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Category: Five Questions

Let's Talk Talent with Bruce Powell – 5 Question Interview

Brucepowell
The talent wars, particularly in the digital space, are heating up (again).  And who better to shed some light than Bruce Powell.  Bruce is the co-founder and managing partner of IQ PARTNERS Inc., an executive search & recruitment firm specializing in online marketing, media, communications and emerging technology companies. 

I remember working with Bruce in the early days of internet marketing – before the dot com bomb – he has definitely seen it all.  He sat down with us to offer his perspective on how job hunters can make a go of it these days, particularly in this new era of social media.

OD: You’re seeing a renewed demand for online expertise.  What are the top 3 skill or experience sets that your clients are looking for?

This is an interesting question – with 2 slightly different answers.  Obviously there’s been an evolving niche specialization in online marketing for many years.  Where companies previously sought individuals to oversee their overall ‘online marketing’ spend, they’re now looking for individuals with much more refined skill sets.  And as marketing activities have progressively moved online, whole teams are being built to manage each facet of a company’s online marketing effort. 

Without a doubt, the most sought after skill sets over the past year have been:

  1. SEO & SEM
  2. Specialized email marketing skills (i.e. dynamic content & CRM integration)
  3. Social Media

That said, there’s also clear polarization happening.  While some individuals have developed highly refined technical and functional skills – clients have also expressed frustration at the lack of breadth and awareness on how their specialist skills integrate within the overall marketing effort. 

It’s an ironic catch-22.  At the same time the industry is demanding more specialized skill-sets, it’s also annoyed these ‘specialists’ don’t have a broader understanding of brand-marketing fundamentals and general business-case analysis. 

Within agency environments we’re seeing a similar frustration with increased specialization coming at the cost of declining client-management skills.

There’s a clear message hear – demand for online talent over the last few years has clearly outstripped supply.  Specialists are self-taught, and there’s not a clear pipeline of learning and skill-progression to broaden their skill-set – nor incentive or time to do so.  They’re in demand, and they’re being paid well – why upset the apple cart? 

On the other hand – the world is a dynamic place.  For those few individuals willing able to operate holistically AND dive deep in select areas of specialization – the world will be their oyster.

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Social Entrepreneurism with Dawn Bowles of DreamBank.org – Five Question Interview

Earlier this year, Canadian startup, DreamBank.org, launched.  DreamBank.org is an alternative gift giving platform that helps people
achieve their dreams and at the same time helps the planet and
important social causes. Instead of giving gifts that although
appreciated may not really be wanted, through DreamBank you contribute to
someone’s stated dream. Plus your gift automatically generates
funds that are given to important social causes.

We sat down with Dawn Bowles, founder and CEO, to discuss her thoughts on being an entrepreneur with a social conscience.

Dreambankwithdawn
1. First off, what’s your definition of social entrepreneurism?

I believe a true social enterprise is one that builds sustainability and social giving into the foundation of both the financial model of the company as well as the way it conducts its business.  While it’s important to have things like “triple bottom line reporting" and audits around social and environmental impact, I believe those initiatives are “after the fact” mechanisms. In some cases that’s great but other outcomes just can’t have numbers put to them — clean water, food to eat, etc.

Now, this is my “if life was perfect” definition. In reality, just starting down the road of exploring ways to build positive social and environmental impact into your business model would be a great start at changing old models that don’t work for the overall benefit of society anymore.


2. What started you down the path to becoming a social entrepreneur?
It definitely didn’t happen overnight. It was a long process. I was working in the investment industry in the early 90’s and witnessed the extreme amounts of money that people and companies were making with little if not zero “give back to society”.  It was heartbreaking.  At the height of the heyday in investments, my boss told me that if charities contacted us for sponsorships or donation, I was to say  “we had a policy of not giving to charity”…

I left the industry not that long after and went traveling where I saw even more of the divide between "haves" and "have nots".  I started doing some work with Credit Unions and realized there were other business models that were more about giving back to community and stakeholders in various ways — I sought out higher education around responsible business and found the Masters Degree at the University of Bath, UK.  I would recommend the program to anyone wants supported knowledge and practice on change-making. Shortly thereafter, while studying alternative business models and pondering the waste that we produce around the way we give and receive gifts, the idea for DreamBank was hatched and then cultivated to eventually launch to the public in July this year. Finally!

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