Feb 01

Powered by TalkShoe

Today I’ve been invited to participate in a blogtalk discussion about the current reality of the work/life situation in Latino families. I would like to invite you all to join me if you are a Latino(a) or if your business has a Hispanic target and/or Latino(a) employees.

This discussion is part of a “Wake Up” series organized by Fem2.0 where different work/life realities are being discussed every day for two weeks.  Mine will take place at 1:00 PM today and you can join us by clicking here:

Powered by TalkShoe

Why is this important? Mainly because the Latino workforce has been affected the most du ring the recession.  Read more in this excellent article written by Jose E. Cruz and Jackie Hayes at State University: Workforce Development and its impact on Latinos in New York State

As a consequence, the Latino workforce is changing face.  Now many “Latinas are bringing home the bacon” (which is the title of today’s episode).  But as Herman Guaracao, the CEO of Al Dia News told me “No solo de Bacon vive el hombre” (Man does not live on “bacon” alone). So we must find a proper work-family balance.

Finally I would like to share my two cents for those who are still looking for work.  Social media can be a great tool.  3 out of every 4 Americans uses social media in some form or another, as does 2/3 of the world’s population. That’s a big audience and if you are willing to put yourself out there, you can really make a splash! However, there is more to promoting yourself on social media than simply posting “I need a job”.  Here is how you can sell yourself:

Step One: Connect

Chances are you have a list of places you would love to work. See if they are on Twitter or Facebook and then follow them. Often, when a company is looking to hire, they will put out feelers before actually posting a job and if they are active in social media, you’ll be the first to hear about it. Don’t just follow the company . . . look at the main players and follow them.

Instead of just jumping in and asking for a job, build relationships. After all, who would you consider hiring to mow your lawn, the kid next door who hangs out at your place every Saturday or the perfect stranger who shows up on your doorstep? Take the time to get to know people before you ask them if there are any openings in their company.

Step Two: Show Them What You Can Do

Even if you are the best qualified applicant for the job, you have virtually no chance of getting it if you can’t prove that. By letting potential employers know that you are indeed an expert in your field, you’ll get ahead of the competition.

This can be done in several ways. First of all, you should make your knowledge known on social media sites by interacting with others in the same field and linking to interesting and relevant articles. On Twitter, re-tweet people who make good points about your profession.

A blog can also be useful for showcasing your talent. If it doesn’t come across that well in writing, start making videos and getting them up on YouTube, then have friends bookmark them, tweet them.  The same applies to inserting pictures in your blog to show you “in action”. You’ll soon realize that your blog places you on top of the competition who only have a resume to share. And speaking of resumes, don’t forget to add your blog link to your resume, business cards, personal website, twitter account and everywhere.  You’ll be surprised how employers prefer to look at a blog before they move on to read the 70th resume on their pile.

Step Three: Ask for the Job

Once you have established yourself as someone who is confident and knowledgeable, it’s time to move in for the kill. By this point, you should have established relationships on social media sites with several potential employers. Now is the time to start asking them for work.

When you do this, make sure it’s a personal message, don’t just send out a mass mailing. You’re far more likely to net a job if you target the specific person you are asking to hire you.

Selling yourself on social media might be a little frightening at first, but the truth is, it is very similar to networking face to face. Play your cards right and you could have a new job sooner than you think.

JJZDYX5TUMAZ

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
Jan 21

As many of you know, last week the Lastism-Party was dedicated to raise funds for Haiti and I also asked my readers to contribute on this blog. The AARP Foundation offered generously to match our donations. That got us so excited that we even exceeded our goal.

I would like to join Ms. Robin Talbert, President of the AARP Foundation in thanking each and everyone who contributed to this urgent cause.

A personal thanks to @ErGeekGoddess , @RDarioBermejo & @julito77 who organized it and hosted and to all those who contributed last week together with those who Retweet it & promoted the widget on their own blog. Especially: Hector Russo, Anthony Lendez, Jennifer Lubrani, Corina Carrasco, Elianne Junoy-Ramos, Carolyn Gonzalez, Karen B Haron, Raquel Segura, Kristy G Blea, Victor Caballero, Sylvia Aguilera, Julie Diaz-Asper, Karen B Haron, Kelly Mullaney, Jeannette braun, Blanca Mejia, Ruben Bermejo, Monica Galang, nilka romero, Marcela Ayon-Siervo, Mary Ann Halford, Lori Nolasco, James Walsh and all those who are not mentioned but embrassed Latism4Haiti

Gracias de todo corazon!

