be Prepared,’ applies perfectly here,” says Alex Twersky Mediabistro’s career counselor and resume coach.

Be ready for any sudden change in employment status a resume that’s set to reel in your next gig. This will save you a considerable amount of time when you re-up your networking efforts or apply to job listings, and will also act as a reminder of your skills and accomplishments when you’re singing the laid-off blues.

To Remain Attractive in the Eyes of Recruiters

Even if you really dig your job, there’s always the possibility of an even better opportunity—whether it’s more creative freedom, better perks or a higher salary. And it never hurts to look, right?

It’s a good idea to continue marketing yourself to recruiters by always having your updated resume on LinkedIn. You’ll be seen as a highly attractive media professional, contributing your skills to the industry and growing in the field.  

To Gain a Better Picture of Your Skill Set, Hire a Pro

By hiring a professional resume writer, you’ll not only get a new resume, you’ll also get a fresh perspective on your abilities, achievements and areas that could use some extra attention.

“When you dig into updating your resume, you’re actually taking a hard look at your skill set, and determining which of these are most relevant to your career growth,” says Twersky, “This is a vital task for every professional to undertake regularly in order to stay current and aware of what their strengths are and where they need work.”

Now’s the time to get your resume updated and ready to impress. Get started with your FREE Resume Evaluation from our career experts.

Topics:

Get Hired, Resumes & Cover Letters
Job Search

This Week’s Best Career and Job Search Reads

Make the most of your weekend and catch up on these articles and prepare to get going on your job search

Career and Job Search Advice
Katie icon
By Mediabistro
The Mediabistro editorial team draws on 25 years of media industry expertise to cover jobs, careers, and trends shaping the industry.
2 min read • Originally published October 7, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026
Katie icon
By Mediabistro
The Mediabistro editorial team draws on 25 years of media industry expertise to cover jobs, careers, and trends shaping the industry.
2 min read • Originally published October 7, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026

Whatever you do between now and Monday morning, be sure to carve out a few minutes to for some reading that’ll do some good for your career.

We understand how busy you are at work, so we’ve rounded up our best recent career and job search advice so you can spend some downtime in the next few days fueling your job search.

5 Steps to Proving You’re Committed to Diversity—With Your Job Listing: HR reps and hiring managers: Learn how to vet your job listing to assure it’s not discriminatory—and that it attracts the best applicants.

Track—and Tout—Your Successes For Your Career and Your Job Search: It’s always a good idea to have a running list of your career wins to prove your worth, whether you’re searching for a new job or are trying to bolster your career. Here’s how to do it.

Warning: These 8 Common Pitfalls Could Bomb Your Next Interview: Read carefully these phrases, topics and questions to avoid at all costs if want to move to the next level, and ultimately get the offer.

Get Back to Job-Search Basics With These Fundamentals You May Have Forgotten: Restart your job search from square one with these fundamentals you can’t afford to ignore.

5 Simple Tools to Help You Create Great Video Content for Your Job Search: Video is becoming an indispensible job skill. Here are tools that can showcase your work—and make you more hireable—with just a little effort.

8 Warning Signs You’ve Gotten an Offer From a Bad Employer: Congrats! You got the job offer! But oops — something seems off. Here are eight warning signs that your prospective employer might not be the best.

What Does a Copy Editor Do?: Get the scoop on what’s involved in this vital role.

Talking Too Much in an Interview Can Cost You the Job. Here’s How to Fix It: Learn how to relax, and not talk so much, in your next job interview.

5 Secrets to Becoming a Six-Figure Freelancer: Here’s how to bring home the bacon with your freelancing, from pros who already do it.

Why You Need a New Resume—Even If You’re Not Looking for a Job Yet: Here’s how to get a clean, concise, targeted CV, and be ready for any opportunity that might come along.

