What we're about

  • The Marketing Mix is the official blog of Marketing Mentor and the community that's sprung up around it.
  • We're devoted to helping small business owners, freelancers and independent professionals grow their businesses into thriving enterprises.
  • Feel free to join in the conversation: leave a comment, send us an email. Or, if you're an MM client, past or present, with the blogging bug and/or great stories to share, let us know—we're always on the lookout for guest bloggers!

Newsletter

LinkedIn

  • Ilise on LinkedIn
    View Ilise Benun's profile on LinkedIn
  • Deidre on LinkedIn
    View Colleen Wainwright's profile on LinkedIn

The Mix Master

  • Featured in Masters of Consulting Interviews
  • ILISE BENUN is the founder of Marketing Mentor, and has been teaching people to promote themselves and their services since 1988. Author of 4 books and many, many more articles, Ilise has been self-employed for all but three years of her working life.

    More about Ilise here.

The Mix Mistress



  • DEIDRE RIENZO is a copy writer who helps small business owners turn their ideas into words. She partners with web designers to create simple, compelling, and keyword-rich website content for their clients. The Marketing Mentor program is the driving force that has helped Deidre grow her business, and she blogs about her experiences, adventures, and struggles here at the Marketing Mix.

Guest Mixers

Powered by TypePad

« Pass this along to your prospects | Main | Mistakes real and fake »

January 28, 2008

Forget about your day job

When I gave a talk last week for the NY Chapter of the Graphic Artists Guild, I, of course, extolled the virtues of having a clear answer to the question, "What do you do?" (what we usually call the 10-word blurb).

A couple of attendees, who are not yet doing their creative work full time, said they often feel compelled to answer the question truthfully; in other words, to talk about their "day job."

My advice?

You don't have to tell "the whole truth and nothing but the truth." While I am absolutely not advocating deception, I do suggest you carefully construct (with marketing in mind) an answer that will lead you in the direction you're headed, and answer that will help you build your part time or freelance business into something more substantial, if that's what you want.

That's what I love about being in business for myself: I get to decide (almost) everything, including how to answer the question, "What do you do?"

So even if most of your working hours are spent as a legal secretary, when someone asks what you do, talk instead about the work you want to do more of. That's the only way to get the word out about it and to find out if the people you're talking to are clients and prospects.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451e4d169e200e54ff763d88833

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Forget about your day job:

Comments

Thanks, Ilise. Good to know. I'm in the same part-time boat as you are referring to.

Thank you for this!

I love that advice. I use to be a designer as a day job and illustrator at night...and with the question "what do you do?" I'm always tempted to just say "illustrator" but I thought I might be lying.

But of course now that I am an illustrator full-time...I say it loud and proud!

Agreed. After all, are you at a networking meeting to plug your services as a legal secretary? I'd also say that what your day job is really isn't "the truth" about who you are and what you do - often, it's just a way to pay the bills while you pursue other passions. So it makes sense to talk about "what you do" in terms of what you really want to be doing - because that's the truth.

I usually describe what I "really do" first, and then fill in the day job later. I've also been known to describe my day job as my biggest client, which is functionally true if not necessarily totally in line with how, say, the IRS views it.

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Subscribe!

Google™ search


  • www
    The Marketing Mix

The Tagline Series

Etc.