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Happy Hump Day! Is it Memorial Day weekend yet? For some reason, that’s all I can think about. Things have been crazy, and a three day weekend to kick off summer sounds so magical.

I have a few blog posts in the pipeline, but while I organize myself for the 1000th time, today’s post is a little coffee (or wine) talk. Let me know what you have been up to!

stingray boat

boating in Boston

  • I attended the Innovation Conference for Boston Business Women on Monday, and it was amazing. I have pages and pages of notes and quotes and have a blog post planned once life slows down a little. I left absolutely buzzing with positivity and excitement and inspiration. There’s so much I want to do. I just need time and organization.
  • Our boat season also launched on Monday. Talk about buzzing with excitement. Our new boat is named Saoirse (Irish for freedom), and we are in love. She’s smaller and a different style from Ceol na Mara, who is dearly missed. But amazing and fun and I am so excited for summer.
  • Working for yourself can be really up and down. There’s always the chance a client’s budget or needs can change and everything can fall out from under you. It’s happened before, but I am trying to remember that just like with the rest of life, work moves in peaks and valleys. My new daily motto is “If I bend I won’t break.”
  • There’s also the very big chance a client won’t work out for you, and that’s okay too. And making that decision can be nerve wracking and scary and somehow make you feel like you failed, when it’s just a fact of life. I’m still learning to stand up for my own best interests, and that can be hard too.
  • What is up with big PR agencies and dropping the ball in blogger outreach? Maybe it’s just me, but I have had so many odd experiences with big agencies lately, including being invited on press trips (as in emails that say “You’re invited” and then sharing passport details etc.) and never hearing back. Or telling them a product doesn’t fit my blog and receiving it anyway. Or getting the same press release five times.
  • I’m signed up for a half marathon on May 22, and I have run maybe twice in the last month. This keeps me up at night, but ultimately I am trying to position it as “At worst, I run/walk for 2-3 hours by the beach. At best, I run a race I am proud of.” Either way, I am outside, moving, by the sea. Win/win.
  • I’m also going to England on a press trip tomorrow. It’s a trip that’s been in the making for a while but just confirmed this week, and I am excited but also super worried about not running or having time to work . . .
  • I’ve been putting a ton of time into planting seeds for my garden, and lots of them are growing and then dying. I am obsessing over this too.
  • I worry a lot. Any suggestions on how to stop? 🙂

What’s new with you?

Tags: blogging, boating, lifestyle, random, work

Begin rant. Some people love it. I loathe it.

girlboss

The use of the hashtag #GirlBoss is like nails on a chalkboard to me. Every time I read it I want to yell PLEASE STOP! It drives. me. crazy.

Don’t get me wrong. I love girl (Um, can we just use female or woman at this stage?) bosses and businesses owned by women. Women who own businesses, women who run households (something I am terrible at) women who are rocking all sorts of leadership roles are amazing, and I think they deserve to be taken a little more seriously than just #GirlBoss.

I technically *am* a #GirlBoss (and I am taking new clients) and for better or for worse that means I do it all. I’m good at what I do for work, maybe not as good at the business side (Hello, my taxes are still not done.)

But I’m doing it and getting it done like a boss and working my butt off (Unfortunately figuratively speaking, not literally. I’m too busy sitting on my butt working to be getting rid of it.) I don’t need to label it or myself. People know I’m a woman. They know what I do for work.

#GirlBoss sounds like playing work or playing house, like you’re not-so-sure of your role so you make up something to make it sound cute and important. I feel like the use of #GirlBoss should be followed by a “tee hee hee” and a shy side smile.  Ladies, you don’t need a silly label to be the boss!

Do you see male entrepreneurs and business owners prancing around calling themselves #BoyBoss or even #GuyBoss? No. Would you take them less seriously if you did? I am pretty sure I would.

Would I like #LadyBoss or #WomanBoss better? Sometimes I use #WomeninBusiness or #WomanOwnedBusiness because I do want to support and seek out likeminded women and kickass businesses owned by women. I don’t know.

