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What We Do ...

We specialize in contingency-based Manager, Director, and VP-level executive searches for online marketing and ecommerce.  We are in constant contact with the Internet industry's best players, and we speak their language and offer them the best career opportunities.  Period.

Call us at (678) 749-7075 and let us tell your story to the candidates who can take your business to the next level.  Or click here for more information.
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2009.06.20

Print Advertising and Reputational Search

FUNNY STORY: From June 2005-March 2009, I was the only recruiter in America to advertise in Internet Retailer magazine.  Online retail is my target market (for now), and Internet Retailer is my industry's flagship trade publication.  Every month my ho-hum little classified ad was in the back, rain or shine, and every month no other recruiter's was.  For 45 months.  Imagine.

I'm not bragging.  I'm not.  I'm just amazed, that's all.

It was like getting away with murder.  And it's not like my marketing strategy was some big, complicated thing:  Every month, IR's invoices would land in my inbox, and every month I'd pay them.  Talk about obvious.  It was like pulling the lever on a slot machine that every so often would pay off in wild excess of my investment.

Just like I had read it would ...

According to John Caples' classic book Tested Advertising Methods, businesses that are serious about growth should think of advertising the way they might think about their rent:  A "given" that should be counted on no matter what the market is doing.

So in 2005 I made the commitment to advertise for better or worse, and things worked out just fine.  Still, I could never tell if that was because Mr. Caples was right or because I was advertising in a competitive vacuum.  Being a cynic at heart, I assumed it was the latter.

Then in April of 2009, a rival recruiter began to advertise right next to me in IR magazine.  I was incensed!  How dare they???  But hey, it's a free country, and I knew things were too good to go on the way they were. The dream was over.  I was drenched from head-to-toe in the icy reality of head-to-head competition.  Or so I thought.

Here's what actually happened:  It seems that when Internet Retailer's readers see two nearly identical classified ads side by side, they Google the companies in BOTH ads -- and whichever company has a more impressive online reputation gets the inbound sales lead!  It was like a hockey face-off between recruiters, and lucky for me -- there's 497 pages of keyword rich content on my website.

In fact, when my competitor's ads started running, my webstats reported an +800% increase in searches for the keywords harry joiner.  What's more, my overall number of inbound calls seemed to increase!  My competitor's ads had a pie-enlarging effect on the market -- not a pie-rearranging effect!

Can you believe that?  I would never have imagined that old-school classified ads would drive readers to Google -- but they CAN and DO.  At least in my case.

Which leads me to this great resource:  Steve Rubel and his colleagues at Edelmen Digital have written an excellent white paper called Search Engine Visibility and PR.

The gist of the paper is that there are two new SEM disciplines emerging:

  1. Reputational Search - The idea that any brand can use Google to influence the search results around certain keywords.  That's what happened above.  People wanted to know about my reputation, so they Googled me.  Satisfied in their knowledge, they called me.  Like magic.  Thank you, Mr. Back Link!
  2. Social Search - Using social content from blogs, Twitter, and so on to create brand "embassies" (Mr. Rubel's term) where employees work to serve the interests of the community, as well as their company.

According to Mr. Rubel, "[Edelmen is] convinced that search engines for the foreseeable future will have a critical impact on how brands are perceived -- far more so than any single social network site, which tend to come and go."
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2009.06.18

Does your business card suck?

CHICAGO, IL - As someone who's self-employed, I'm a jobseeker.  That's right.  Everyday, I'm out there looking for a job to do, and the job I do is finding people jobs to do.  Everyday I wake up broke.  Everyday, the market determines my paycheck based on the value I create for my clients.  Every frikkin day.  And I love it.

Anyway.  The guy below seems like a piece of work, but he raises some very valid points about business cards.  The coolest business card anyone ever gave me looked like a real plastic laminated driver's license -- except that it was a "creative license."  Funny.  And I kept it, and later used the company, the owners of which became my personal friends.  I forget how many other business cards from creative-types I have in my top desk drawer.  Dozens.  And that's the point of this post.

On the back of my next business card, I'm going to list the names of (some of) the companies for which I have closed searches ... A&E Television, Adidas, American Signature Brands, Ashford.com, Backcountry.com, Boot Barn.com, Columbia Sportswear, Crutchfield.com, David Weekley Homes, David’s Bridal, Dean & DeLuca, Design Within Reach, DSW Shoes, Golfsmith.com, Kennametal, Magellan’s Travel, Montgomery Ward®, MusiciansFriend.com, Peruvian Connection, PrintingForLess.com, REI.com, Restockit.com, ShopNBC.com, The Thompson Group, Williams-Sonoma, etc.  After all, I'm known by the company I keep.