  • Share/Bookmark
Jan 15

In response to the devastating earthquake in Haiti, the Latinos in Social Media [Latism] have dedicated 5 days to raising funds that can help to rush emergency relief to victims of this tragedy.

You can help by making a donation using the this widget, by spreading the word among your contacts and by pasting the widget on your blog/newsletter/website.

We have partnered with the AARP Foundation and they will match every dollar we donate. Any amount we give will be automatically doubled and go twice as far to providing relief in Haiti.

This was the largest earthquake to hit Haiti in 200 years and it has left the poorest country of the Western Hemisphere greatly devastated. Families and children need supplies, food, medicine, clothing, water, but above all, HOPE! I ask all my readers regardless of their ethnic background to Chipin and to become the voice of the 50,000 victims who have died and their families.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
Jan 11

As many of you already know, I’ve been nominated for the Shorty Awards on the official category: Small Business. Apart from being so honored and humbled by all the support that I’ m receiving, I am also thrilled by the power of Twitter once again.
Here I am, a little Latina with a small business in Rochester, NY.  Running against the producer of House, a TV show watched by 8 million people.

If you haven’t voted, please do so at http://shortyawards.com/AnaRC and I will be forever grateful.  The previous winner told me all the benefits the award provided him and I must admit that I was a little jealous.

I have answered some of their questions on my profile and I would like to share my answers with you:

The Shorty Interview with AnaRC

What are six things you could never do without?
My faith, my 4 kids, my hubby, my friends, my business & my passion to make the world better for all.
How do you use Twitter in your professional life?
I recruit new clients, build communities of practice, generate buzz & research trends
Twitter or Facebook?
Oh Twitter big time :)
What feature should Twitter add?
It should add an auto-DM blocker. Or at least not allowed app developers to invade people’s DM box. Real business takes place in DMs
Is there someone you want to follow you who doesn’t already? If so, who?
Not really, I don’t chase celebrities. Twitter must be reciprocal. I only engage with those who are capable of con-versation.
Why should we vote for you?
1) Because I deliver tangible results to my clients. 2) As a social entrepreneur, I share my revenue & 3) I am passionate about my business
Terms you wish would start trending on Twitter right now?
#Latism #Work-Life #BeatCancer #EntrepreneursRock #MomsRock #Consultant #MoveToRochester
What’s the most interesting connection you’ve made through Twitter?
Connecting with my fellow latino(a)s, moms & entrepreneurs has been amazing. Each person brought a unique value to the table.
What inspires you to tweet?
To share, to build community, to laugh, to cry, to fight, to console, to make business, to have a voice, to build consensus & just to BE
How long can you go without a tweet?
I tweet as I breathe :)
Who do you admire most for his or her use of Twitter?
Other business owners who can make concrete things happen. For example @ChrisBrogan, @Ramon_DeLeon, @GaryVee and many others
Has Twitter changed your life? If yes, how?
It’s certainly opened many doors & many worlds. It’s broken stereotypes. It’s made me aware of real issues lived by real people.
What do you wish people would do more of on Twitter?
I wish people would unite voices (tweets) to build a better world. We’ve seen it happen already with the Twestivals. I want more of that
What are some big Twitter faux pas?
Well, the typical spamming, selling in your face, the me-myself-&-I attitude, building cyber-getthos, the divide & conquer approach…
What will the world be like 10 years from now?
I really hope that we can build a better world for our kids. I want a greener, healthier, friendlier and happier world in 10 years.
Ok, so please let me know what you think and don’t forget to nominate me at http://shortyawards.com/AnaRC
  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
Jan 07

I’ve been preaching like crazy lately about the importance of owning your space, of managing your content and becoming your LandLORD. In other words, to focus on your own Blog. That’s all.
Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and all others are great. But they’re not yours. In the quest of convincing my fellow consultants, business owners and entrepreneurs to create and invest on a blog, I would like to provide 101 reasons why. If you have blogged at all and feel it has helped you in any shape or form, please add your reasons in the comments here.  Today is my birthday! so may your reason(s) become my birthday gift :)   At the end, I’ll compile all the reasons in a Whrrl story.  I’ll start the list:

1) To show my areas of expertise
2) To express my opinion
3) To share knowledge
4) To improve my writing skills
5) To acquire new clients
6) To build communities of practice
7) To help others
8) To publish my ideas
9) To earn revenue
10) To own my space

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
Dec 24

greeting

Social media has given me the amazing opportunity to get to know new friends.  I consider many of you part of my new family.  I look out for my friends, defend them, help in every way possible and they do the same for me.  Don’t we feel we’ve known each other for years? Here we are going crazy, wishing one another happy holidays and everything in between.  I call this my new holidays! using new media with my new friends. And I love every piece of it.

