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Showing posts with label Career. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Career. Show all posts

Friday, April 10, 2015

KYW's Tony Hanson Calls It A Career

4-8-15
After spending his entire 37-year radio career as a newsman with KYW/Philadelphia, Tony Hanson has announced he will be retiring at the end of this week. His years at KYW have brought him numerous honors, including awards from the Philadelphia Bar Association, the Pennsylvania Bar Association, the New Jersey Bar Association, a Sigma Delta Chi national award, a William A. Schnader Memorial Award, a Freedoms Foundation certificate of excellence, a UPI statewide first place award for sports coverage, and the New York Grand Award.CBS Radio Philadelphia SVP/Market Manager Marc Rayfield talked about Hanson, telling Radio Ink: "He is a legendary newsman, a consummate professional, and he will be sorely missed by our listeners and his co-workers."

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Sunday, March 23, 2014

NABEF Announces Career Day In Vegas

3-19-14

The NAB Education Foundation, in partnership with the Broadcast Education Association, announced the addition of a Military Veteran Resource Center to NAB Show's Career Day, Wednesday, April 9, in Las Vegas, NV. Located in the Las Vegas Hotel and Casino Pavilion, Career Day is an annual event that provides college students, entry-level job seekers, and experienced professionals with the opportunity to interact with media industry recruiters. NAB Show is the world's largest annual conference and expo for professionals who create, manage, and distribute entertainment across all platforms.

This year, NABEF has partnered with representatives from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation's Hiring Our Heroes program, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and Quaestor Federal Consulting to offer resources for veterans and employers. Immediately prior to the Career Fair, employers can attend a free session from 9-10:00 a.m. focusing on the business case for hiring military veterans and skill sets veterans possess that can be applied to the broadcast industry. During the Career Fair, the Military Veterans Resource Center booth will provide advice and opportunities for training related to a successful job search as well as information for both recruiters and job seekers.

Job seekers can attend sessions throughout the day on personal brand management, dressing for success, and information on jobs in broadcasting. Career Day will offer the popular one-on-one career coaching sessions that include resume critiques and interview strategies. Recruiters include Beasley Broadcast Group, CNN/Turner Broadcasting, ESPN, Gannett, NEP Broadcasting, PBS Las Vegas, Radionomy, and Univision Radio.



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Sunday, July 28, 2013

A Stellar 40 Year Career

Barb Richards started in radio right out of high school in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Five months later she was on the same path most jocks take when they want to advance in radio - she moved to a larger market looking for fame and riches. She spent the next 8 years of her life moving from bigger market to bigger market, winding up in Cleveland in 1983. When the station changed format in 1984 she was fired. To add a little stress on to that, she was 7 months pregnant. Richards and her husband decided to move back to Fort Wayne, have the baby and plot out their next move. That's when she heard from WFWQ, better known as MAJIC, back in Fort Wayne. When her son was only 7 weeks old, she was back in radio working at her hometown station. After nearly 30 years with the station, most of them as PD, Richards announced this month she was retiring from radio. We spoke to Richards this week about her career, how programming has evolved and being a big fish in a small pond.

You've been with the same station for three decades. Why?  
Richards:Fort Wayne was home for me so that was part of it.  But the main reason was that Sarkes Tarzian is a great company full of great people. I learned so much, I moved up from nights, to morning drive and music director. I did promotions for many years, and then became PD. The company allowed me to grow, gave me consistent opportunity and education,d so there was no reason to leave.  I had the best deal on the planet. I was able to do so much through those years. I always used to say I was running a major market radio station, it was just in a small market! I would have put our air staff and promotions up against anyone and I know we would have won.  Yes, we were that good! 