Jobseekers: Do you have a creative business card that CLEARLY and UNIQUELY transmits your value proposition?  Better get on that.


2009.06.13

How to Get an Ecommerce Job

Editor's note I first posted this article in Spring, 2007.  For many months it was one of the most frequently read ecommerce articles on this site.  However, due to some formatting problems involving Typepad's new platform, I am forced to republish this article here and now because I wanted to include it in a list called "INTERVIEW PREP" on the right hand side of this blog.  Look right below my LinkedIn badge ...

In case you're wondering, the candidate below DID NOT get this job, and he has asked to remain anonymous.  Whatever.  It was a heroic effort, and there's no accounting for chemistry.  My point in calling this post "How to Get an Ecommerce Job" is that all candidates must prepare this thoroughly to have any real hope of landing a $150K/up ecommerce job.  Currently, the competition for such jobs is incredibly fierce -- and clients are being choosy to the point of indecisive in the face of so many great candidates.  Thorough preparation is the best differentiator.

Many of this candidate's tactics are now standard operating procedure -- and some candidates have actually taken them a step farther.  I'll be discussing some of these techniques in future issues of my newsletter.  Subscribe now.

BOSTON, MA
- One of the best things about specializing in direct-to-consumer multichannel retail is that I get to deal with some of the smartest people on earth. Honestly, they're amazing.

There's just so much happening in the multichannel marketing arena, what with all of the changes in the way consumers can discover, buy, and return products: catalog, internet, mobile phone, TV, inbound call centers, retail stores, you name it.

The candidates who deal with these ever-changing marketing and integration challenges are freaking brilliant. But they're clever, too -- and there's a difference.

Example: Three weeks ago I put a candidate in play for a VP of Marketing role with a large multichannel retailer. His first phone interview with the VP of HR was in six days, so I sent the candidate a massive pile of market research on the industry, the company, and its competitors. That's standard for me.  I even offered to set him up on phone calls with industry analysts and vendors who know things about the company -- which he gratefully accepted. That's standard too.

But then he took it a step farther: That night, my candidate Googled several of the company's products to see how they placed in the organic search rankings. Satisfied that all of the queried products appeared on page one of the Google rankings, he proceeded to enter my client's site through their Adwords landing page in the paid search area of the Google results.

For the next 90 minutes, my candidate used a number of Firefox extentions to analyze the site's source code, merchandise selection, and layout. Finally, he ordered eight items from the company's website -- after having built and abandoned two shopping carts during his user session.

Minutes later, a confirmation email arrived stating that all online orders must be changed within two hours. Three hours later, he logged back on to the site to make changes to the order. When he started to have problems, he phoned the call center to complain. The customer service person was as nice as she could be and helped my candidate make the changes. He tried to be a jerk to her, but she managed the conflict with cordial professionalism.

The order shipped out the very next day. Three days later, the order arrived and my candidate ripped open the box and all of its contents. The product was in fine shape, so my candidate used two of the items. He then marched right down to my client's store and abrasively demanded a full refund for the order -- just to see what the retailer would do. Again, he tried to be unreasonable, but the store clerk complied happily with all of his demands.

During the check-out process, my candidate noticed a neat stack of my client's Spring catalogs next to the cash register and he began to reconcile the product numbers in the catalog against those for identical products on his order. They all matched ... In a last ditch effort to crash my client's customer service system, my candidate elected to make a substitution to his order -- accepting a refund for seven of the eight items he bought online, and asking to have the final out-of-stock item in a different color shipped to his house via overnight express.

The very next afternoon, the final item arrived at my candidate's house in excellent shape -- just in time for his phone interview with the VP of Human Resources.

Questions: How much do you think this candidate knew about my client after having gone to such great lengths to crash their multichannel fulfillment system? Do you think this candidate wanted to work for a company that goes to such great lengths to keep its customers happy?

If you answered "A bunch" and "Yes" to the above questions, then you got the point of this post.
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2009.06.07

Three Ways to Outlearn Your Competition

HOUSTON, TX - I have no idea who this drummer is, but this is some badass percussive thought leadership!  Hard enough to conceive, let alone execute. The real pyrotechnics don't start until 1:18.  Until then, he's just establishing a rhythmic theme for the piece.