At the same time, social media often removes the personal connections we used to have once upon the time.  I would encourage each one of you to go back to those old “best friends” and close family members that you haven’t heard from in years.  Once you connect, apply all the social media strategies to those relationships and bring them back to life.  Here are three basic tips:

1) Connect – it might take a phone call, a post card (yes a post card), an email, a visit.  You make the first move to @ or tag or DM. But the old way. You know what I mean….

2) Engage – don’t impose your boring speech.  Let them do most of the talking, find a few common denominators and join the conversation.  Be genuinely interested in what they’re doing, what excites them today.

3) Follow-up – maybe your friend is on Facebook or LinkedIn, maybe not. Who cares? what matters most is that today we have an infinite number of ways to stay in touch with people when we really want to do so.  Ask them about their preferred method of communication and use just that.  Once they see your interest and persistence, they’ll be on the front line of your fan/follower list.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank each and every one of you.  My readers, my colleagues, my staff, my clients, my fellow consultants, business owners, social entrepreneurs, vendors, social media aficionados and curious cats.  I wish I could write each of your names, but I can assure you that your names (and links) are written in my heart. I hope you have a great time these days and that you give priority to your family and close friends (new and old). God bless you

  • Share/Bookmark
Dec 16

I’ve become aware of the scrutiny and judgments around Shellie’s tragic incident (a mom whose 2 year old son drowned 2 days ago).  I would like to shed some light to the tool but even more to the culture and practical application that Twitter has for its users (often called Twitters or Tweeps).

I am writing this post to the attention of the investigators, police officers, extended family and community members who have been personally touched by Bryson’s short life.  The intention of my post is not to defend nor to accused.  Instead, it is meant to give you a solid and objective idea of Twitter and what goes on inside its walls.

Twitter

An application with now billions of users.  Currently the house of every business that care about its future and the house of organizations that care about their customers.  Twitter is also the house of many people who constantly communicate, help, fight, sheer up, spam, sale, support and much more.

Communities

Believer or not, Twitter is really formed by communities.  A group of people with a common denominator.  Like most of us Shellie (Military_Mom) belongs in various communities: moms, military, marketers, bloggers and so forth.

Now the three big questions:

1) Why did Shellie spend so much time on Twitter?

There are many reasons people join this big community.  By interacting with Shellie and reading her Tweets (messages on Twitter), I can share the following:

Work: Think about Twitter as a home business.  Here are some examples how Shellie persuaded me to go to Wal-Mart and other clients for my Christmas shopping back in November:

@AnaRC walmart is free site to store shipping with excellent clearance too 8:47 AM Nov 19th from Echofon in reply to AnaRC

@AnaRC jcp.com has free shipping and 10 or 15 off purchases this weekend (now through Sat) toysRus has great clearance, and 8:46 AM Nov 19th from Echofon in reply to AnaRC

Before she sent me those tweets, we engaged in a conversation about how I leave everything to the last minute (including my shopping).

Attract Traffic to blog: As most of us in the online world, our blog is the main source of clients.  Twitter is a great tool to bring traffic back to her blog from which Shellie writes product reviews, runs give-ways and has fun.  The higher the traffic, the higher the sales and the more opportunities will come her way.

Source of knowledge: Like most of us, Shellie uses Twitter to find best practice, to read the latest trends in her business and also to share her two cents as the expert that she is.

Connector: Twitter is one of the best connectors out there.  So to connect with brands, marketing officers and other moms (her target audience), Shellie engages on Twitter.

2) Was Shellie Twittering instead of watching Bryson?

If you look at the tweets around the time of the accident, the first one was at 4:30, then 4:31, another set of tweets at 5:17, 5:18, 5:19 and 5:21. To the final tweet after 6 when she cries for prayers to the Twitter community.

I can assure you that when a person is exclusively “twittering” he/she would normally tweet 1 tweet a minute.  Therefore Shellie was obviously doing something else other than Twitter.

3) How can she tweet after her son is dead?

Apart from the fact that people have different reactions to tragedy and one never knows until the moment arrives (hoping for a never).  I can only share my personal story here.

Last Friday, I was on my way to Washington D.C. heading to a Latism conference.  I had also combined the trip with a consultancy job with the World Bank and another meeting with the U.S. Hispanic Youth Entrepreneur Education (USHYEE).  However it was the first snow in Rochester, NY and my car went off the road.  All of the sudden, I was buried in snow and since it was 7:07 AM, there weren’t many people on the highway.

