Results matching “Just got laid off at Yahoo” from Susan Mernit's Blog

So I just updated the writing tab on this site.  I've always been a writer--professionally, in the early days--and then as an avocation, on the side, but my desire to do more writing--alot more writing--is increasing(more on that in next post)

. Currently I blog regularly at Susan Mernit's Blog and am a contributing editing with weekly posts for BlogHer on Sex and Relationships. Decided to do a recap/cheat sheet of favorite and popular pieces I've written including the following:
  • SMB: Losing Jerry Yang: Why CEO's departure reflects how Yahoo! has been broken
  • SMB: What I want from Friend Feed
  • SMB: 5 months on Facebook: Observations of Value
  • SMB: The Battle over Bundling: Ten Top Sources and more (aka RSS & copyright)

 BlogHer favorites
I am also proud of this talk on blogging, sexual identity and privacy Viviane and I did at Arse Electronika: Avoiding the Emily Gould Effect: Blogging, transparency & oversharing and of this essay on what it feels like to write poetry again after a long absence.
Any minute now we're having Yahoo! mass layoffs; in the past month, a dozen dotcom companies have slashed staff and at least five people I know have lost their jobs.  As someone who went through a layoff last February, and another one right around Christmas 5 years ago (Thanks, AOL), I'd like to share some tips for surviving and going on to your next thing, assuming you're someone who gets the ax. 

My advice focuses on how to manage your digital identity, how to use social media, and how to advance your social capital. If you are a Silicon Valley digerati with your own web site, your own seesmic, twitter, flickr , friendfeed and upcoming accounts, you can stop reading now; if you're a normal person, read on.

Let's pretend that, if you're like most people, you have been super-busy at work trying to show your value and keep your job. Let's assume your resume isn't current, you only see your real friends, and you don't do networking events because the payoff doesn't see great enough to make the lost family time and or driving cost worth it.

Let's also assume that for you Facebook is where unwanted college friends you're happy to never see again find you and hunt you down, and that twitter just seems silly. And as for seesmic, what is that, an earthquake?

That perspective is all good if you're busy being Mr. BigCo's drone, but if you're falling into free agent land --you have to do better. Not only is social media critical to show how cool and up to the minute you are, it's a great way to be visible as you journey onward to the next big thing.

So, here are some tips on Susan's favorite social media tools to ease your journey:

1. Make Facebook your friend.
Maybe up till now Facebook just seemed like something for the kids, or a good way to be stalked by people you wish hadn't found you, but Facebook is also a rich source of friends and connections that can lead you to opportunities, jobs, events. If you don't have a Facebook profile, make one now--with pictures, please--and then use the Find Friends feature to open up your email and send invites to everyone you know who has a Facebook account. If you've made sure to put in enough accurate detail about yourself that it's clear you're not a Bot, a high percentage of your contacts will accept.

Once you have 25+ Facebook friends, and are posting a news update about yourself in your newsfeed once a day, start checking out your friends' events.  If you can find some professional networking events you want to go to, accept invites for them; if not, just leave comments on some of your friends pages.  Soon as you've created 4-6 posts for the day, you're ready to move on to twitter.

2,. Say tweet
Twitter, a micro blogging platform that shares your updates with people around the world and lets you read the same from anyone--friend or stranger--that chooses to post without locking, or protecting, their account, is the newest way to interact with people in the digital world. Typically, people create accounts with their real names and locations, and links to their web sites and/or blogs, and then share thoughts, links, and ideas with all those who "follow" you.  Much has been written about the best ways to twitter, but the two things to remember more are a) just get in there and do it, and b) you can find people who share you interests or location by heading to search.twitter.com and typing in keywords like "mommy blogger, " "Napa,", "laid off,' or whatever. It is considered perfectly good form to "follow" anyone you see who has an open account (i.e., not protected) and looks interesting; they, in turn, may choose to follow you.  There are lots of little web apps that provide interesting ways to read and post to twitter, but there's no reason not to just go to twitter.com and try it before you go all fancy.

3) Your name web site or blog
We are truly at the moment when everyone on the planet should that the first thing that comes up when their name is Googled is their very own web site.  Isn't that waay better than your old MySpace pictures, a post someone else made about you, or your music collection on last.fm? 
If your answer to that is yes, where is your very own susanmernit.com? 

Yep, you need something to go live with your name on it, so you have some control over what search engines pop up.  If you're starting with nothing, the first step is to go purchase the domain someplace like GoDaddy.com, then figure out what you want to put there.
 