I do know that I am going to have to agree to disagree with some of you on this, and that’s fine, because part of loving, supporting, and respecting fellow lady bosses is the variety of different and valid opinions we all bring to the table. There’s room for us all.

Just please don’t call me #GirlBoss. Okay?

End rant.

Your turn: what do you think about it? Any hashtags or popular terms you hate?

On fleek also makes me want to rip my hair out.

Tags: business, work

I was recently introduced to a project The Ladders is running on sharing career advice for recent college grads. It’s been a few years since I graduated from UMASS Amherst with an English degree, and I feel pretty darn lucky about the career path I have been able to take, the opportunities that have been opened up to me, and the people I have been able to work with and that I have been supported by along the way.

My class was the first to graduate after the September 11 tragedy, and the world we entered was scary and uncertain and there were lots of qualified people and not many jobs. The first job I actually interviewed for was a babysitting job, where the parents had 45 or so applicants. It got down to me and one other person. I didn’t get it because I couldn’t drive the family’s stick shift car. I find automatic to be much more comfortable anyway, and so I had my first  “It’s not a good fit.” experience.

Job hunting and forging your own career path can be scary, cutthroat, frustrating, but also so rewarding, fun, and eye-opening. For more information on my path, please check out my Professional Background page.

After lots of consideration, here are a few pieces of advice for recent college graduates. What advice would you offer?

grad cap

 

Say thank you often, and mean it.

You are above nothing. Sure you have a newly minted diploma, which you should be proud of, but always be ready to roll up your sleeves and do anything that’s needed to get a job done. Don’t lose that spirit ever; it will come in handy and it will be a trait you will come to appreciate in others.

Every job doesn’t have to be your dream job. Learn as much as you can from the job you have, even if it isn’t the job you want right then. My first job out of college was as an admin at a hospital. It wasn’t what I dreamed of when mapping out my career, but I learned how to manage in an extremely busy office setting, how to thrive in a professional environment, how to place others’ needs and concerns above my own, basic office skills, and a lot more. Oh, and by making the absolute best of it, I walked away with some excellent references that I could call on in the future.

Be open to being mentored. Heck, seek out people you admire for mentoring. I was lucky to have a supervisor at my second job who steered me more toward communications and helped me on the path to where I am now, which is working for a number of great clients on various communications projects.

Follow up. Not everyone will do this. You will have appointments and job interviews that seem great, you will put your time and energy into these things, and then you may never hear from these people again. Frankly, I find that pretty rude, and it casts a shadow on how I feel about an organization going forward. People are busy, but basic manners trump all. It doesn’t take long to write a sentence and hit send. Just do it.

It’s a very small world. Social networking makes it even smaller. This can work well to your advantage if you’re professional and polite and don’t burn bridges. Even if you are unhappy with a person or situation, walk away on the best of terms. To quote an old New York Telephone slogan that you all are probably too young to know, “We’re all connected.”  This rings true so much more now than it did in the 80’s.

Work isn’t your life. Yes, you will need to put in plenty of hours on nights and weekends, and if you’re lucky, you might even love it most of the time. There is no 9 to 5, and that’s ok. But you also need to know when your brain needs a break, when the work you are doing might be better if you walk away from it for the night. Take your vacation time. Americans are doing ourselves no favors by ignoring healthy meals, exercise, and time with family so we can crank out more work.

Learn to communicate professionally. You might feel most comfortable texting in code, but in most places, your boss won’t be LOLing if you lack the ability to write a well-written email or to pick up the phone to make an actual call.

Have fun and dream big! You are young and have so much ahead of you! There is no telling where your path might take you, so be open to change to growth, to jobs that might differ from what you imagined.

For more of my work related posts:

A Day in the Life (2011 version)

My First Interview

Job Hunting Nightmares 

The Freelance Rollercoaster

Tags: career, job hunting, jobs, lifestyle, work

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