5 years ago I would have called 911 but last Friday, I sent a Tweet and the usual magic happened:

911: I did end up calling them at 7:10 (3 minutes after my tweet) only to hear “yes madam, we’ve received 36 calls already. We’re on our way” by the time I hanged up they were already there.

Meeting 1: my secretary text me “I’m rescheduling the meeting on Skype and sending you the presentation electronically”

Meeting 2: they sent me a DM (direct message that’s private between two people) just saying “we’re aware, will reschedule”

The car: 2 friends from my ROC community not only called the towing company but they even provided a credit card number in case I didn’t have cash on me.  The towing service was there within minutes with a big “I’ve been paid smile”

Prayers: other cars were having the same problem as I had on the curve and I worried about a bad accident.  My prayer community was on, sending me all the angels, messages of encouragement and hope.

Flight: Even though I wasn’t very lucky with my travel agent, my airline waved the change fee and booked me into the next flight.

Extras: I received over 70 messages, direct messages, texts, phone calls and more.  All offering help, prayers & support.

Now, do you get the power of that tweet? Not only did I save myself over 14 calls (to 911, my secretary, World Bank, USHY, D.C. friends, people in my prayer network & family) but I certainly felt surrounded by a support system.  This wasn’t chance.  This was the result of a presence and a community building that takes place every day. One tweet at a time. When I sent that tweet, I knew what was going to happen. My communities would jump to help, the same way I’ve helped others in need.  The same reason why I’m writing such a long post for Shellie.

I hope that my story helps you understand why Shellie twitted during her tragedy.  She cried for help: “Please pray …..

And if you are still in doubt, please have the courage to link to Shellie’s support system on Twitter.  You’ll see that messages of encouragement, sympathy and blessings have been nonstop.  If still in doubt, please join the conversation tomorrow at 9:00 pm EST on Twitter.  I can assure you that you’ll be moved.

I’ve been consulting for public and private organizations to help them understand how their customers are using social media.  Also how they can use it to engage and reach certain goals.  This job has given me enough exposure to every level of perception of Twitter by “the big guys”.  There are also false myths and stereotypes about “mommy bloggers”.

Often when I ask provocatively to my clients if they think I’m a mommy blogger, their answer is NO! as a mother of four young children who blogs for her business, I must break the news: I am a “mommy blogger” and it is an honor for me to be the voice to a fellow colleague during such difficult time. I am happy to talk to any of the agents involved in this case free of charge.  As long as it serves to shed more objective light to the situation.

I have seen a common denominator among Shellie’s tougher judges.  They’re Twitter newbies.  This will also be the case of the majority of the investigators, family members, educators and so forth.  The first reaction is to blame the unknown (in this case “Shellie’s presence on Twitter” and to jump to easy conclusions as a result of anger and fear.  According to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, 300 children drown every year and over 3,000  end up with serious injuries. I’m pretty sure these stats have not been altered by Twitter.

One last thing.  Think twice before you judge and count  to 5,000 before you write or say anything that could hurt a grieving mom.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
Dec 03

We are back with the weekly Twitter parties after the Thanksgiving break.  Now in December, we will do something unique to continue to support each other in our social media efforts: The Bloginaldos – The same concept of the traditional Aguinaldos (Parrandas, Sarandelas, Posadas or however you call it in your own country).  The difference is that instead of visiting each other’s houses, we’ll visit each other’s blogs (cyberhomes).

http://Target.com will sponsor these parties and every day, we’ll have a winner of a $25 Target Gift Card.  Here are the rules:

1)      Visit a blog written by a Latino or a Latina

2)      Leave a comment

3)      Retweet the post link with #Bloginaldo #Latism written on the tweet

The idea here is to promote each other’s blogs and businesses in the holiday spirit of sharing.  There will be a winner every day of December starting today.  In order to join the parties on Thursdays at 9:00 pm EST, just login to Twitter and use #Latism at the end of your Tweets.  Otherwise you may enter one of the chat rooms: http://tweetchat.com/room/latism

This week, winners will be selected randomly.

For those who are not familiar with the Aguinaldo concept: In Latin American countries, during the month of December the neighbors gather to sing Christmas carols in different houses. So each house offers ginger tea, sweet bread and other goodies. The concept behind the Aguinaldos (Posadas in Mexico) is to open our homes and share what we have with each other.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
preload preload preload