Why did you decide to stay in a small market your entire career?
Richards: Because I like being a big fish in a small pond!  I had done a large market (Cleveland) and was pretty invisible. I came to Fort Wayne and immediately became a star! I could make an impact here with what I was doing on the radio and in the community.   You can really leave a legacy in a small market and that became important to me.
Why are you retiring from Radio?   
Richards: Mostly because I was bored.  Radio doesn't do the things like we did before---we don't have a guy on the street in the morning show, we don't do major promotions anymore because of lack of staff, and the loneliest place in the station is the on-air studio!  The focus is on what we need to do to get the buy and while I understand that and did it successfully for many years, I still wanted to continue to impact my community.  I was not going to move from this market, my husband has a great job and two out of three of my kids are here,.  I could not go work for another radio company because of my contract and due to the fact that I really didn't want to work for anyone else in the market. I was too well branded with Majic.  I have been very high profile here in the community and had been on the lookout for something I could do full time that would hit my hot buttons.  This job was it---still could deal with music, concerts, artists plus market a beautiful facility.
How has being a PD evolved over the years? 
Richards: Well this is a tough question because I think every radio station or group handles their PD position differently.  We are a small company so I could make a lot of decisions and had a lot of flexibility   Bigger companies dictate more with group contesting, imaging, music selection, etc. Through my tenure. I got to program just ONE station! I never could figure out how some PD's can program 3, 4 or even more at a time! That to me is the biggest change for PD's. You are responsible for a chain!
What are you most proud of from the time you've put in at the station?
Richards:
Most proud of the mile long prayer chain we delivered to Columbine one week after their tragedy. We started the morning after the shootings inviting people to write on a slip of construction paper a prayer, a note, whatever and  we connected as a huge paper chain.  By the end of the first day, you couldn't get into my office because so many people had dropped off chains.  We had to get a private jet to fly us out there.  And when we hung that chain from tree to tree, we held hands with the families of victims and prayed.  A moment I will never forget.   A part of the chain is in the Columbine Museum.  I've helped to raise over $1.2 million dollars for our Children's Hospital through our radiothon.  I won the Bob Lind Award from the Children's Miracle Network for my dedication to the Children's Miracle Network and John Scheider presented to me. That meant a LOT. Being consistently in the top 3 ratings and billing in the market for most of my tenure at the station! Giving away bigger then life prizes, like 25 cruises for two where we actually shut down the phone system in the city due to the volume of calls.  Creating a series of 6 CD's with Sweetwater Sound here in Fort Wayne where there was no cost to us and 100% of the sales were donated to charity.   And working a gazillion hours for years and still raising three wonderful, productive, NORMAL children who have grown into wonderful adults. And oh yeah, I got to meet and hang with JON BON JOVI! 

What advice do you have for others thinking about getting into radio and becoming a PD? 
Richards: It's a very difficult road to get into radio, much like it was when I first started out and had stations that did not want to hire a woman! You will get rejected a lot. But if you have the talent, stick with it until you find someone that hears that talent. Try to find a mentor in the business. Be ready to work long hours that will never seem long because you love it so much If you want to become a PD, observe all you can from others, go to every learning convention you can go to. Take some leadership classes. A lot of PD's are good on air and know programming but they are not a leader. A PD should be a leader for their air staff and for the community. 

What will you be doing?
Richards: I am the Marketing Director of the historical Embassy Theatre, built in 1928.  It's on the National Register of Historical Buildings.It's beautiful. We are a 2500 seat venue.We book concerts such as Alice Cooper  who was here last week and next week we have Steely Dan.We host the Broadway Series, and originate some programming ourselves as fundraisers. Plus the venue is very busy with weddings and receptions in the lobby and the attached hotel that was built at the same time as the theatre. We just announced a $10M Capital renovation campaign to expand. I've been there about a month now and it's pretty cool.

Barb has also been writing a monthly column on consultant Doug Erickson's site ericksonmedia.com about her transition out of radio and into another career at this stage of life. Seems to have hit a lot of people's hot buttons from the first article http://www.ericksonmedia.com/blog/radio/1243-starting-over.html so she decided to keep updating. She says, "It's hard to start something brand new and take a leap of faith and I think a lot of people are facing that right now. Its been interesting to see people's responses."

