The easy way to thank your mentor

    

   

One of my favourite books of all time is On The Road by Jack Kerouac. I love this book simply because it is a reminder that life is a journey and it’s not the destination that matters but the experiences and the people you meet along the way.    

    

I also find this book carries across into my professional life in the form of a metaphor.    

How often do you stop and think about how you actually got to where you are now? Sometimes you can get so caught up in living your life you don’t actually turn around and look at the road you have been down.    

    

-         How far have you actually come?    

-         Who helped you along the way?    

-         Who put gas in your tank when it was almost empty?    

-         Who jumped in your car and enjoyed the great stretch of road you were on when you were having fun?    

-         Who jumped in your car when the going was tough and kept you company?    

    

I was thinking about this recently and realised that I had never properly thanked my mentor who actually showed me the open road only two years ago. So I wanted to make sure I let her know. I found the easiest way to do this way to write her a quick story that we both relate to and a testimonial that she can use on a resume or that I can put on her LinkedIn profile.    

    

My testimonial to my mentor.    

    

Sir Ken Robinson wrote that “Heroes may be remote from us and inaccessible. They may live in another world. They may be dead. If we meet them, we may be too awestruck to engage properly with them. Heroes may not be good to us. They may be competitive or refuse to have anything to with us Mentors are different. They take a unique and personal place in our lives. Mentors open doors for us and get involved directly in our journeys. They show us the next steps and encourage us to take them.” I once told Karen that James Dean is dead, that I have met Russell Brand, spoke to Gary Vaynerchuk but I actually know Karen Becker!    

    

Quite simply Karen is the greatest mentor a student could have asked for.
         
   

-         She saw the fire in my eyes and helped me ignite it   

-         She started my car but didn’t tell me which way to turn    

-         She gave me my first contact but taught me how and why to network    

-         She was always there for me but wasn’t holding my hand   

    

My journey on the road started when I met Karen Becker and I will always hold her in the highest regard and hope that she continues to join me on this crazy journey.   

   
Don’t forget to look back in your rear vision mirror and reflect on where you have come from and have a look at who has sat in the seat of your car!
 


So if you want to thank your mentor, write them a story that really conveys how they have shaped your journey and link it to something that you both care about or experienced. In my case it was Sir Ken Robinson.
 
 

 So start writing and let me know how you go!    

#CNOW Business Idea

It is my nature to think of all these great ideas day after day, week after week, month after month etc.

But what do I actually do with them?

  • Some I embrace and catch with two hands
  • Some I let slip. Similar to Elizabeth Gilbert’s creativity story in her TED Talk
  • Some become great conversation starters
  • Some become conversation enders

But this one is going to become something real! Thanks to #CNOW I feel inspired and empowered now to make this project happen. But I also feel like I joined an amazing community during those three days of people who are always experimenting with new ideas and social change and I am ready to step up to the plate and try hit a few homers for Gary!

Funnily enough it was also networking which kicked me into gear. It was through one of those conversations that start out as “I’m Damon, tell me about yourself” that I have been linked to a whole new community of people who are helping me get my idea of the ground and believe in my project.

So in short I want to say:

HALLELUJAH  TO #CNOW

HALLELUJAH TO NETWORKING

HALLELUJAH TO NEW IDEAS

Send me an e-mail at damon.klotz@gmail.com if you want to learn more

Information overload is a filter failure

This will be the first of many posts that ruminate some of my aha moments from the Connect Now Conference I attended last week.

“We are drowning in information but starved for knowledge” John Naisbitt

One of my close networks and myself regularly talk about that quote and how we something feel like we are drowning in information thanks to social media. So I am here to be your lifesaver and stop the drowning once and for all.

Tools:

Are you currently using social media tools to help identify what you need to read and what can wait.

  1. Set up a Google Reader account
  2. Or for our yahoo friends try delicious an online bookmarking tool

Networks:

The other option is to utilise the network that you have developed both online and offline. Regardless of how many contacts or followers you have Dunbar’s number of approximately 150 still applies.

Out of your 150 closest contacts you can probably identify pretty quickly the quality ones who are interested in similar ideas and authors as you are. Set up a sharing community where you regularly try flick on the articles that would interest each other.

No More Drowning!

By using your networks and the online tools available you will be swimming freely from now on as you have strong filters in place and a lifeguard that is always here to help.

PS: Thanks to Gavin Heaton for his great talk that inspired this post. It wasn’t easy being the first speaker in a pretty prolific schedule but you were one of my favourites!

How will you ever know if you don’t ask the question?

It’s a premise that I have always believed in but never really understood the full extent of? That is until I am sitting here in a hotel in Sydney writing this at 6am watching the champions league from my bed waiting for my breakfast to be delivered to me.

If you told me last Wednesday I would be in Sydney next week on a business trip I would have laughed at you. Yet here I am in Sydney for the Connect Now Conference!

Connect Now is a marketing and communications conference focusing on the convergence of social media, emerging technologies and enterprise.

I’m here to learn from the leading thinkers and change agents in this field so I can successfully implement a social media strategy within my current district to help brand them in the wider community and to use it as a workforce planning tool to attract the next generation of employees to the organisation.

The highlight for me will be to see Gary Vaynerchuk live in action ripping the stage to pieces for over two hours! If you have seen his TED talk then you know the damage that he can do in just 20 minutes!

It will also be a little bit surreal as I have ramped up my own personal brand and social media presence this year so to see somebody who inspires and drives me on in the flesh will be very rewarding. It would be the HR equivalent of meeting Sir Ken Robinson.

PS: In case you are reading this and saying why doesn’t my boss send me interstate on business trips then maybe you should pass on this research I read in the inflight Virgin Blue magazine. “For every $1USD a company spends on travel they can expect a return of $15USD in profits.” IBS Global Insight 2009