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Archive for the ‘Employers’ Category

ZEEFAX – The Best CV Ever!

August 24th, 2011   By   Filed Under: Candidates, Digital, Employers, Everyone, Guest Blog

At Dylan we love to see people being innovative in their job search, going that extra mile in the search of a job they love. As we say: Love what you do. Never work Again.

So, having recently brought you The Best Cover Letter Ever courtesy of Gareth Cash’s video http://dyln.it/own we are now happy to bring you The Best CV Ever, ZEEFAX! This time from Zef Narkiewics who has taken a nostalgic approach to that remnant of the past, Ceefax (or Teletext if you’d rather), to set himself apart from the crowd. Awesome, nice work Zef. Here is what Zef had to say about his CV:

“I remember attending a lecture at University where the visiting speaker was discussing ‘novelty’ CVs, describing them as a hit and miss approach, more often than not bordering on the miss. Opinions differ, as with anything; some designers might slap their thighs and roar with laughter at your baked-bean-tin-CV whilst others may chuck it in the bin with last week’s copy of Creative Review. A CV’s primary objective should not be sacrificed for a creative approach. Potential employers want easily obtainable information on who you are and what you can do – nothing should hinder them (too greatly) in discovering this. It was with this in mind that I took a punt and designed my CV to look like a Teletext service.

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Why We Are Proud To Be Sponsoring The Best Newcomer Award At The Next Marketing and Advertising Recruitment Awards

August 17th, 2011   By   Filed Under: Candidates, Employers, Everyone

Dylan was created 4 years ago as a reaction to the status quo. Created by entrepreneurs, not recruiters, who were tired of the usual recruitment hyperbole and wanted to offer clients a different proposition to the ‘same old, same old’.

Every industry needs new rock star talent and innovation to be the force behind the creative destruction of industry norms. Innovation can come from companies continually adapting but it so often comes from the new kids on the block who want to, and can, do things differently. Better.

This is why we are delighted to be sponsoring the Best Newcomer award at the next Marketing and Advertising Recruitment Awards. To give praise to, shine a light on and encourage the best newcomer to our industry.

We were nominated for a few awards too, not this one though of course, and we’re all smiles about making the finalists in 5 categories (including Best Recruitment Website for this site!).  That also includes Best Recruitment Consultant for our very own Ant and Recruitment Boss of the Year for Phil and Julian.

You can find out more about the MARA awards on their website http://www.ukmara.co.uk/

A look into Google+ and the Growing Social Network Battle between Google and Facebook

August 5th, 2011   By   Filed Under: Candidates, Employers, Everyone

What is it?
Google+ launched on 28th June and is their 4th attempt at ‘cracking social’. Of course, social networks are popping up all over the place and whilst some quickly become obsolete (anyone remember Hi5, Ping!?) others, like this, are worth taking note of. Google+ took just two weeks to hit 10 million users globally, with many more trying to get invites to become beta users. Having failed with Wave and Buzz, this time, their focus is on a smarter, more intuitive interface with the ability to segment your friends, followers and any other group you want to create.

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The HR Director is the new Marketing Director

July 29th, 2011   By   Filed Under: Employers, Interesting, Weird and Wonderful, The Forum

 You can now watch Tom Fishburne’s full talk at this event here

As part of Dylan’s forum events we are welcoming Tom Fishburne (a.k.a The Marketoonist) from San Francisco. Tom will be giving a specialist talk on behalf of Dylan on how we are all responsible for setting a company’s culture and how essentially the HR department are the new Marketing department! Tom speaks regularly as the Marketoonist about creativity, marketing, and innovation, using his cartoons and marketing career to tell the story visually.  As Tom says, “If a picture tells a thousand words, a cartoon tells a thousand boring PowerPoint slides.”

In preparation for this special event, we spoke to Tom who had this to say:

“I am excited to share my take on how we are all responsible for setting the culture of the businesses where we work.  I speak frequently about marketing, but rarely about the crucial, but often overlooked role of recruiting in how a brand is marketed.

The big focus of my talk for Dylan is how the best brands and businesses “market from the inside out”.  We all work in marketing, no matter our functional expertise.  Everyone in the company has the ability to impact the brand, whether they work in accounts payable or marketing. That means that the HR Director is the new Marketing Director.  Recruitment is as important to how a brand is marketed as creating a marketing plan.

I’ll share a number of examples of homework assignments and other tactics that ensured that the right talent ended up on the team, as well as examples of how recruitment choices produced amazing marketing.”

Tom started drawing cartoons at Harvard Business School by doodling on the backs of business cases.  He later started Marketoonist to develop cartoon campaigns as a form of content marketing.  As example is a Unilever cartoon campaign for career planning.  Other campaigns were developed for Wall Street Journal Asia, Kimberly Clark, Kronos, and Motista.  Tom says, “cartoons have a superhuman ability to break through the clutter.  They thrive in social media, accelerate PR, and cut through email inboxes in a single bound.”

