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Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Rummaging Through Gchats

"If ever I would leave you it wouldn't be in summer.

Seeing you in summer I never would go.

Your hair streaked with sunlight, your lips red as flame, your face with a luster that puts gold to shame.

But if I'd ever leave you. It couldn't be in autumn.

How I'd leave in autumn I never will know.

I've seen how you sparkle when fall nips the air.

I know you in autumn and I must be there.

And could I leave you running merrily through the snow?

Or on a wintry evening when you catch the fires glow?

If ever I would leave you, how could it be in springtime?

Knowing how in spring I'm bewitched by you so.

Oh no! Not in springtime! Summer, winter, or fall!

No never could I leave you at all."

To love and be loved, it's a wonderful feeling.
#memories

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Millennial talent, and what to do with it


Lately I've found myself searching for answers.

Cue orchestra background music here and imagine me atop a hill, gazing into the horizon.

Well, it's not as dramatic as that image, but it is still important. I have questions about my professional future. Questions that create other questions about my personal future; which create even more questions about my life's future in general.

As employees of any organization many live without thinking, "what will happen to me if I stay in this position for one more year or one more day." Many believe we are secure, working our 9-5 schedule and two-week vacation lives, paying bills and saving what's left for our retirement dreams. Unfortunately for me, I think a lot about seemingly mundane things like this. If I have a stable and good job, why worry over the "what if's" or try to change the status quo, right? I don't seem to be the only one wondering that. After all, Millennials are becoming a larger percentage of the workforce. One of my e-mentors, Brian Solis, discussed just that in his latest post.

Call it the Millennial curse, if you will. I have dreams, desires, a thirst for adventure! Along with also having student loans, aging parents and a biological clock that's definitely ticking. Oh, the unfairness of it all. Less than a year ago I read this witty, and sadly poignant, take on our Millennial attitude towards life from HuffPo's Wait But Why Blog, Why Generation Y Yuppies Are Unhappy. While the post was highly entertaining and rubbed some people the wrong way, I felt it was accurate in some ways. Here are my reasons to support the three conclusions from the post with real-Millennial life examples.

1) The image we have of ourselves. Yes we are special, but not that special. Not all of our start-ups, non-profits, businesses revolutionizing an already revolutionary idea (I actually saw a crowd sourcing project for the manufacturing of "iPhone's competitor") or ideas in general will be successful, and we need to learn to accept that. As an only child, who's had to be the best and worst all of her life, I've learned this the hard way, specially at work. My ideas make sense in my head. If I want to convince others that they will make sense in the real world I need to take criticism, edits and collaboration in stride for my ideas to evolve and become successful. I've encountered many a Millennial who believe they are the savior of whichever industry they're in and their unwillingness to take a Humility Pill will keep them from ever reaching that messiah status.We're not perfect, and many of us will have to be OK with that 9-5 schedule and two-weeks vacation life for some time. This does not exclude me either. As much as I love to travel and take courses I realize my financial stability and personal security do play a role in the achievement of my dreams. I need to follow a plan that will not be enticingly exhilarating every day-and that's OK. As much energy and courage it takes to make your goals come true, realistic planning and hard work are absolutely needed as well.

2) Social pressure is real, and by social I mean social media. Facebook Image Crafting exists and is very well darn healthy and kicking. I've fallen prey to doubting myself and feeling inferior when seeing that people in my age group are living THE life. They appear to have the perfect partner, ideal weight, lovely job and dog included... Only to realize some time later, when we meet in person, that all their photos are edited, the partner or the weight aren't that great, the job has ups and downs just like mine and that the dog is from pet-sitting. True story. Am I more cautious of what I post? Yes. Have I stopped feeling pressured? No. While we can no longer disconnect entirely- c'mon Facebook has become a global rolodex and Twitter a portable newspaper- I encourage everyone to log-off once a week or check personal social media only once a day. I have come to post to my heart's content because I like to share my life, but I don't check feeds more than once a day or browse individual profiles anymore. Try it, and if you are curious about a friend's life then send them a message or call them. Millennials aren't the only ones dealing with this social pressure by the way, even baby boomers can assimilate to wanting to make life seem better to the public because everyone else's life already seems better to them. Go ahead, ask your parents or grandparents who are on Facebook if they feel the social burn. In my humble opinion, the future of social media will be bringing back the human touch. We're already seeing it with campaigns asking to Like images of Cancer survivors for example, before heartless people scam them but it's a noble idea nonetheless. Still, if Facebook or Vine or the next social platform can figure out how to make us feel happy for, not envious of, each other I think we would be using the Internet correctly.

