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Signature Source Blog

As Boomers Retire, Companies Struggle To Develop Senior Leadership

May 12, 2015 – With about 4 million Baby Boomers retiring annually, companies worldwide are experiencing a growing talent gap at the executive level, which comes as no surprise to us at Signature Source. A recent survey reports that nearly a third of firms polled are struggling to fill senior leadership role, while 59 percent agreed succession planning is more challenging in today’s economy. Read More

7 Issues That Impact Staffing 2015

April 10, 2015 – Small and large businesses all plan to step up hiring activity in the second quarter, according to CareerBuilder’s latest forecast.

Twenty-three percent of companies with 50 or fewer employees expect to add full-time, permanent staff over the next three months, up from 18 percent last year. Among employers of all sizes, the number planning to hire in the second quarter is up six percentage points over last year.

Which leads many of Signature Source’s clients to ask the perennial question: What are the issues that will impact staffing this year? Read More

Personal Branding: Why It’s Important

March 11, 2015 – Our last two posts have focused on developing and implementing a personal brand. Today we focus on the “why” of personal branding, which for us at Signature Source is the most compelling argument about why you need to develop yours.

First, let’s touch on what a personal brand is not, according to more.com:

  • Your job
  • Your resume
  • Your elevator pitch
  • Your network
  • Your LinkedIn profile
  • Your leadership roles
  • Your Google search results
  • Your style of dress
  • Your way of relating to others
  • Your office décor.

The above list obviously is very important. But there’s more work to be done.

The nitty-gritty of your brand

Consider your personal brand your trademark, what you are most passionate about and what you stand for. It defines you as a person but also communicates what sets you apart from others. It is not bragging, nor is it about constant self-promotion. If you manage your brand correctly you become a role model for others, the go-to person on a specific topic and someone others can trust to provide insight and information. More.com gives this example: “vice president of XYZ Company” becomes “a forward-thinking team leader with a dedication to mentoring and an unwavering focus on profit and efficiency.”

You probably will have many jobs in your lifetime, but the one constant you take to all those positions is your brand because it is all about you and your core values.

Two key questions

And here are the two questions we advise all our job candidates to think – and then do something –
about:

  1. Have you designed your personal brand?
  2. Do you consistently live your brand?

Don’t feel badly if you didn’t positively answer these questions. Based on a survey conducted by the Glenn Llopis Group, less than 15 percent of people have truly defined their personal brand and less than 5 percent are living it consistently at work. To answer those two questions positively takes a huge amount of self-introspection, combined with a call to action, and then a daily check-in to see if you are living true to your brand.

Glen Llopis says what is truly fascinating is that although only 15 percent of people have defined their brand, 70 percent of professionals believe they have one and 50 percent say they are living their brand.

Our parallel universe

Today, our real world and online personas co-exist on two parallel paths, and both must be managed effectively for success in business. And both must be true to your brand.

It is imperative that your online message coincides with your in-person self. A 2013 Career Builder survey found that 39 percent of employers use social networking sites to research job candidates. As social media expends, that percentage will surely grow. That same survey discovered that 43 percent of hiring managers who research candidates on social media said they found information online that caused them not to hire a candidate.

Stew Friedman, director of the Work/Life Integration Project at the Wharton School of Business explained to more.com: “When your personal brand is a genuine expression of your core values, it focuses your attention on actions you should be taking – as well as making clear what you should avoid. The result is better alignment among the different parts of your life, which creates a greater sense of purpose and more coherence and optimism.”

Define yourself with your brand, live your core values, and the result should be a greater appreciation of who you are and where you are going in all aspects of your life.

A Primer On Personal Branding

February 5, 2015 – So many are busy promoting their company’s brand, they fail to consider the importance personal branding plays in career advancement.

At Signature Source, we instill in candidates why personal branding is critical, specifically:

  • It defines who they are.
  • It defines how great they are and where their strengths lie.
  • And it establishes why they should be sought out.

Read More

  • National Association Executive Recruiters
  • National Association Personnel Services
  • Foreign for Expatriate Management
  • Society for Human Resources Management
  • Worldwide ERC
  • Women Business Enterprise National Council
  • Southeast Regional Relocation Council
  • Chicago Relocation Council
  • North Texas Relocation Professionals
  • Houston Relocation Professionals
  • Tennessee Relocation Council
  • Midwest Relocation Council
  • Metro Atlanta Relocation Council