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Posts Tagged ‘Employers’

Happiness At Work – A Philosophical View

February 21st, 2011   By   Filed Under: Uncategorized

Work is love...

More recent research finds that most people approach their work in one of three ways: as a job, a career, or a calling. If you see your work as a job, you do it only for the money, you look at the clock frequently while dreaming about the weekend ahead, and you probably pursue hobbies, which satisfies your effectance needs more thoroughly than does your work. If you see you work as a career, you have larger goals of advancement, promotion and prestige. The pursuit of these goals often energizes you, and you sometimes take work home with you because you want to get the job done properly. Yet, at times, you wonder why you work so hard.

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From the Mash Field to Office Glory – Part 1

February 8th, 2011   By   Filed Under: Interesting, Weird and Wonderful

Over the next few weeks, we are going to feature some real Mash Success Stories.

The spotlight turns to 5 Top Mashers who – after representing us brilliantly in the field on multiple campaigns – are now displaying their talents and skills here at Dylan Towers – either with us at Dylan London or with our Sister Company – Mash.

Each of our featured Mashers are fantastic evidence of where you can get with hard work, professionalism and no little fun…

Today’s featured Masher is the one and only Seb.

“Whilst at Uni I worked for Mash in the field. I started as a BA working on L’Oreal in-store delighting the females of the North with the fragrance of Ralph Lauren.. Throughout my time I worked on Armani, BlueSquare, Eat Natural, Cadburys, Lindt Chocolate, Ray Ban with the pinnacle of my Mash career running the Tic Tac campaign across the North East of England. The Orange van and Hawaiian shorts were a big hit!

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Richard Branson on Intrapreneurs

February 1st, 2011   By   Filed Under: Candidates, Employers

- The business icon talks about empowering employees to break the rules

I am incredibly lucky to be able to live in the British Virgin Islands, one of the most beautiful spots on the planet. My family’s home is on Necker Island, which is both our home and a luxury resort. Here, I’m much more likely to do my thinking in an office hammock rather than an office chair.

Seeing guests exploring the beach reminded me that one of the first charming things visitors to the BVIs see are signs in the airport arrivals area that designate the immigration channels. Unlike the rest of the English-speaking world, here the signs read “Belongers” and “Non-Belongers,” rather than “Residents” and “Nonresidents.”

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Dylan Hold Their First Quarterly Forum

November 26th, 2010   By   Filed Under: Employers, The Forum

Dylan held the first of a new quarterly forum last month in an intimate setting at Soho House. All in all it was a great success and the guest speakers Marcus and Fiona gave everyone food for thought.

The forum is a confidential environment where senior HR management can discussthe ins and outs of set topics. Subjects covered on Wednesday 27th October include the following:

 

• Building pitch teams

• Aligning company values with client values OR ideally picking clients with similar values to your organisation and how this can increase your win ratio

• Internal values . Do your staff know who they are? Do you recruit according to your company’s values?

• Retaining staff and keeping them motivated and challenged within their role

• Do senior/board level staff understand the challenges of HR?

One handy tip that Marcus and Fiona gave us, was an online test which could really help any of you working within TV, radio, press, posters and all the other communication media. The Diagonal Thinking Self-assessment is an online tool, designed to aid recruitment into the advertising and communication industries. It tests the hypothesis that the most successful individuals working in the business are both Linear and Lateral Thinkers – they think ‘diagonally’.

www.diagonalthinking.co.uk

Dylan is aiming to host the next forum in late January and we’re hoping to have a guest speaker from a psychometric testing firm to come along and share some of their expertise. They provide a range of assessments that create an environment of understanding to enable you to deliver success in your company. Their assessments provide insight on the key areas that reflect what people are capable of, what motivates them and their core strengths.

If you are interested in joining us for the January forum, please email either Phil (phil.edelston@dylanlondon.com) or Shaz (Shajnab@mashmarketing.co.uk) and let us know.

4 Job Search Tips For Aspiring SEO/SEM Specialists

November 22nd, 2010   By   Filed Under: Candidates, Employers

four tips for seo and sem

Companies across every industry are competing for top rankings on search engine results. And whether they turn to a marketing agency, SEO firm or consultant, there is an increasing demand for search engine optimization specialists.