4) Word Press, Moveable Type, or Tumblr?
This is a continuation of #3 and has to do with what sort of content management system, aka blogging software, you want to put at your URL (a tech person can help you do that).  For people who don't want to update frequently, and who are more visually oriented, tumblr.com can be a great blogging platform and the thing to point your name to (see Zach's blog at http://zjarrett.tumblr.com/ for an example of how tumblr gives this young, aspiring chef a place to post pictures--and, occasionally, rant about food). 

For others, moveable type is a good choice because of the number of plug ins and formats it can support (see Susan Mernit.com). However, for most people, the CMS platform of the moment is wordspress (wordpress.com), which is flexible, easy to use, and has tons of plug-ins and features you can install if your ambitions swell after you recover from your layoff.

5) Update your linkedin profile and import your contacts
Maybe you're into LinkedIn, maybe you're not. If you're out looking for work, or consulting, you should be. Into it, that is. Make sure to import all your contacts, but when you ask to link to people, remind them how you know them; if you just send a standard note and someone tells the system they don't know you, the spam guards are set on alert, not a good thing. LinkedIn is the ultimate rolodex; not only do you see when your colleagues and friends change jobs, you also get to see who they know that you might wish to talk to.

6) flickr, it's quickr
For the full social media impact, you want to also have a public flickr account. Remember, this may not be the spot where you post those vacation pics with the drink in the pool and the falling down BFF, but it's definitely the spot where you want to post all those pictures of other local media butterflies who also go to meetups, barcamps, drinkups, brunches, conferences, and other events your professional world has to offer and forgo having conversation to take photos, just like you are about to do.

Why should you miss out on playing papparazai?  Get a decent digital camera (Canon is fine), click away and then have a place to post your pix. Also, taking pictures at events gives you one more thing to talk about on your tumblr, twitter account, and blog.

6) Get an upcoming.org account, and join Meetup.com
Okay, if you're not in New York or San Francisco, you may find events on upcoming.org a little, uh, sparse, but if you're in a city where there's a good user concentration, upcoming is bliss.  What I like is the friend feature, and what I do is make sure I can see what events my friends are attending.  Not only do I learn about all sorts of fun things I'm not cool enough to hear of in the usual ways, I get to see who else is willing to admit they're considering a visit to the Folsom Street Fair or Coachella (in other words, you can say whether you're interested in the event, or definitely going). This is a great social tool if you're time has suddenly expanded, you feel the need to network and you have no fucking clue.

As for Meetup.com, the famous VC Fred Wilson liked it enough to give the team a pile of money and say it was the best thing since sliced bananas (well, not exactly, but in that vein).  My own feeling is that meet up is the best there is right now, but that makes it pretty darn good.
 
Basically, what meet up does is give you the ability to form a group, like I just got laid off in Oakland.com, and recruit members and have meetings.  However, and perhaps more importantly, it gives you a chance to search for groups you might want to join and events you might want to go to--which is way easier, after all, that having to start something yourself just to go out. Meetup is particularly useful for professional groups and association, though there are tons of pagans, knitters, wine lovers, etc.

7) Go seesmic, or  12seconds.tv
If podcasting is to blogging what audio is to text, seesmic and its little cousin 12seconds.tv are to micro blogging what video is to text--in other words, they let you look straight at the camera in your Mac--or the little one you clip to your PC-- and record a short message right into your browser and uploaded into their service.

 This is invaluable when you want to send a fellow unemployed person--oops, I meant free agent--a greeting, or when you have a burning need to put on dozens on hats to show everyone on the web how resourceful you are (or what a pervert).
The truth is while I just can't quite bring myself to use seesmic, I see other people I know using it and it is just great. So there. Do as I say, not as I do.

8) Use these tools every day.
Building a presence with social media is just like doing laundry--it's repetitive, with a cycle of wipe, rinse, repeat. The trick is to modify your behavior so that you're connecting to people in your professional community via tools like twitter, going out and meeting them at professional events, and then using social media to stalk them (oops, I really meant to write, to stay connected.)

Next up: How not to spend  money now that your job is gone.

At least three people I know who were laid off at Yahoo! have either been rehired or interviewed for jobs there. It's been interesting to watch that process and think about the very personal pros and cons of returning to a company that deemed you non-essential, only to offer you a spot eight weeks later.

For one of my friends, there was a chance to manage people and great promises for the future involved; for another, the lure was security and people he already had worked with before; for a third, it's keeping options and benefits after years at the same firm.

For me, returning to Yahoo! right now would feel somewhere between complicated and impossible (no, I don't have an offer). Some of the elements that made me thrilled to join are still there: good people, very large reach, tons of opportunity to capitalize on what they already have. But there's the negatives: A company that might not have planned well in letting me--and so many others--go in the way they did, uncertainity about what can be accomplished as the inevitable acquisition continues to loom, questions about alignment and strategy of the senior teams beyond a piecemeal approach.

