SPEAKERS’ CORNER | What our favorite speakers are blogging about

By Pamela Slim | September 26, 2011
I had the pleasure of working with Joshua Waldman last year, and was very impressed with his tenacity and creativity. He had a dream to write a book about his passion for using social media in job search, and he moved this into reality when he secured a deal from Wiley to write Job Searching with Social Media for Dummies.
So first off: ROCK ON JOSHUA!
I am very proud of you.
Second, even if you swear you will never set foot in a cubicle again, it makes sense to understand the job search process in the new world of work. Quite frequently, my friends and clients take a job to become their own venture capitalist, aka secure their financial base while they grow their startup.
Enjoy Joshua’s first-hand account of how he turned what appeared to be calamity into a solid opportunity.
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If you're like me, dreaming of having your own business thrive in today's economy, you probably have two voices in your head. The first voice is one of doom and gloom.
It says, "The market is down again, home values mean nothing, all my neighbors are foreclosing, news about the economy is dour, and no one will buy my stuff. I'm never going to make it."
Then you read Pam Slim's blog and see other people making it. So you remember successful people saying, "The economy is just one more barrier that means nothing to your success. What matters is your heart, your belief and passion. You CAN make this work, there ARE people still buying!"
I face this conflict every day, even with my For Dummies book coming out in September, 2011 and a thriving professional speaking career taking off.
You see, my book deal didn't happen overnight. And once you've been in the trenches, you never take anything for granted again. And that makes you more careful and humble, and it's something to be grateful for.
In late 2008, I had a cushy sales job with Cisco and I was earning six figures. Not long after, though, the market tanked and my accounts stopped spending money. Overnight, I was one of thousands of laid-off Cisco employees.
But being laid off from Cisco isn't the worst thing in the world. I was quickly recruited by a Cisco reseller in Portland, Oregon. My wife and daughter were happy to move out of the desert states to the green abundance of Oregon. After three months into the new job, though, my customers started to have budget issues. One large customer fired everyone and hired back 80 percent of them at lower salaries. The economic tsunami was coming my way.
During that time, I attended one of Pam's live workshops, and by the time I was laid off for the second time in six months, I saw several business possibilities and regained a sense of purpose. It felt liberating, but I just wasn't making enough. So I tried to look for another job.
I used my social networks (primarily LinkedIn and Twitter) to get info interviews. Soon I had my first job interview – and that was one of the most traumatic experiences of my life!
After the volley of the usual questions and answers, fake interest and hidden desperation, I got in my car and started to cry.
Suddenly, the pain and letdown from the last two layoffs came back in one big overwhelming rush. I became aware of a lot of fear. Fear of losing control again. Fear of being let down by a company I loved.
When I got home that day, my family were off at school; lucky for me, because I needed some time to deal with this. I locked myself in our meditation room and started to think back to all of my meditation training and what my teacher, Lama Wangdu, had taught me.
(Side note: I almost became a monk when I lived in Nepal for three years back in 2002.)
One lesson I learned from my teacher was that if you ever want something in your life, you have to visualize yourself giving it to other people in abundance. So I thought about all the thousands of other laid-off and jobless people suffering right then, and I imagined them getting jobs. I saw their smiling faces, I heard their sighs of relief when they got that happy phone call. And slowly, after many days of this practice, my broken heart started to heal.
Maybe you can guess what happened next. I realized that I had skills that could help other people find work. I knew how to leverage social media to grow a valuable network. I knew, intimately, how the hiring process works. And I knew from Clay's courses how to market online.
My first two-hour workshop was held in July 2009 at Umpqua Community Bank in downtown Portland, with 12 job seekers. I started speaking, pro bono, at every job-seeking group I could get my hands on. I spoke in front of 200 job seekers through the unemployment offices. I spoke at church groups, exclusive executive clubs, and even in little cafés.
My passion for helping other people grew, and ideas started pouring out of my head and into my new blog CareerEnlightenment.com. And through private clients and information products, I started to make enough money to survive.
About a year and a half later, I met Charlie Wescott through my dad's BNI network back in Rhode Island, where I grew up. Charlie is a social media genius; just in passing on a random phone call he mentioned that my blog would actually be quite a timely book. He said other bloggers – for example, Pam Slim and Josh Kaufman – had successfully published books related to their blogs' themes.
Charlie knew someone at Wiley and made an introduction. So I pitched my book idea in just a few short paragraphs. Three months later, my family and I were having lunch at our favorite Indian restaurant in Beaverton when I got a call. It was Wiley's For Dummies editor. And they wanted to know if I was still interested in writing the book. Daal Bhat had never tasted so good!
This whole story is a long way of saying that:
If you know anyone who is unemployed or looking for a new job, please send them over to Amazon where they can pick up a copy of Job Searching with Social Media for Dummies. And please leave your comments; I would very much like to hear about your own journeys.

Joshua Waldman helps frustrated job seekers leverage social media to find work FAST! He is the founder of CareerEnlightenment.com and the author of the new book, Job Searching with Social Media for Dummies. Sign-up for his newsletter today and get access to his exclusive training videos for free.
About Pam Slim
Pamela Slim is a seasoned coach, writer and professional speaker who helps frustrated employees in corporate jobs break out and start their own business. Her blog, Escape from Cubicle Nation, is one of the top career and marketing blogs on the web. A former corporate manager and entrepreneur herself for more than a decade, she deeply understands the questions and concerns faced by first-time entrepreneurs. Her expertise in personal and business change was developed through many years consulting inside corporations such as Cisco Systems, Hewlett-Packard and Charles Schwab, where she coached thousands of executives, managers and employees.
Pam’s book Escape from Cubicle Nation: From Corporate Prisoner to Thriving Entrepreneur was released in Spring, 2009. Pam is frequently quoted as an expert on entrepreneurship in publications such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, BusinessWeek, Forbes, Entrepreneur, Money Magazine and Psychology Today. Pam is married with three kids and lives in Mesa, Arizona.
Books by Pam Slim
Pam is the author of Escape from Cubicle Nation: From Corporate Prisoner to Thriving Entrepreneur.