Reach out to Bard to congratulate her on her 30 plus years of service to the Fort Wayne community and to barbrichardsfortwayne@gmail.com

(7/26/2013 6:28:23 AM)
Awesomesauce!!!

You GO girl!!!


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Monday, June 10, 2013

McConnell Wins Career Achievement Award

6-6-13

WTOP Radio?s Capitol Hill correspondent, Dave McConnell, has been named by the Radio & Television Correspondents? Association as the first-ever recipient of the ?Career Achievement Award for Distinguished Reporting on Congress.? This is a new award established by the RTCA to honor those journalists who represent career achievement and dedication to Congressional coverage. The award further highlights House and Senate reporting that is respected and considered a model for all. The RTCA presented the honor Wednesday night in Washington, D.C.

McConnell, a veteran journalist with more than 50 years of reporting in Washington, has covered decades of presidential elections, White House administrations, Watergate, and more. He joined WTOP in 1965 and became the station?s full-time Capitol Hill correspondent in 1981, a position which he still holds today. McConnell is a Maryland native and has received numerous awards over the years, including an A.I.R. ?Lifetime Achievement Award? and a Society of Professional Journalists ?Hall of Fame Award.?



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Thursday, March 28, 2013

NAB Career Day Set For April 10

3-25-13

The NAB Education Foundation and the Broadcast Education Association, will host the annual NAB Show Career Day on Wednesday, April 10, at the Las Vegas Hotel. NABEF President Marcellus Alexander said, "Career Day provides broadcasters with exposure to media companies from across the country. It?s ideal for job seekers looking to work in the broadcast communications space." Representatives from this year?s recruiters include Clear Channel, ESPN, Fox, Gannett, Production Hub, Sencore Inc., Star Radio Group, and more.

In addition to the Career Fair, job seekers will have access to one-on-one career coaching sessions as well as informative sessions focused on career development. This year?s sessions will be:

Social Media in the Job Hunt
10:00 - 10:45 a.m.
This session will provide attendees with tips and insight on how to better incorporate social media into a successful job search.

Moving on Up Through Networking
11:00 ? 11:45 a.m.
This session, meant for new and seasoned professionals looking to brush up on networking skills, will provide insight into the networking process including tips on how to ?work the room,? approach key individuals, establish meaningful contacts and master the art of small talk.

Dress for Success ?Fashion Show? by Laura Rubeli
12:00 ? 1:00 p.m.
Image expert Laura Rubeli will give the do's and don?ts of professional attire during interviews and at the job, providing insight on how attendees can make sure image and aspirations are one and the same.

Negotiating Your Best Salary
1:15 ? 2:00 p.m.
This panel will explore the elephant in the room ? how to prepare for, talk about, and get the best salary possible.

Pre-registration for Career Day is available for attendees, and admission is free with the registration code CF13. Both registrants and non-registrants of NAB Show may attend.



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Monday, August 27, 2012

NABEF To Host Radio Show Career Fair

The NAB Education Foundation, in partnership with the Broadcast Education Association, will host a Career Fair on September 18, 2012, one day prior to the 2012 Radio Show kickoff. Located in the Hilton Anatole from 1-5:00 p.m., the Radio Show Career Fair will provide experienced professionals, college students, and entry-level job seekers with the opportunity to network and interview with major radio companies.

This year?s Career Fair will feature round-table-style networking and group interviews, allowing attendees and recruiters to interact in a fast-paced, personal and competitive setting. Entry-level candidates as well as seasoned professionals interested in radio opportunities in sales, technology, and on-air should register online. Admission is free with attendee code CF12, and registration includes entry to the exhibit floor of the Radio Show.



