Post by smritirohman88 on Oct 28, 2023 6:41:11 GMT
Much of professional reputation is based on how lazy the rest of us are to verify it. Except for very specific situations of recruitment and selection of people, the accreditations we present are not thoroughly reviewed to highlight our track record. What you do in solidarity for other people and professionals is also part of your professionalism. Helping other people and professionals is an opportunity to make your skills and the services you offer visible and to show precisely attitudes of collaboration, teamwork and networking.
Don't tell your professionalism, show it. The contents are the most manageable evidence to show professionalism. In my work sessions I usually show a video curriculum published on YouTube by a graduate in Interpretation Crypto Email List and Translation from Granada who presents himself as a translator of English (and other languages) but who has made the video in Spanish. Instead, you could have done it entirely in English with Spanish subtitles, if your target audience is customers who speak this language.
Not demonstrating your professionalism when you can is a serious presentation error. The time has passed from 'saying' that you are a professional to having to prove it. It's okay to introduce yourself but it's better to let the facts present you. Don't say what you do or what you did well, show it. If you present yourself as a “social media professional” (social media) but you cannot prove valuable activity on social networks, you are like a public relations person without relationships. And if plumbing is your thing, why not show off your skills in a video or blog? Not only because it will benefit you but to compete better because others are already doing it!
Don't tell your professionalism, show it. The contents are the most manageable evidence to show professionalism. In my work sessions I usually show a video curriculum published on YouTube by a graduate in Interpretation Crypto Email List and Translation from Granada who presents himself as a translator of English (and other languages) but who has made the video in Spanish. Instead, you could have done it entirely in English with Spanish subtitles, if your target audience is customers who speak this language.
Not demonstrating your professionalism when you can is a serious presentation error. The time has passed from 'saying' that you are a professional to having to prove it. It's okay to introduce yourself but it's better to let the facts present you. Don't say what you do or what you did well, show it. If you present yourself as a “social media professional” (social media) but you cannot prove valuable activity on social networks, you are like a public relations person without relationships. And if plumbing is your thing, why not show off your skills in a video or blog? Not only because it will benefit you but to compete better because others are already doing it!