So why am I putting this on an ecommerce blog?  Three reasons:

  1. I like the way the artist decided to make a tape loop (!!!) and take apart this impossible groove piece by piece.  Musicians call this "woodshedding" -- getting back to the woodshed and practicing one's craft in isolation until it's ready for prime time.  Most people lack that kind of discipline and focus.  Geoffrey Colvin's wonderful book "Talent is Overrated" discusses the benefits of "deliberate practice," and that's that we have here.  It's a boring pain in the neck to practice a lick over... and over... and over again, but when it's time to rock the party, you'll be ready to BRING IT.

  2. This drummer video taped himself, and I'd sure he will review the footage until he's sick of it.  Ask Tiger Woods about the benefits of such self-analysis.  The video taping also tells us that the artist has a goal for his practice -- something very specific that he wants to improve.  Wanna get better?  No problem: Put it in writing. Vividly imagine it. Ardently desire it. Commit to it. Like this guy.

  3. His YouTube profile says that he studied with Eric Harland, which says a lot about his artistic ambitions.  It pays to aim high in the choice of one's heroes, mentors, and instructors.  Likewise, hacks don't study with the best.  Clearly, this guy wants to soar with eagles, and by the looks of his off-the-hook Afro-Cuban solo, we'll be seeing him on Drummerworld very soon.

QUESTIONS: Who are your marketing mentors?  Are they the best in the business?  What aspect of your game are you trying to improve?  Why, specifically?  Finally, do you practice your craft with intensity and focus until you get it right?  Most people don't.


2009.06.02

GM: "The numbers don't copulate."

There is nothing as difficult and as expensive, but also nothing so futile, as trying to keep a corpse from stinking. -- Peter Drucker

DETROIT, MI - Today's news on General Motors reminds me of an old boss who'd occasionally misuse big words. One time our sales team was holed up in a budget meeting, and when the boss noticed some numbers that didn't make sense, instead of simply saying "The numbers don't add up," he said "The numbers don't copulate ...".  He meant to say "calculate."  Honest mistake.

By now you have read all about the GM bankruptcy filing.  No need to rehash it here.

It's a shame, obviously, but you can't talk your way out of problems you behave yourself into: GM's problems took decades to make, and both management and labor are to blame.  The whole relationship seems co-dependent to me, with each side enabling the others' behavior.

And what of it?  Well, the U.S. government now owns 60% of a car company that it wouldn't buy if it didn't have to.  Which means it's a bad investment, like lending money we don't have to a friend with a poor memory.  It's also a flagrant violation of the time honored "ignore sunk costs" rule which warns capitalists (is that a bad word yet?) against throwing good money after bad.

This is not a political rant.  It's a business rant.

The bailout will cost U.S. taxpayers a minimum of $60 billion, which is $206 for every man, woman, and child in America.  My family's share will be $1442.  Before my beloved Honda Civic was paid for last year, the payments were $189/month.  My share of the GM bailout equals 7.6 monthly car payments.  I don't own a GM car ...

... although now I own a tiny sliver of GM, the company.  We all do.  Same basic management.  Same basic union.  Same basic culture.  Nothing has really changed, except that consumer confidence in the brand is plummeting.  Would you buy a GM car?  Me neither, not when I could buy a car from a profitable, well-run, non-union Honda plant down the road in Ohio.

GM's bankruptcy plan calls for the company to IPO in 2010, at which time the government will sell 10% of its 60% share.  The government will sell its remaining shares over a 2-4 year period, as the stock appreciates.

But here's what doesn't add up:  Why would any investor buy GM's IPO shares if he knew that the government was going to unload tons more stock on the market over the next few years?  Makes no sense.  And who would invest in a business fraught with serious, structural conflicts of interest, such as "Is it better for GM's investors (me and you) to manufacture automobiles in China at a profit -- or make them on U.S. soil with union labor and lose our shirts?"

Amigos, the road to heck is paved with good intentions.  The only thing that's going to get copulated here are the U.S. taxpayers.
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2009.06.01

Re-Tweet Meat from Ecommerce Jobs

Okay, boys and girls: Here's a run down of recent Tweets from the EcommerceJobs Twitter feed. If you see something thought provoking, share your enthusiasm with the world by re-Tweeting it. Rock on!