Marketing professionals looking to break into this relatively new niche can’t necessarily rely on prestigious certifications or a long background as a SEO specialist to demonstrate their knowledge.

We spoke with SEO firms to get their advice for aspiring SEO specialists who want to impress potential employers and stand out from the pack.

Read on for 4 expert tips…

How Social Media Can Make Us More Productive

November 22nd, 2010   By   Filed Under: Everyone


T.A. McCann serves as founder and CEO of Gist. His past experience includes Vulcan Capital, Polaris Venture Partners, where he was an entrepreneur-in-residence. Prior to Polaris, he held senior positions at Microsoft.

To quote Eric Clapton: ‘It’s in the way that you use it!’

In the constant back-and-forth arguments about Millennials joining the workforce, we’ve heard countless times that managers think social media is a distraction and ultimately a productivity killer in the workplace.

In response, the social media community has fought back by saying that these tools actually help them get things done faster, or bring other value to the business. But there have been few substantive conversations about precisely how social media might help you get things done.

Beyond Millennials, the ‘new workforce’ is being defined by a work style that blurs personal and professional time. That development has spawned professionals that craftily use social media to get things done. Yes, the initial draw was networking, but as those relationships become more essential to your professional responsibilities, social media becomes an area where you can get a lot of work done too.

The trick is to realize that it’s not about the tool itself, but your ability to (more…)

35 New Social Media Resources You May Have Missed

November 16th, 2010   By   Filed Under: Interesting, Weird and Wonderful

We’re back with another jam-packed roundup of social media tips and tricks. We’ve been working hard to make sure you have enough to read as the temperature starts dropping, but with this many new tools and resources, we understand if you missed one or two stories. To help, we’ve gathered 35 of our most useful post from the past week or so to make sure you stay on top of your digital game.

Social Media looks at five captivating personalities, tips for maximizing Facebook ‘Likes,’ and talks social media with Late Night host Jimmy Fallon. Tech & Mobile features some amazing crowdsourced art, analyzes the ‘dumbphone’ market, and helps you get started developing apps. Business takes a closer look at brand names, startup lessons for Madison Avenue, and even some great Drupal themes for small business.

Looking for even more social media resources? This guide appears every weekend, and you can check out all the lists-gone-by here any time.

Source: Mashable.com

HOW TO: Gain Twitter Influence

November 3rd, 2010   By   Filed Under: Everyone

Guy Kawasaki and Robert Scoble have vastly different philosophies when it comes to gathering Twitter followers. Kawasaki puts his bluntly: ‘My strategy is that Twitter is a marketing broadcast platform, and so the way it gets to be the best platform you could have is to have as many different followers as possible, which to put it mildly, is radically different from most people — who believe they should have a Kumbaya soulful experience with every follower.’

follow me

Scoble, on the other hand, is more of a quality over quantity kind of guy: “Caring about number of followers is going to take you down a path that’s not very satisfying…Even if you get the numbers, if you’re surrounded by a million [jerks], is that as much fun as being surrounded by a thousand brilliant, fun, great people?”

Both Kawasaki — the co-founder of media aggregation site Alltop, author of nine books, and former Apple Fellow who uses Twitter to broadcast the interesting articles collected at Alltop — and Scoble, a bloggerwho has carved out a niche in world-changing technologies, have met their own definitions of success. Kawasaki has more than 300,000 followers on Twitter. Scoble has about 146,500 and a Klout score higher than Lady Gaga’s (though she does admittedly have roughly a 6.5 million person lead in number of followers).

We spoke with Kawasaki and Scoble to get their keys to Twitter success. Here’s what their advice had in common. (more…)

Building company culture

October 25th, 2010   By   Filed Under: Everyone

People spend a lot of time talking about “company culture” in Silicon Valley. What does it take to create the right kind of culture? How can you maintain that culture? Do you need a mission statement? Should you have a mascot? At first blush it sounds like a bunch of mushy-gushy nonsense. But every great company I’ve had the good fortune to work with has maintained a strong, independent, identifiable culture. And that culture has served to unify and energize the company and its employees.