3) We want to achieve quickly. We are willing to work hard but we are also little wanderers, so when our hard work is not recognized we wander to where it will be. Or, well, where we are told it will be. I think the concept of staying at a company for 20-plus years is pretty much defunct with our generation. Of all my close friends, who graduated college in 2007-2009, none has spent more than five years in one single company, and their backgrounds range from finance to education. When I think about it, it shocks. However, it doesn't mean it has to be bad. I believe that change is necessary but many times we make that change come too soon because we dislike how things are going. BUT, and yes it is a big but, when honest-to-goodness lack of appreciation is shown I also support searching for greener pastures. Regardless of your age or occupation, nothing will make you like your job more than respect and appreciation. As a job-switcher I can attest to this. I have left a job I loved in an industry I wanted to grow in because the environment and leadership around me made me miserable. One should not cry about one's job or be scared to come into the office to face coworkers. If the situation is not as drastic as this, then re-think a move. Are the reasons why you're "hating" your job fueled by a bad organizational structure or by your bias? Could you work a few months or year more to have enough experience on your resume and mind? What would happen if next time you're asked to do something you say, "sure" instead of "I can't" then? We may be wanderers but we're also growing up and need to value the opportunities we're given. Good or bad. Sometimes our parent's or guardians can tend to feel guilty, and they may or not verbalize it, for having given us much more than they had as kids and making us believe that we deserve to succeed. Let's prove we are willing to earn our stripes and change the world with actions, not just hopes. 

At the time of me finalizing this entry, I find myself in a new office and with new work responsibilities I had not envisioned. It's both exciting and preoccupying, but I want to give the 9-5 schedule and two-weeks vacation (three for me thanks to my boss!) life a chance. A good chance. I think back to freelancing and having my own business again, this time more organized, at least once a week. Then I think of the good things I am also getting with structure: health insurance, retirement benefits, professional connections, camaraderie. To appease my little wanderer I've signed up for music lessons and begun to offer weekend consultancy one-on-one services. Some may think I'm "settling" and some may think I'm slowly doing things "right."  I think that as human beings we can be happy but never satisfied, and I like that. I don't ever want to be satisfied... but I don't want a life of debt, constant worry, instability or solitude forever, either.

More on ways to tame your inner Millennial:
(hey, it's not just those born from 1980s to early 2000s who experience these feelings!)









Tuesday, December 31, 2013

The Collective Gift

Hello peeps! 

It's 7:30pm in Boston as I type this. Perhaps you recall that this July I reached 700 followers (still psyches me out!). Well, you have grown into a beautiful 900 and I have slowly but surely gathered wonderful goodies for the Collective Gift I wanted to give one of you. 


What is a Collective Gift? Well, here is my original post about it, but essentially a gift that we, as a twitmunnity, create and give to one of ours. This year has been very significant for me because it was filled with a lot of changes and you, my dear peeps, made many of those changes bearable with your humorous, inspiring, informative, caring and never-stopping tweets. 


THANK YOU!

So, finally, the gifts have been gathered and assembled together and tomorrow- the first day of 2014- one of you lovely followers will be the receiver of our Collective Gift :) I wish I could give each of you something but if there's a way I can be of help to you, in person or through our digital world, just send me a tweet!


Happiest of new year's to you, your loved ones, and 1,000 years of happiness to all of us (more on that here


Good luck! If you wonder what you may be getting, here's a list of what was collected:



  • Books! Yay, learn to build a website or read about the digital age, always keep reading.
  • Oral hygiene supplies per my dentist! My "slogan" is, "love, dance, sing, floss, travel" after all
  • Travel mementos!
  • Essie nail polish! You know for your lady friend.
  • The awesome Ricola box! It sings, for real.
  • Beauty masks! Make yourself pretty
  • Assorted candies! Some of my faves.
  • A mini-Mexican hat! Because, whey not?
  • an emergency light and whistle! For emergencies only.
  • Deeeelicious Oloves treats! They're my favorite healthy snack.
  • Blowfish samples! Get rid of your NYE hangover. 
  • Sunglasses! Again, because why not?
Stay tuned for tomorrow and int he meantime enjoy these pics! 