  1. WEEKEND READING: (23 pg pdf) Copywriting legend Ted Nicholas' classic "87 Marketing Secrets of the Written Word." http://tinyurl.com/nuhcrf

  2. MICRO BOOK REVIEW: @tomfunk has written an AMAZINGLY handy 165-page guide to ecommerce titled "Web 2.0 and Beyond" http://tinyurl.com/p2r7zd

  3. JOB SEARCH TIP: "Candidates, I cannot over-stress the importance of asking a hiring manager if his company is CURRENTLY profitable." A must.

  4. INTERVIEW QUESTION: "Tell me one misperception people (team members) have of you." This tells if the candidate is self-aware.

  5. WHAT'S YOUR DOMAIN WORTH? Professional domainers use Sedo.com, FlyAppraisals.com, & AccurateDomains.com. I like EstiBot.com, which is free.

  6. WAVE OF THE FUTURE: "Where the Digital Revolution is Headed." One word: Mobile. http://ff.im/-3wHVd

  7. HISTORY ALWAYS REPEATS: "Will the candidate stick around?" Check his LinkedIn bio to see, on average, how long he stays in a typical job.

  8. INTERVIEW QUESTION: "How would your subordinates from recent years describe your approaches to training and developing them?"

  9. INTERVIEW TIP: Marketing's job is to 1) sell MORE stuff to 2) MORE people 3) MORE often for 4) MORE money. Specifically, how can you help?

  10. DOWNLOAD OF THE DAY: Kurt Vonnegut's "How to Write With Style." (2 page PDF) http://tinyurl.com/ml73vx

  11. DOWNLOAD OF THE DAY: "How to Make Your Advertising Stand Out From Your Competition So People Call You First" (PDF) http://tinyurl.com/ouzhbw

  12. DOWNLOAD OF THE DAY: "The Art of Attack: How to Attack & Dislodge Your Largest Competitors." (95 pg pdf) #strategy http://tinyurl.com/p4my3d

  13. MAKE FLASHCARDS: "All top ecommerce candidates should be able to explain these SEO concepts." http://ff.im/-3eH9k

  14. ECOMMERCE JOBS: Get this Twitter feed delivered to your Facebook homepage: http://tinyurl.com/okqmgo

  15. I LOVE THIS: http://tinyurl.com/q9xnax

  16. DOWNLOAD OF THE DAY: "What you find using Google is only a fraction of the information actually available online." http://tinyurl.com/p93kbk

  17. MADE TO STICK: I'm reading "Made to Stick" by Dan Heath. It's awesome! Here's a summary of the key concepts (pdf): http://tinyurl.com/pfv9kk

  18. RESEARCH TOOLS FOR JOURNALISTS: A treasure trove for any blogger who wants to write academically sound material. http://tinyurl.com/o8kal5

  19. INTERVIEW QUESTION: "Describe your methods of diagnosing customer needs."

2009.05.29

Who wants to be a tool?

My pal, Julie Donovan, sent me this link today.  Julie's incredibly talented, btw.

If you're on the client side of the business and your company operates like the customers in this video, stop it now -- for your own sake. To quote Mark Twain, "When you need a friend, it's too late to make one."  You never know when you'll be looking for a new job and need the help of a former vendor.  After all, some vendors know everyone.  Do you really want to be known in your trade as a tool?  Think about it.

2009.05.17

Seth Godin's Hiring Process

HASTINGS ON HUDSON, NY - Tonight, while goofing around on Wikipedia, I noticed the following snippet on the entry for Seth Godin:

Six Month Alternative MBA Program

In December 2008, Godin announced in a blog post that he would be offering a six month alternative MBA program in his office in Hastings on Hudson, NY.  48,000 people looked at the post and 340 applied.  He invited 27 applicants to his office for a group interview.  They spent two hours interviewing one another.  Then they, and Godin, wrote down the names of their favorite candidates.  Three weeks later the 9 chosen showed up at Godin's office ...

Seth and Company

This is a great application process!  I love the idea that the candidates interviewed each other "Tom-Sawyer-paint-the-fence-style" -- although I can't tell from this Forbes.com article exactly what skills they and Seth were interviewing for.

Maybe they weren't interviewing for skills, so much, as character traits.  This reminds me of advertising legend, David Ogilvy, hiring ad men based on "the cut of their gib."  Warren Buffett has done this, too -- so we know that this type of process can work whenever the technical expertise of the candidates is a given.

Here are the questions Seth asked during the process ...

