Entries tagged "guidance"

Motivation is Key: Insight from Melanie Spring, Sisarina

May 21, 2010

by: Amy Liz Martin
Original Post on Gen Y Networking

Each Friday, its my goal to bring you an interview with someone who has walked many miles in your shoes: other employers. To kick off this new segment, we’re going to feature Melanie Spring, principal and project director for Sisarina. Her company is a unique website design, marketing and business branding “one-stop-shop” and has grown tremendously in it’s first year. You can also follow her on Twitter: @sisarina

While she’s been in the game for a while, Melanie is always on top of the latest digital trends and brings the best strategies to her clients. On top of it all, she is the queen of networking with Gen Y – one of the many reasons I wanted to interview her. Here are the highlights:

What stands out in your experience of working with Gen Y employees?
Motivation isn’t like it used to be. It used to be that people would want a raise, a bonus or time off. Now people just want reason to be working — purpose. Money is a little motivator but if you have collaborative space, a great company culture and dedicated people, motivation isn’t needed.

How do you adjust your communication style when talking to Gen Y employees or students you mentor?
I realize that it’s more about the impact we have, not the things we do that causes Gen Y people to grow. Being that I’m not too far ahead of that generation, I tend to identify as a ‘been there, done that’ mentor to my employees and interns. Too many people talk down to the younger crowd just because they’re younger. Allowing them to have an opinion is key since they have more resources at their fingertips earlier than even I did. They know a lot more than my generation did at their age.

You’re famous for your #DCTweetups (Twitter meetups) and they tend to pull in a significant Gen Y crowd. How do you best reach out to Gen Y and get them involved?
The old style of networking just doesn’t work anymore. Chamber of Commerce meetings are boring and just a ‘card-passing’ event. To keep up with the younger networkers, my events have become a social happy hour event with a friend-making and business connections component. People work with people they like, not people who sell them.

What do you feel motivates Gen Y to network in the ways they do?
The motivation for doing something that’s purposeful is the key. Paid or not, Gen Y is resourceful and understands they need to grow quickly to make it in the economy we’re in. Gen X is more of a social media generation right now but I believe Gen Y is growing in it and will just keep it at a steady growing pace as they get older. Being able to share what they know will only propel them forward.

What advice would you give employers in communicating/networking/mentoring Gen Y’ers?
Don’t talk down to them. Realize they probably know more than you and could mentor you in a lot of ways. Allow them to be heard but also give them the space to listen to you without feeling ‘young’.

Any other insights?
A lot of people say that Gen Y is a class of lazy slackers who just want more vacation time. In reality, they just want to work harder so they can play harder. I’ve rarely seen someone 10 years older who will work as hard at something. Congratulate them after they’ve done a great job instead of incentivizing them with money beforehand — they’ll work a lot harder if they get the recognition rather than the raise.

Melanie’s recommended reading: Dan Pink’s “Drive”

What insights would you add about motivating Gen Y to connect and perform to the best of their ability? Let’s keep the conversation going! And if there is anyone you would like to see interviewed for this feature, please let me know.

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What We're Reading: The Sisarina Bookshelf

February 24, 2010

The Sisarina bookshelf holds a wide variety of books. While we all work towards engaging our users and positioning their brands successfully in the marketplace, it doesn’t mean that we approach design and marketing from the same direction.

Earlier we discussed the different ways we find inspiration. The books we read cover a wide array of topics and interests, but essentially they all have the power to awaken us professionally, steer us in new directions and provide alternate perspectives.

Here are just a few of the current reads that have reveled the Sisarina staff.

Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us
Daniel H. Pink

Pink cites a dizzying number of studies revealing that carrot and stick can actually significantly reduce the ability of workers to produce creative solutions to problems. What motivates us once our basic survival needs are met is the ability to grow and develop, to realize our fullest potential.

 

 

World Orders Old and New

World Orders Old and New
Noam Chomsky

Marshaling meticulous scholarship, this leading critic of American foreign policy  argues that Washington's support - open and covert - for repressive regimes in Colombia, Guatemala, Indonesia, Angola and elsewhere has undermined attempts to create meaningful democracy, thus exacerbating poverty and misery.

 

 

Crisis Counseling

Crisis Counseling: A Guide for Pastors and Professionals
Scott Floyd

Provides a much-needed resource for the professional, pastoral, and even lay counselor.  Providing a spiritually based framework for responding to a crisis event and the following times of trauma, loss, and grief.

 

 

How We Decide

How We Decide
Jonah Lehrer

The author arms us with the tools we need, drawing on cutting-edge research as well as the real-world experiences of a wide range of deciders and shows how people are taking advantage of the new science to make better television shows, win more football games, and improve military intelligence.

 

 

Breaking into the Boys' Club

Breaking Into the Boys' Club: 8 Ways for Women to Get Ahead in Business
Molly D. Shepard, Jane K. Stimmler, Jane K. Stimmler

Why do women still have so much trouble making their way into the upper echelons of corporate America? According to the authors, it's not quality of work that holds them back but something more insidious. While women try to get ahead by logging long hours and working to become experts in their fields, their male counterparts are easily included in corporate culture (golf, drinks, lunches, etc.) and get inside information and more face time with superiors.

 

Women of Influence

Woman of Influence: Ten Traits of Those Who Want to Make a Difference
Pam Ferrell

The author helps women see the call to mentor other women as part of the spiritual maturity process. By developing ten character traits, all starting with "I": impassioned, individual, intimate, idealistic, interdependent, initiative, integrity, intense, inquiring, and infectious, she tells stories from great women of the past, and those living today.

 

 

Share Your Bookshelf

What books are currently by your bedside? On your iPod or Kindle? Please share with us.

Comments (2)
My book is The Cat in the Hat by Dr. Seuss. Tuesday March 2nd is Dr. Seuss' birthday and Read Across America Day. Whoo Hoo!
Posted by Debbie Annen on 02/25/10
Too Fat to Fish

This debut memoir from the comedian best known as Howard Stern's radio show sidekick is scrappy, funny, tumultuous and profane, just like its author. Lange, a self-proclaimed fat guy with a heroin problem, is difficult to love, but easy to like, his shaggy-dog life story full of derogatory self-awareness and cheerful vulgarity (often in the form of casual profanity and sexism). Many episodes from this life story will be familiar to Stern listeners, including the infamous "Pig Story," wherein Lange snorts cocaine while in full pig costume on the set of television's MADtv. Less familiar to fans will be a sobering account of Lange's suicide attempt and fond childhood memories of his beloved father. Lange's outrageous and horrific behavior involves prostitution, jail time and several trips to rehab; perhaps the saddest recurring theme is the frequency with which Lange thanks someone who's helped him, only to reveal that that person is no longer a part of his life. Glossing over Lange's penchant for alienating people is just one oversight that keeps this warts-and-all memoir from feeling fully honest. Still, for those with a taste for his aggressive, self-loathing brand of humor will find this volume full of compulsively readable stories. Photos.
Posted by AppleMacGenius on 02/25/10
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