Topics:

Get Hired, Job Search
Job Search

How to Build Your Online Visibility and Get Hired Faster

Go from an online nobody to a competitive job seeker with some tweaks to your online presence

Looking For a Job? Here’s Why You Need to Be Visible Online
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By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
3 min read • Originally published October 10, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026
Katie icon
By John Lombard
John Lombard is a content strategist and writer with over a decade of experience creating interactive and video content for brands like Apple, IBM, and Samsung. He previously worked at Mediabistro and now serves as a Client Strategist at Ceros.
3 min read • Originally published October 10, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026

When it comes to the job search, gone are the days of applying to job listings by submitting a resume, cover letter and work samples upon request. The Internet has changed the way job seekers are found, and in order to remain competitive in your job search, it’s important you don’t fall behind.

With hiring managers and recruiters using Google, LinkedIn and Twitter as means of researching candidates, it’s now more important than ever to be seen in the results.

“In the highly competitive ad tech and marketing job market, employers expect to see at least a minimum presence,” says Mitchell Reichgut, CEO of Jun Group. “Candidates with scattershot or outdated materials will be at a disadvantage.”

Digital content and marketing is the field that creates the stories told online. You need to be able to show that you not only understand these concepts but can use the latest available tools to share the story of your personal brand. If you’re not able to do this, hiring managers will have a tough time seeing how you’ll be able to do the same for their company.

Increase Your Visibility

If you’re not the type of person who snaps, tweets and posts updates all the time, it’s not the end of the world. With a few quick adjustments to your online habits, you can up your social presence in no time. Start by tackling the basics.

Update Your LinkedIn

“At the very least, candidates should have up-to-date Linkedin profiles,” says Reichgut. “This has become the standard in the industry and it’s table stakes for anyone looking for a competitive position.”

LinkedIn makes it incredibly easy to see how complete your profile is, and will prompt you with tips to making your profile closer to its “All-Star” status. Need some help getting started? Check out this video on the basics of building your LinkedIn profile.

Want even more LinkedIn help? Our counselors can help you raise your presence with a professional LinkedIn profile edit.

Create and Share Content

Another way to up your visibility is by developing and sharing content online. As Reichgut says, “Candidates may also use blogs, updates and other social networks to enhance their overall profiles and increase their exposure.”

One of the easiest ways to get started with this is to use Twitter to share articles that you find interesting—and that relate to the field. You don’t have to go crazy here, but try to be consistent with your posting. Try setting a goal, such as sharing three industry-related articles a week on Twitter and Linkedin.

Don’t Forget Facebook

Reichgut also says Facebook is an area job seekers should spend some time as it’s “increasingly becoming a destination for recruitment and it is a platform that should be considered by candidates, especially millennials.”

But don’t let this overwhelm you. If you’re just looking to break in, Reichgut says to start by focusing on your LinkedIn, and expand from there. “LinkedIn is the requirement,” says Reichgut. “As job seekers become advanced and get familiar with other platforms, they can extend their voices to make a bigger impression.”

Topics:

Get Hired, Job Search
Career Transition

How to Land a Job in a New Field With Zero Experience

Specific experience can be important, but it's a hurdle you can cross

How to Land a Job in a New Field With Zero Experience
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By Andrea Williams
@AndreaWillWrite
Andrea Williams is an author, journalist, and columnist for The Tennessean with over 16 years of experience in journalism and 20 years in copywriting and communications strategy. Her work spans national outlets and high-traffic digital brands.
5 min read • Originally published October 24, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026
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By Andrea Williams
@AndreaWillWrite
Andrea Williams is an author, journalist, and columnist for The Tennessean with over 16 years of experience in journalism and 20 years in copywriting and communications strategy. Her work spans national outlets and high-traffic digital brands.
5 min read • Originally published October 24, 2016 / Updated March 19, 2026

In a perfect world, we would have all been 100% sure of our career paths as early as middle school, and, subsequently, every internship and college course would have moved us swiftly along that path.

The reality, though, is that our personal interests and circumstances change—not to mention the fact that the very industries in which we work seem to be in constant states of upheaval.

So we find ourselves not just looking for a new job, but checking out the grass on the other side and planning for the ultimate career switch.