Before Marketoonist, Tom had a 15-year career in consumer marketing in the US and UK.  Most recently, he was VP at Method Products, the innovative home care brand, and he previously led brands at Nestle and General Mills.

We’re delighted to have such a great, world renowned speaker coming to talk to you all, we too can’t wait! What Tom didn’t say when we spoke to him was that his cartoons now reach over 100,000 marketers every week (you may have seen them in Marketing Week) and The Huffington Post ranked his South By Southwest talk the third best of the conference out of 500.

You can find out more about Tom and see more of his work here and see him in action here

The Digital Skills Gap

July 15th, 2011   By   Filed Under: Candidates, Employers, Everyone

The current market place for Digital is an interesting space. Over the last 12 months the demand for Digital has doubled. Integrated agencies have worked hard to develop their Digital offering, pure play Digital Agencies are expending their offerings to be 360 in their approach and Social Media, well, I think we all know that that is the new “cool kid” at School.

So how has this affected the job market? Well, it has created a skills shortage. Over the last 6 months we have 3 jobs for every one Planner, AD or Media expert. If you are looking for a role in PPC then it’s your lucky day as there is a huge demand for your skills.

So what does this mean for companies? It means they need to up-skill staff or hire in digital freelancers to stay with the pack. Training is often seen as time consuming and expensive so the freelance route is often taken as a quick fix and easy way out to filling the skills gap. The problem with being reliant on freelancers for your company’s digital skill set is that their knowledge leaves the building when they do.

Freelancers, to an extent, have a stranglehold over the market place. It’s in their interest to keep freelancing as they can earn more than their permanent counterparts and the Digital Skill Gap continues to flourish.

Some companies have responded to this by bringing in senior Digital suits to up-skill their staff whilst working on live projects. A famous International Marketing Agency has done just this. Alongside their Digital offering they have brought in a permanent Senior Digital suit to concentrate on educating the agency on Digital; getting the ‘off-liners’ talking to and thinking like the ‘on-liners’. The initial outlay of bringing in a permanent suit can be expensive but it is a brilliant and necessary long term investment.

Read more about my thoughts in this great article from Marketing “Filling the digital skills gap”

 

Setting The Record Straight: AWR Myth-Buster

July 12th, 2011   By   Filed Under: Candidates, Employers, Everyone

For an in depth guide to the the Agency Worker’s Regulations you’ll find a great guide from APSCo (Association of Professional Staffing Companies) here But first, to blow a few myths away Alison Treliving, partner at law firm Squire Sanders Hammonds, identifies five common misconceptions agencies have regarding the Agency Workers Regulations:

MYTH: Agency workers will have to point to a comparator in order to bring a claim.

Agency workers will not have to point to a permanent employee doing the same job as them to bring a claim. They will simply have to show that they would, for example, have been paid more if they had been recruited directly by the hirer to do the same job. Being able to point to a comparator could, however, be useful for agencies and hirers defending a claim to show deemed compliance.


MYTH: The regulations are not an issue for agency workers who are on a higher rate of pay than permanent staff.

Although such workers may not be able to bring any claim in respect of their rates of pay, they will still be entitled to holidays and rest breaks. If an agency worker can point to individual elements of pay that are less, for example a lower bonus, then he or she may be able to claim.

MYTH: From October 2011 we are going to be inundated with claims from agency workers.

We are unlikely to see claims coming before tribunals until at least mid mid-2012. Agency workers will not gain the right to equal treatment until they have completed the 12-week qualifying period, which ends around 25 December 2011.

MYTH: Agencies can simply take an agency worker off their books if they start being difficult about their rights under the regulations.

Agencies need to ensure that they do not treat agency workers less favourably because, for example, they make a request for information relating to their treatment or otherwise do something under the regulations. If found liable, an agency could be required to pay compensation to the agency worker.


MYTH: If there is a 12-month qualifying period to receive a bonus, agency workers will have to wait 15 months (i.e. 12 months plus the 12 week qualifying period) before they become eligible to such a bonus.

If there is a 12-month qualifying period to receive a bonus, this is counted from the start of the agency workers assignment. They do not have to wait 15 months.

This forms part of a wider article, Getting down to business on AWR, featured in the summer edition of Recruitment Matters.

The Fine Art of Finding The Right People

July 8th, 2011   By   Filed Under: Candidates, Employers, Everyone, Talented@Talent

The comments by Martin Sorrell (Campaign Live 29.6.11) caught my eye – how refreshing to see someone addressing what is such a major issue in our industry, yet one that doesn’t get the attention it deserves considering that talent is all we sell, in effect.