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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

How To Advance Your Career When Jobs Are Limited

1-4-2012

As the number of programming jobs declines in the radio industry, those that are willing to work longer hours, do a lot more work and be agile in what they do are finding new opportunities. Bob Lonsberry has been in talk radio fulltime since 1995 and he's still around today. Before getting a regular shift on radio, Lonsberry was a columnist for the Rochester "Democrat and Chronicle." He started as a fill-in host on Rochester (NY) powerhouse WHAM, he did mornings (from Rochester) at KNRS in Salt Lake City, has filled in for Glenn Beck, Art Bell, Michael Reagan, and worked two stints as a host of the Premier syndicated "Weekend" program. This week Clear Channel announced that Lonsberry will add the Syracuse market (WSYR, 3PM-5PM) to his schedule which includes WHAM in Rochester (9AM-1PM). Rochester and Syracuse are several hours apart in upstate New York.

Lonsberry tells Radio Ink he plans to make his program work in the Syracuse market by making it local and getting to know and love that city. "For 10 years I did the most local show in Utah from a studio 1,700 miles away. I did that by working harder, and by immersing myself in the community and its people. I will spend a lot of time in Syracuse. I will walk its streets and come to know its priorities. Basically, it's like when I was a newspaper reporter and I was assigned to cover a new town or beat. You study hard, you meet people, you figure out the players, you try to get a sense of the place. That's what I will do in Syracuse. And I imagine it will be great fun. Learning about a good place is a positive experience. Content of the Syracuse show will be about 80 percent local. It will be, in every way, a Syracuse and WSYR show."
Despite his willingness to learn new markets, increase his working hours and the drive to make his show local in markets he is unfamiliar with Lonsberry has a few doubts about the future of the media. "Everyone who asks me about a career in radio -- or newspapers or television -- I tell to go to law school. Or dental school. Or some school where they will learn a trade that will let them make a living. I'm uncertain of the future of radio. My hope is that it continues largely as it has, and unless the suits get in the way, it will. I admire and appreciate new media, and I think the Internet and its associated technologies will become the new delivery device, but at the end of the day, a guy in his car listening to the radio works -- as long as something real and compelling keeps coming out of the speakers. The best advice I can give is true in every part of life -- be yourself. We right now are an industry dominated by half a dozen giants who suck all the oxygen out of the room, with various of us minor leaguers impersonating them around the edges like a bunch of sycophantic minnows. Any number of hosts do their particular impersonation of Rush or Rome without ever quite grasping the fact that Rush and Rome got to be who they are because they were who they were. They stood on the basis of their own uniqueness and talents, and anyone else who is going to be worthwhile is going to do the same thing. I don't sound like anybody else. My show is just different. That has defined my success and my failure. Success in that audiences like me, failure in that bosses and programmers aren't quite sure how to take me. It's kept me a minor leaguer, but it's given me a wonderful job talking to audiences I truly love. So be yourself. We are a nation of 312 million people. In that mix there have to be some great folks, if they'll just be themselves. We all know fascinating people, and most of them aren't on the air. And that's too bad. Love your audience, have something to say, and say it well. And don't forget it's show business. You are the dancing monkey who offers encouragement and entertainment to hard-working folks who are trying to get through another day.

Lonsberry says his show is optimistic, not antagonistic. "I believe in asserting something positive, I'm not shouting something negative. Also, I am about 80 percent local, in terms of content. I apply the principles of conservatism to local issues. I also recognize that life isn't all politics, that nobody is always right and nobody is always wrong, and that you should have a good time. I think a show should have a high entertainment value, with a fair amount of humor, that it should respect and support community values and that it should, generally speaking, stand for God, family and country. I hope to be the guy next door, who cares about his kids and his town, and who has something more to say than that Obama is a louse."
Lonsberry is an Army veteran, ?an emergency medical technician, the holder of a pistol permit, an elected member of his village board and a marathon runner.? He?s also a commentator on NRAnews.com. Most impressive, he is a father of 8 kids ranging in age from 8 months to 26 years.