It can be daunting, to forsake all relevant experience and well-cultivated networks in the name of a new gig, but it is possible to make the switch somewhat seamless. Here’s how:

1. Do Your Research

Isaac Asimov, the great American author and intellectual, once said that self-education is the only kind of education there is. That’s great news for folks who find themselves shopping for a new job in a field wholly unrelated to their current degree, but it also means that you must be prepared—and willing—to study your new career path as earnestly as you did college algebra.

“The first step to any career change is research,” says Aaron Michel, CEO of PathSource, a career navigation app. “Learn about your new field: what skills are required, what types of jobs are available, and what it’s like to work in the industry.”

Michel created PathSource as a resource for folks embarking on a new profession, with detailed information on a variety of fields in areas including localized salary data and job openings, projected job growth and typical work environment.

But PathSource isn’t the only way to study your new career. Read a book (or ten), get your Google on, or ask someone who already works in the field what it’s really like.

Find your next job — or the first job in your new career — on Mediabistro’s job board.

2. Leverage Your Transferable Skills

One of the greatest advantages of thoroughly researching your new field is that you will get a good sense of the types of skills necessary to not only land a job—but to do it well.

And, says Sam McIntire, founder of the online career education platform Deskbright, you will likely find that you already have many of those skills, even if you didn’t develop them in a comparable environment. (Read: If you’re looking for a copywriting gig, whether you previously wrote press releases or technical briefs is of little concern to your new boss.)

“Think about how you can position yourself to prospective employers by using these skills as indicators of your future capabilities and success,” McIntire says. “And don’t forget to think about softer skills, like leadership, communication and teamwork; these are often just as valuable to companies as harder skills like programming and media management.”

Once you’ve determined which skills will be attractive your prospective employer, be sure to lead with those on your resume and in interviews.

3. Gain New Skills

Working with what you’ve already got in your arsenal is a great way to shift careers with the least chance of backward movement (i.e., landing in an entry level job), but if you really want to make forward progress, you’re going to have to learn some new tricks.

“For example,” says Cheryl Rogers, founder of the Mentor Me Career Network, “a former newspaper reporter can start out in freelancing by writing newspaper and magazine articles. That reporter also likely has to broaden his or her computer skills and learn how to market himself or herself.

“He or she also has to learn how to manage a writing business. At some point, as a freelance writer, he or she may take on a wider variety of writing projects. Eventually, that may result in a new specialty such as public relations or marketing or even being an author.”

Everyone may not want to freelance, Rogers notes, but there are still other ways to gain in-the-field experience that hone chops and appeal to hiring managers. “You may prefer to volunteer in a new career field, or take a temporary job, as the stakes for the employer are not as high,” Rogers says. “If you want to try something wildly different [from your previous career], training is advisable. Consider an apprenticeship program or advanced degree. An internship may be useful.” Sometimes all you need is an online course to familiarize yourself with some more specialized skills.

4. Build Your Network

Even when you’re completely confident that you’ll be able to crush any job in your new field, the reality is that you have to at least get your foot in the door for an interview. And sometimes that can prove to be the most difficult of your career-switching endeavors.

McIntire recommends using LinkedIn and other tools to tap your network for warm introductions with executives and hiring managers, but what happens when your current circle doesn’t have any connections in your new field? You build a new network, of course!

When L’Oreal Payton decided to leave her journalism career for work in the nonprofit world, she knew she would need allies on the inside who could help her land a new job.

“First, I made a short list of dream companies I’d like to work for, and then I researched their staff to find people who worked in communications or marketing,” Payton says. “From there, I’d research them on LinkedIn to see if we had any mutual contacts and Twitter to learn more about their interests. Once I thought I’d found a good fit, I’d reach out either on social media or by email.”

Payton was clear about her intentions in her initial correspondence, noting that she was a journalist looking to break into nonprofits. And after an in-person meeting, she made sure to stay in touch with any contacts, mentioning “an interesting tidbit from our conversation, or a link to an article I thought they would be interested in—or if they mentioned an upcoming vacation, I’d send tips for that location if I’d been, or a deal I’d seen online.”

Payton’s efforts paid off. A coffee meeting she had more than two years ago helped her land her current position of media relations manager for Girl Scouts of Greater Chicago and Northwest Indiana.

Topics:

Be Inspired, Career Transition

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