One thing that is certain, no two company cultures are the same. Even successive companies built by the same people, like children born of the same parents, come out a little bit different. Some companies are playful and fun. Their employees jam in bands together, wear bright colored company clothing, model for corporate brochures. Other companies are intense and driven. Their employees appreciate complete transparency, celebrate each increase in conversion, work after dinner on Friday nights. No one culture is better than another. Whatever motivates, energizes and inspires your employees to build a big company over the long run, is just the culture you are looking for.

So what does it take to build a strong culture? That’s a tough question. And one that is rarely tackled systematically. Tony Hsieh takes on the topic in his new book “Delivering Happiness,” in which he gives a great account of the many things that he did to make Zappos’ corporate culture flourish. And in a recent talk given by Scott Weiss, former CEO of IronPort, he enumerated the many things that he did maintain a strong and unified culture at IronPort. Scott is a widely respected leader and CEO, and one need look no further than his list to understand why — Scott suggests the following 20 rules of thumb while building a company for 0 to 250 employees:

Interview every new employee (until 50 then interview everyone that will manage others)

Spend 30 minutes per week on Mondays talking to new employees as part of their first day. Stop by their desk within a month to see how things are going.

Have lunch with every employee (After 50 you can take 2 out at a time) and get to know them not only by name but some details about them.

Hold at least one all hands meeting (at least two execs should speak, not just you) every quarter

Go over the real board slides after every board meeting – let everyone know what was discussed.

At every meeting with all employees, you must set aside 30 minutes for questions and press for no fewer than 5.

An email (or internal blog) to all after every customer trip, conference attended or major news from a competitor e.g. notes from the road

Personally roll out the values, strategy, and history of the company during a comprehensive employee orientation within the first 90 days.

Attend every company function, event and party as though you are the host

Review every significant communication to ALL and ask your team to review yours before it goes out.

Give a performance review to your direct reports at least twice per year, spending no less than 5 hours preparing each person’s review and at least an hour giving it. Get 360 feedback in person.

Set annual and quarterly goals (between 2-5 is about right although I prefer three) as a company as well as each individual employee.

Promote mainly from within and always based solely on performance.

Personally roll out the performance review process to everyone – you are the lead speaker, not human resources.

Emphasize “speaking up” as a value every time you get the chance (e.g. interviews, evaluations, all hands, employee orientation and lunches)

Follow the rules e.g. fly coach, park in the back lot, have a modest office

Constantly demonstrate that no task or chore is beneath you. E.g. Fill the coke machine, clean up after a group lunch, pack a box, and carry the heavy crap.

When a team has to work a weekend, you need to be there too – even if it’s just to stop by and buy them a meal to show your appreciation.

When something really goes wrong, you need to take all the blame.

When something really goes right, you need to give all the credit away.

I couldn’t agree more with Scott’s suggestions. Company culture starts from the top and can only thrive if it is promoted and supported at every cross-road. But, it is also a ton of work. When I suggest to Scott that it was a huge time commitment to deliver on all of these recommendations, Scott responded, “it was very time intensive but totally worth it… I firmly believe that if you want to have a culture where employees contribute broadly to solving problems outside of their area, it starts with the CEO being approachable/authentic and someone who pays attention to the people ecosystem. Employees then need to be current on what the companies problems are and then constantly encouraged to help solve them.”

Great advice all around. Creating the right company culture is hard but invaluable. My thanks to Scott for sharing his thoughts on the topic.

Source: Ventureblog.com

Earn up to £750 by referring a successful candidate to Dylan*

October 14th, 2010   By   Filed Under: Everyone

At Dylan* we’re always looking out for new talent. Not only are we proud of the relationships and contacts we have, we value and rely on our network for their insight and recommendations.

If you recommend a candidate that is successfully placed* through Dylan, you could be eligible for a referral fee up to £750.

Please see tiered scheme as below:

Salary up to:                                                        Referral fee:

Up to £25K                                                           £250

Up to 50K                                                             £500

Up to £100K                                                         £750

We look forward to hearing from you!

* A candidate must pass the 3 month probation period to be successfully placed.