Reach out to Bob HERE
Follow Bob on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/boblonsberry
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Wednesday, November 30, 2011

A Stellar 35 Year Career

As we reported yesterday Maureen Lesourd was let go from her most recent job in the radio industry. For Lesourd it's been a 35 year run and she does not plan to call it quits now. Her career began in the traffic department of WJLK AM and FM, an accidental job, when the position she applied for with the Asbury Park Press was already filled. Lesourd learned how to write commercials and read meters at her new job and that was followed by her getting a position at WHN in New York City. Last night we caught up with Lesourd and peppered her about her three-and-half decades working in an industry she says she still loves.

You say you love this industry. The changes going on do not bother you?
Well on the positive side, I'm a great believer that there really is no growth without change or some risk. I've always embraced the willingness to reach outside of my comfort zone to learn new things and grasp new innovations that are impactful to the business. What is concerning are the recent dramatic cut backs industry wide. I do contend that maximizing talent and positions is wise consolidation, but I wonder what the long term effect will be on our products and customer service if we overload our people with more work than can be handled with due diligence. Ah yes, the challenges of every manager today is to work through that, find new ways to measure and keep people motivated in the process.
What would you consider some of your biggest successes?
I'm proud of the many great stations and business units I've managed and honestly, what has made them successes are the people. I love building teams and driving business. Many come to mind, but WRQX in Washington, DC was especially rewarding because it was my first GM job. When I got there it was a struggling CHR with low ratings and margins. I built a great team with Jim Robinson as our GSM and Lorrin Palagi as PD. Research supported a couple of format opportunities. HAC was fairly new at the time, but we really believed it had greater growth potential than the format corporate had signed off on. I recall aggressively petitioning corporate and they supported us...although I knew Norm Schrutt would have creamed me if we were wrong!...so we flipped to HAC as Mix 107.3, hired Jack Diamond and Bert and grew it into a monster station in the market and highly profitable for the company.

WYCD in Detroit is another. We shared similar ratings with our competitor at the time, but only one Country station got the buy, so I decide the only way to beat them was on the street. It was my hope they'd flip the format if the revenue wasn't there; so I hired Deb Kenyon as GSM and we built a great sales force. A year later, they changed format. Then when I became Market Manager for the cluster, I made Deb DOS where we grew the revenues to be the #1 cluster in the market. WQCD in NY was another. We woke up the market from a sleepy market competitor as a niche Jazz station to a mainstream Smooth Jazz by tweaking the format and executing a strong marketing plan led by Russ King.. We took a share out of the AC and bite out of market revenues. KRTH in LA is another great story...it's all about Jhani Kaye. 

What was the pressure like working in some of the big markets in America?
There must be something in my DNA that helps me manage pressure. I balance my business and personal life which may be a large part. That said, the top line success in a big market is always a focus for broadcast companies. It can make or break a year depending upon it's value to the company portfolio. A costly mistake or a revenue blip can have disastrous impact overall, so it's critical to embrace new revenue streams and audience building initiatives and technologies, plan strategically and be disciplined regarding expenses.
What is it like to be under a microscope on nearly a daily basis?
For some people accountability may be considered a daily microscope, but if a company is highly leveraged, the price to pay is greater scrutiny from above. I set a high bar for performance and hold people accountable. I've also learned from some very good supervisors along the way who have held me accountable how and what to anticipate. Plus I work to have a good relationship with them and an open dialogue,which typically fosters an understanding of how to best work with them. That's not to say I haven't had a bad year; I have, but I think healthy communication and mutual respect can make the phone calls less intense. The more leveraged a company is of course, the price to pay is greater scrutiny from above and of course, we've seen more of that in recent years. I don't think I've ever been under a daily microscope, but I know me and I know that's not a culture I would enjoy.
 
What is your fondest memory in radio?