Ask anyone in media land what the biggest challenge they face in their business is, and I bet ‘finding the right people’ comes near to the top. And ‘nicking staff’ will always be an effective, if uninspiring, way of doing this as companies look to take on a safe bet. A proven candidate will naturally come from a competitor. Employers need to be open to the potential of a broader range of people who can be developed into the next company superstar.

There’s also the argument that by doing something as simple as listening to the needs and desires of employees there wouldn’t be as many gaps to fill and the recruitment merry-go-round would spin a lot slower.

Although there is no substitute to the good old-fashioned face to face interview, using tools like Personality Profile Analysis can help make sure that your ‘safe bet’ really is safe and not a risk that you end up regretting. The cost of losing an employee in their first nine months lies between two and five times their annual salary – recruiting the wrong person is a pricey mistake.

The industry needs to stop burying its head in the sand and think more broadly about recruitment if it wants to avoid this nuclear talent race – right person, right time – shouldn’t be difficult.

Digital Pure-Play vs Integrated

July 1st, 2011   By   Filed Under: Candidates, Employers, Everyone

I clearly don’t have Miles Young’s experience, nor have I been in the industry for 30 years and seen things come and go, however, I do have the fortunate position to be in the middle of the Digital revolution.

I genuinely believe there is a place for pure-play Digital Agencies. Just like there is a place for PR or SP Agencies. The issue isn’t the silo-thinking; it’s how the silo thinking is integrated into the bigger picture.

We need people who live and breathe Digital, people who are so passionate about the discipline that that’s all they know and/or care for. This is how we progress the discipline. We need agencies of excellence that do nothing else than Digital, offering amazing solutions and exciting Ideas.

What we need to be careful of is who is leading the Strategy. Digital is just another channel. Sometimes it’s the right one to use and sometimes not. There is a need for specialists and there is a need for pure-plays. Marketing is a big puzzle and Digital is an essential piece. Without pure-play Digital agency, we would be missing a huge trick.

Original quote from: http://dyln.it/bw2

The 5 Biggest Hiring Mistakes.

June 15th, 2011   By   Filed Under: Employers, Everyone

We have all experienced the negative affect of a bad hire. Bringing on new employees is one of the most crucial parts of running any business yet many businesses are guilty of repeating the same mistakes over again and expecting the results to be different.

Here are 5 fundamental mistakes to avoid…

http://www.bnet.com/blog/small-biz-advice/the-5-biggest-hiring-mistakes/2268

How to get VERY creative with your cover letter

May 19th, 2011   By   Filed Under: Candidates, Employers, Everyone, Interesting, Weird and Wonderful

If you’ve got, ever had, or are desperately seeking a job in the media industry I’m sure you’ll all be familiar with the friendly email response ‘your CV is on file, we’ll contact you if a position becomes available’. It’s the big hand of the media industry cyber-slapping you in the face. I graduated in June 2010 and must have emailed hundreds of companies and applied for hundreds of jobs, just to be sent the same computer generated response every time.

I’m not blaming anyone, they receive a ridiculous amount of CVs by email, and if they sat down to look at and reply to every one nothing would be on television except maybe a documentary about how many people in the media industry suffer from depression. So after one too many slaps in the face I took a step back and reconsidered my angle entirely. If I was in charge of sifting through thousands of similar applications what would I want to see. The answer’s obvious really, something different, something that would make my day that little bit more exciting.

I came up with my idea based solely on this, what I would want to see as someone working in media? A video that distracts them with comedy and heart-warming amateurism, makes them forget that they’re just looking at my cover letter, seemed like the perfect option for me. It was an example in itself, proof that I could be creative and proof that I had the skills they were looking for. The idea of making it like a letter was decided after I read an article about how the writer was tired of computers and much preferred the human aspects of a letter.plus I’d received a pen for my birthday and it was collecting dust!

I finished it in around ten hours, it would have been sooner but I was determined to shoot it in one continuous take, and kept mucking up, if you’d have heard the audio you would have been impressed with my plethora of foul language!

The response was out of this world, it shot up past 2,000 views within a day, and it spread virally very quickly, I’ve had dinner dates, drinks at gentlemen’s clubs and loads of meetings with people not only high up, but people that were genuinely interested in me and ready to help me on my career. The best response by far was from the Head of Creative at 4Creative (the creative department at Channel 4), he actually took an hour out of his schedule to make a response video (it followed my video above)! It has so far led to me freelancing with a lot of incredibly creative companies and meeting a lot of incredibly creative people.

My advice to those graduating is to prove what you’re good at, and don’t get disheartened by the automated responses and negative feedback you’re bound to get along the road. I want to go into a creative position, either in TV production or advertising, so I produced something creative and had a lot of fun doing so, if you can prove to people you love what you do, they’ll love you for doing it.

Gareth Cash
@gareth88 www.garethcash.com