And then there's the big one: Is there more, and better opportunity elsewhere? (Obviously, subjective, here.) For me, heads down with my team and my role for so long (except for a side stealth Brickhouse project that never got anywhere), getting laid off was one of those shoves that makes you reassess and look around with new eyes.

On that level, I've seen opportunities beyond Yahoo, whether I accept them or not, that make me think the sturm and drang I feel about the place just isn't where I want my soul to live, and as much as I recall the high hopes I had when I started, there are better places for me to play those aspirations out, some of which I could never have imagined three months ago.

Just got laid off at Yahoo

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Well, the law of continuous revolution just gave me a good shove.
Today is my last day at Yahoo and the start of something new.

What? No idea, yet.

I'm definitely interested in hearing about both short term and longer term consulting opportunities, as well as real gigs--advice, support and the chance to do interesting things all welcomed.

Next adventure, coming up.

Looking back: 5 years of Januarys

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January is always a reflective month for me--not only is it a new year, but it's my birth month and a month of resolutions, and, historically, new directions.

January is also the month, back in 2003, when I got into blogging, discovered RSS, and started playing with social media tools like those then newfangled social networks.

So, a quick trip down memory lane and a glimpse how how the world has changed.

January 2003
I've just been laid off from AOL. Living in New Jersey, I moved back east from California with the family and they miss the left coast. And hate Jersey.

  • Blogger is the dominant blog software and I read dave winer and doc and halley every day and decide to start a blog myself. I start a couple. They don't stick. Yet.
  • Jason Kottke and Meg Hourihan are my heroes. They're real bloggers and seem so cool.

  • Social networking is this idea no one quite knows what to do with. To check it out, I join Ryze. I am amazed when I actually start to meet and have useful conversations with people--who knew?
  • I take a writing class--maybe I want to be a journalist again? And write this piece about Kevin Sites and Xeni Jardin and CNN--and set off a firestorm.
  • David Winer invites me to the first bloggercon; Kevin Marks is in my session and basically sets up the first ever podcast.
January 2004.

Back in California, running 5ive, a digital media product development and business strategy consultancy with Steven Madoff, my East Coast partner. Blogging away, meeting Mary Hodder and the PubSub folks; totally obsessed with RSS, blog search and social media.

  • Working with Chris Alden, Kevin Burton, Mark Graham on building Rojo--we thought a newsreader that could share info would be sweet
  • Obsessed with RSS--why doesn't everyone grok this is the future? (Soon, they do)
  • Obsessed with Technorati--the early days.

  • Blogging daily and totally into it; the more my personal life stresses, the more time I spent blogging...this is good for my blogging, tough on everything else.
  • Work on BlogOn with Chris Shipley and Mike Sigal; invite this new blogger named Steve Rubel to come and speak.
  • Meet this geek from the other side of the world who keeps writing about the same things I do and hire him to do work for my consulting company--it's Richard McManus from read/write web.
  • The bi coastal travelling thing kicks in big time.

January 2005:
Still in California, still consulting. Doing really cool strategic projects with big media companies around using RSS, newsreaders, microformats. etc and working with small cos on social media tools.
  • Obsessed with Technorati, and PubSub. Pluck, Eurekster. Bloglines.
  • Trying out Orkut, friendster and FOAF services.

  • Conferencing and consulting like crazy--this is the start of the on the road year--and my life as a single.
  • Get involved with BlogHer and women in tech stuff.
  • Keen on hyperlocal--and watching Bayosphere, Backfence and Bakersfield.
January 2006
Anna Zornosa recruits me to join Yahoo! as a product developer which I do in January, on my birthday. Deep dive into how online dating and social networks fit together. Total immersion into learning the funnel.

  • Y!P all the time
  • Blogher, blogging
  • LinkedIn, LI groups, checking out MySpace, flickr
January 2007 At Y!P, still blogging, watching podcasters and vlogging, deep in product development, lots of work behind the wall.

And here we are at January 2008--I'm still blogging, still using social networks, still into search structured and unstructured data, media and tools and starting to go back out and engage more with the community (or try to find the time to). More on this yet to be written, eh?

Stories of AOL

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Did you hear the one about the new portal home page that's in beta testing, but that is just like another big company's site?

Or the one about the executive who got a call from a head-hunter asking if he'd be interested in a job at a certain portal company--working for exactly the same exec who'd laid him off two years before (and doing fairly the same job)?

Welcome to AOLHell, the world where everyone means well, but getting out of that big crater in the earth is, well, kinda tough.

TechMeme's got the story on the new front page; a friend called last week with the head-hunter tale.

Susan Mernit
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