Oh gosh, there have been a few that bring a smile to my face, but I'd have to say it was landing my first sales job at WPLJ in NY. I wanted to stand out from the crowd, so I drew a picture of me and wrote a poem as one of many many follow-up letters to Marc Morgan, the GSM. I interviewed there several times because he never hired anyone without radio sales experience. The poem did it and I got the job.
What would you like to do next and where would you like to do it?
Identifying, coaching and leading talented people is my strength, so I'll always naturally gravitate to leadership positions. As has been my passion, I want to be more than an employee, but be an active participant in the growth and new initiatives of a business.
Name 3 people in the radio industry you most admire and why?
I've never actually met him, but I've known of his career since his PD role at WNBC a number of years ago, but I'd have to say Bob Pittman is one. I attended his session at the NAB this year and was completely inspired by his knowledge, enthusiasm for diving into new technologies and growth areas for his company and most of all for his "all industry", not just for Clear Channel, commitment to foster positive change. I'd like to meet him. 

I admire and appreciate people who have ventured out of the traditional radio environment of working for companies to embark upon new businesses that are brand extensions of radio. Women like Tracy Gilliam, President of Topline Matters was my GSM at KRTH who started a busy company serving stations sales research and marketing needs and Mary Beth Garber. I was in LA when Mary Beth was selected to lead SCBA; well she did more than that, she revived it and built it into a most notable organization.

Also in this category is Daniel Anstandig, President of Listener Driven Radio and my former client at the Network. He's under 30 and is the creator of a terrific crowdcasting platform for radio stations to activate their listeners on-line and on-air participation through social networking.

Finally, I know they are no longer in radio, but they will always have my sincerest admiration....Tom Murphy and Dan Burke, formerly the Chairman and COO, respectively, of Cap Cities/ABC. Two incredibly fine men and and great leaders.

Reach out to Maureen at Maureen Lesourd mo_lesourd@yahoo.com

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Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Looking to Advance Your Radio Career?

When a GM or a PD tells an applicant that the radio station has received "hundreds of resumes and packages," that may well be true. But it did NOT hear from hundreds of potential employees. What that station did receive was hundreds of terribly crafted resumes, awful audio, and cover letters filled with poor grammar, bad spelling, deceptive statements, and outright lies.

I recently advertised for two separate positions. We were looking for a staff member on our FM and a staff member on our AM. These were two different positions, with completely different job descriptions.

I received 73 packages for one of those positions and 66 for the other. Nineteen of those were duplicates. The same person applying for both positions, never realizing that they were applying to the same company. Despite the fact that the job descriptions were vastly different, these 19 people sent exactly the same package for both jobs.

Hence this article.
Here are the five worst things you can do when trying to score that awesome radio gig.

1. Shotgun your package to dozens of openings, hoping something sticks. This is HUGE. I know it's tough out there, but sending the same package over and over to every advertised opening is not the way to get noticed. As hiring managers, we see through this, especially when we have seen your package before -- same letter, same audio -- same everything. This brings us to...

2. GENERIC PACKAGES. If I have an opening for a sports play-by-play person, I need to hear play-by-play audio. If you don't have it, you aren't going to get the job. It just isn't going to happen. And a generic cover letter isn't going to get it done, either. I judge EVERY package based on the cover letter first. So do most hiring managers I know. It is your first impression. This brings us to....

3. Badly written cover letters. If you have bad grammar, bad spelling, etc., that makes us think that you are lazy, and we won't hire you. If you do not know to whom you are sending the package, it's OK to address it to "Hiring Manager" or something generic. I would PREFER that you take the time to read the job announcement and do some research. If I put my name and e-mail address on the announcement, I expect a personalized letter. That doesn't mean I want you to stalk me. Which brings us to....