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Thursday, September 19, 2013

Back to the drawing board

Since my last post life has changed drastically. After being a reporter for five years, I decided to venture into digital media and social media management. Mainly because my mother's business, which I was also co-managing, needed to join the wave of the future to increase sales.
What began as the creation of a Page and teachings of basic social media use, developed into a small business and a passion to help local business owners, like my mom. Freelancing turned to consulting and within a year I was searching for full-time community management, content creation and social media monitoring jobs. The search was successful and I find myself working as a digital media manager nowadays, in a corporate communications team. I miss journalism, I won't lie about that. I miss a newsroom and the liberty to find, pitch and report my own stories. However, there's a beauty in learning how to maneuver in a hierarchy to stand out within a company with thousands of employees.
The process has been tough but insightful. I've felt shunned by my journo peers, but have met brilliant new marketing and PR pals. It has been a drastic year of changes. Fortunately, change is good and if we adapt to it life will be better. That is my current Energizer motto, "keep going, change is good." Reinforcement of this came last week when I attended the fourth Young Women in Digital (#YWD) meet-up at Communispace. A dear friend of mine, NaEun Park, introduced me to the first event as one of the supporting creators of this quickly-growing, ladies-only networking group.
Honestly, I attended that first event because I needed contacts in the digital marketing and PR field; no longer a journo, I had no mentor or area colleagues who could understand what I was talking about when I mentioned "analytics" or "outreach campaign" and offer constructive criticism. Sure, when I was consulting my friends "got" what I did, but a full-time job representing a large brand is a whole other ball-game. When I spoke of my job with friends I imagined those memes mocking social media jobs running through their minds and worriedly thinking, oh Lord they think I'm a hack.
After the first event was over I realized #YWDBoston was good for more than meeting industry contacts to brainstorm with, I could also make new friends. This might seem obvious, but when you think about the prospect of being in a room full of women for three hours, venting and discussing and mentally analyzing each other, you may understand why I was doubtful of the prospect. Rooms full of women from grade school to graduate school were based on competition, competition for the teacher's attention, for the student government position, for the best internship or for the story.  Once in the work force, rooms full of women were based on survival, survival at a social gathering to get a guy's attention or survival at a sale to get those last size 7 boots for $40. Sad? Yes. True? As well.
Although I have meaningful, long-lasting, strong friendships with exceptional women, they, too, are weary of too much estrogen on their day-to-day lives. Therefore, the notion of attending a networking event to find a new female friend was not really my prerogative. But that's where #YWDBoston did things right. Melanie Cohn, the group's founder, expressed that women need to support each other professionally, competing together, to move forward efficiently, and survive as a whole. Sounds dramatic, huh? Her words were not these exact ones but the message certainly was, stop thinking about coming out first and come out as a collective. Right now, young girls are getting more Math and Science Education (STEM) teaching and they need role models to believe they can become leaders in the workforce one day. I am certainly not an engineer but I can understand the urgency in helping a female developer get a job within my company, and encourage her to pay it forward, to influence a girl who is on the fence about math.
That night the mood changed and my perspective did as well, and that night I met the lovely Susie Concannon, who is becoming a new friend and brainstorming buddy! That night I was convinced to return for more. During this month's fourth event Melanie and her wonder ladies organized a stellar panel. Adri Cowan, Public Relations Manager at Springpad, Celie Hart, Content Editor at Hill Holiday, Tamrah Collins, Marketing Manager for Intercontiental Hotel, and Emily Mahlman, Account Supervisor at Mullen, spoke earnestly about the highs and lows of working in the digital world. From marketing and content creation to customer service and team management. Each lady helped us all feel truly welcome, driving Melanie's point- that we're here to help each other- home.
I was happy to share the night with my fellow digital marketer and friend since Introduction to Public Speaking at Northeastern, woot-woot, Sarah Taylor. My favorite part of the night was meeting a fellow journo who went to the 'dark side' and is now enjoying her career in marketing. The most useful part of the night, aside from the great panel advice, was learning about new apps to try.
Taken from the #YWDBoston blog:
Change, although beneficial, can be tough to manage. When you have a network to support you, that change feels like a smooth transition. Even if your network is made up of one or two people. I am reaching this transition phase now. I know I love journalism, but I also know I'm good at this digital gig.
I can do my job and I will grow within my "new" field, but I have to do it with the support of others while supporting others. If those others happen to be fabulous women of Massachusetts, even better.