  1. What do you do now?
  2. Why do you do it?
  3. What are you hoping to learn?
  4. After you learn it, what are you going to do with it?
  5. Tell me a true story about making a change in the world.
  6. Have you overcome a Dip?
  7. What astonishing thing did you do before you did what you do now.
  8. Make a wish.
  9. What else should I know?

I wonder if the people Seth hired were stars.  Is it too early to tell?  Given the lack of a job description, how would Seth know they were stars?

Seth, if you are reading this, perhaps you could share your thoughts in the comments section.  Specifically, does your process work, and could any company replicate it?  That's all I'm really after. [Seth did respond.  See comments.]

UPDATE (04-JUN-09): Seth blogs about the results of his program.
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2009.05.13

10 Reasons Why this Cover Letter Rocks

ATLANTA, GA - Okay, get ready to take some notes.  Following is one of the best cover letters / emails I have ever received.  Check it out and I'll explain why ...

Hi Harry,

I read your interesting blog [1] recently and thought to contact you.

I am new to Atlanta and champing at the bit [2] to join an organization and prove my mettle [3]; however, I need help [4] obtaining a position.  Do you think that you could help me [5], given my background [6]?  Please take a look at my resume and let me know.  If so, I am happy to pay a bonus commission for successful placement [7].  If not, I would appreciate it if you kindly suggested a colleague or agency that is more appropriate for me [8].

You can reach me at metcalf@post.harvard.Xdu or on my mobile number, 617-9X9-1X91 [9].

Thank you in advance for your consideration.

Best regards,
Casey Metcalf

Encl. Resume [10]

First off, my love of this candidate has NOTHING to do with his degree from Harvard.  Sure, Harvard is an awesome school if you can afford it, but America has more than a million millionaires, and only a small percentage of them went to Harvard.  This guy is HUNGRY, and they don't teach that in the Ivy League.  Casey was hungry before he got to Harvard.  Beyond that, ...

Here are ten reasons why Casey's cover letter rocks:

  1. He read my blog.  This isn't about my ego.  It's about one-to-one marketing.  I get loads of email from people saying they've read my blog, but it's clear from their email that they only glanced at it long enough to scrape my email address.  Casey knows I'm in Atlanta.  Clearly, this correspondence is personal.
  2. Great choice of words.  I read a ton of email, and I love it when people take chances with their communication.  "Champing at the bit" is a great idiomatic expression that I don't hear every day.  Good call, Casey!
  3. Not only is "prove my mettle" an awesome expression, it tells me that this guy is a do-er.  No sense of entitlement whatsoever.  Lookit: I run a business.  I know how critical do-ers are to the success of every business.  Casey doesn't bore me with desires of "applying his strategic skills" or any of that crap.  All in good time.  For now, this cat's ready to roll up his sleeves if given an excellent ground-floor opportunity.
  4. I love it when people just admit right up front that they need help.  Shows humility.
  5. Not only does Casey know he needs help, but he is asking me very politely ...
  6. ... and he is providing evidence as to why my doing so would be credible in the eyes of my peers.  This is no baseless favor he's requesting.
  7. Beyond that, Casey's willing to put some skin in the game.  Candidates, please know that candidates NEVER (re-read that) need to pay me.  All of my fees are paid by my clients.  Period.  But I love the idea that he is willing to put his money where his mouth is.  That shows self confidence and a streak of entrepreneurship.
  8. Ask for referrals.  Always.  Always.  Always.  Who knows?  Maybe some recruiter will blog about you.  And perhaps other recruiters will Tweet about that recruiter's blog post.  Or maybe the first recruiter's post will make the homepage of StumbleUpon and be viewed by more than ten thousand people.  You'll be famous!  Hey, stranger things have happened.
  9. Casey gives me not one, but two ways to reach him.  You'd be surprised.  Not every candidate does this.  Dumb.
  10. The fact that Casey put this footer in his email shows he knows a thing or two about proper form.  Believe me, one can take all manner of license with the English language if it's evident from one's form and sentence structure that one knows about them in the first place.  Like, duh!  It's the difference between knowing the tricks of one's trade and knowing one's trade.

I realize that some folks will read this blog post and wonder how slow my day must have been to bring this up.  Actually, my day was very busy.  However, unless your resume is just brimming with relevant work experience (Casey's isn't) -- then you'd better learn to politely differentiate yourself in a brief, cogent cover letter.
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2009.05.11

Top Five Links of the Day


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