4. Friending me on Facebook. DO NOT DO THIS! This does not make you stand out, and it does NOT make us think that you have creativity and aggressive awesomeness. It makes us think that you are stalking us and won't leave us alone if we don't hire you. If I don't know you already and I get a friend request after seeing your name in the pile of resumes, it creeps me out. If your audio is no good, it won't help that you did this. And if your audio is awesome, I don't need you to do this. I will remember you. Which brings us to the worst thing you can do when looking for a job....

5. Sending bad or irrelevant audio. I am going to lay some truth on you. I know that we have all been hit by layoffs and firings and cutbacks. But it is my opinion that talented people will find something eventually -- and the vast majority of the packages that I and ALL of my PD and GM friends receive are rejected because the applicant is simply not talented. Do yourself a favor, send your audio to someone you trust who will tell you the TRUTH about your aircheck. Do this before you send your package to a potential employer. The first 30 seconds of your audio will tell me all I need to know. If I am still listening after one minute, it goes in the good pile.

Also, make sure your audio is relevant. As I said above, if the opening is for a PBP guy, then send PBP audio. If the opening is for a morning host, we need to hear you doing breaks that show that kind of skill. If the job is for a production director, we need to hear production! I know this seems simple, but I can tell you that more than 75 percent of the airchecks I received for these two openings had those issues and were rejected immediately.

Why did I write this article today? I want to help you. Also, I want to help all of the hiring managers out there who have to sift through e-mail after e-mail from applicants who will never be hired because of these simple issues.

Let me conclude with HARD numbers.

Of the 139 packages I received, I ended up with nine potential candidates who fit the criteria and had good, well designed packages with good audio. Of those nine, only three of them interviewed well. Which leads me to the next article: How to screw up a phone interview.

Good luck in your job search, but remember: Finding that right gig is 80 percent luck. GETTING that gig is all on you.

(8/17/2011 12:18:49 PM)
This is GREAT. I wish I could just respond to every candidate that sends me a resume/demo with your article! I fully AGREE with you.

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Friday, June 10, 2011

Is Your Radio Career in Need of Serious Rehab?

byBill Pasha
A long time professional acquaintance called me a couple of months ago, ostensibly to say hello and discuss industry trends.  During the conversation, he hesitantly raised the true reason for his call.   His once-promising radio management career had stalled.  We discussed the reasons that he felt that way and, sure enough, I drew the same conclusion.  The job advancement train of this senior radio station executive had come to a screeching halt. If that's you. Here's how to fix it before it's too late.

Together we examined where his engine had veered off the track.  We started with his most recent frustrations; he had been in the same job for too  long, he worked in a dead end city, his job interviews had felt ?off.?  Worse, there had been companies who were eager to speak with him at the beginning of each search process that simply didn?t even call back to inform this eager candidate that the position had been filled. 

We agreed that all signs pointed to the need for action, but could a stem to stern review alone provide the answers to the dilemma faced by this 46  year-old white male candidate?  If so, would it be too late to intervene by performing Career Rehab?

The process that we followed over the next weeks required psychoanalytic-like honesty and objectivity on his part, and a willingness to ask very  difficult questions that were sometimes personal, on mine.  The bond we shared as radio professionals was more productive than our friendship.   Immediately, the introspection instigated by the queries began to reveal flaws in the package that this manager?s employment-to-date represented.

In short order, we agreed on the following challenges that required immediate remedial actions:

? Over the years, interviewing had become foreign to my friend.  He tended to spout rote answers to interview questions.  The answers he gave were not particularly thought provoking.  Worse, they often seemed to be out of touch with current ideas and approaches.  We agreed to a series of mock interviews with other managerial colleagues, to simulate the calls that he might encounter with C-level employers and sharpen his interviewing skills.  This included learning what questions to ask, as well as how, or even when, to answer.

? Having lived in the same city for so long, my friend?s wardrobe tended to reflect the geography and that area?s conservative fiscal nature.  In other words, his clothes were out of style and drabby.  While an open collar might be fine for sales calls in his market, the overall look that he projected was a bit sloppy and uncompetitive with more savvy managers who also were in the running.  I suggested that my friend make friends with the manager of the Men?s Department at Nordstrom, or a seasoned pro at Brooks Brothers.  There, the stores? knowledgeable professionals could outfit my managerial amigo with clothes that would impress without being ostentatious.  I also suggested that he lose his beaten and beloved Chicago Bears logo wristwatch in favor of something more in keeping with the job status he seeks.

? My friend had no cohesive personal digital strategy.  Facebook was a place that he used to publicize enjoying a weekend beer with his friends.  He never offered a thoughtful professional observation or insight.  His picture was taken at a party in a funny hat.  He didn?t tweet.  Even his email signature failed to include his email address.  Creating a meaningful strategy for my friend?s online presence was a sure way to rehabilitate his online image.  It included teaching him how to write for Facebook and Twitter, and even creating a month?s worth of status quotes.  For all intents and purposes, Career Rehab would not only put him in control of his personal digital strategy, it would make him accountable for it.

? When asked whose careers he had helped to build, he blanked.  And when prompted with names of prominent players with whom he had been involved, he was unable to articulate how he had contributed to their careers.  Clearly, mentoring is an important arrow in the quiver of skills of any good manager.  As a managerial strength, my friend should have been ready and able to capitalize on it.  Learning to do so was to be an important part of his Career Rehab.

? My friend?s resume had not been updated in several years.  While his professional and academic credentials are impressive, he failed to effectively communicate what he should have known best.  His CV was filled with features, but no benefits to employers.  He stated that he had created and singlehandedly managed a sales team of fifteen reps, but he failed to account for his recruitment techniques, the revenue the team generated in digital sales, or incremental sales of any sort.  In fact, it was impossible to judge his effectiveness in training or motivating his crew versus the skills of his GSM.  He stated that he had an Ivy League MBA, but failed to describe how that had served him in the real world.  In general, his resume was a boring history book that could have been a colorful blockbuster movie.  Needless to say, our foray into Career Rehab created a shiny new bio piece that effectively tells the winning story of a worthy candidate for hire, who possesses today?s most sought after skills.

? Networking was a thing my friend used to do.  During his years in his current market, this manager had grown top busy?read ?complacent??to keep in touch with friends he had made in his years rising through the ranks of sales, sales management, and general management.  He had lost important connections with programmers and marketers and vendors.  He talked to no one outside of his local circle, and no one spoke about him.  So when important positions would arise within companies of people he once knew, he would make a call to his ?buddy from Cleveland? only to discover that it was hard to strike up a conversation.  That social discomfort was compounded when this manager had only one option left:

Asking for help from a virtual stranger.  One of the toughest parts of going through Career Rehab is admitting your mistakes to your friends.  This man is now a networking evangelist.  He takes full advantage of the note cards that we selected from a fine stationery web site.  They were not inexpensive, but my manager-student was quickly learning that optics might not make the man, but they often open doors.  He drops a note to anyone he knows who is promoted, has a baby or a birthday, or who loses a job.  They are quick and concise, and always very personal and handwritten.

My friend?s program of redevelopment paid off.  He is now gainfully and happily reemployed outside of the radio industry, in a pursuit that involves mobile platforms.  He is reinvigorated and is a poster child for the premise that no career is unsalvageable.

My take away from this experience, and I hope yours, too, is that careers require constant direction and control.  When you allow the planning and execution of your livelihood fall into your comfort zone, you are destined to hit bottom.  Today, while you are still on top of your game, develop your own custom version of Career Rehab.  Run what you do against a checklist.  If you fail to make the grade, enlist the support of a trusted colleague who cares about you to help in a makeover. 

Bill Pasha is founder and president of MultiBrand Media International, LLC, a concierge consulting company. Until recently Bill was VP of Programming for Entercom where he was responsible for over half of Entercom's 121 stations. Contact Bill at bpasha@multibrandmedia.com.

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