Promoting Professional Geekery #36 – Have A Book List

(For more Promoting Professional Geekery, see this Roundup of past columns.)

OK you’ve got those must-read books, right?  And they’re really important to people’s careers.  You being the progeek that you are know what to read, and often tell people about it.

Of course I’m pretty sure you’re usually forgetting it.  Or adding to it – and forgetting it.  Or you’re not sure.  Or you forgot everything.

So here’s one of the simplest tips to help out progeeks – keep a list of the best books you’d recommend to your fellow geeky pros and share them with people.  A lot.  Yes, write it the heck down.

Yeah that’s . . . pretty much it.

Of course half the benefit of this is actually, truly, asking what is indispensable for people to read – and that alone is going to provide you a lot of benefit right there.  You’re not tossing off an exhaustive list, or a single book – you’re having to ask yourself “what is a reasonable list of books people should read.”

That question is going to help you help others.  It’ll also make you think seriously about the lessons you learned.

If possible, keep a copy of each book you’d recommend to lend out to people.  Just be sure to get them back.

What’s my progeek booklist?  I actually have three must-reads.

  • Me 2.0 by Dan Schwabel.  It may be a few years out of date but the basic concepts and ideas are strong.
  • Never Eat Alone by Keith Ferrazzi.  The book everyone says you must read?  Is actually a must read guide to good networking.
  • The Unwritten Rules of the Highly Effective Job Search by Orville Pearson.  A rational, intelligent guide to a good job search.

So what’s in your list?

Steven Savage

Ask A Progeek – Sending Multiple Resumes?

Ah, that magic moment where you see multiple jobs at the same company.  Of course that leads to our next “ask a progeek question” . . .

Does it hurt one’s chances of being hired if they apply to more than one job at the same company?  If not, are there any special things to keep in mind when doing so?

We worry if we apply to multiple jobs at the same company, it’ll hurt our chances.  Of course the truth is a little more complicated than that . . .

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Promoting Professional Geekery #35: Connect Groups

(For more Promoting Professional Geekery, see this Roundup of past columns.)

You know how it goes.  You’re there helping plan a convention and someone mentions they really need some artists for a project.  The artists group you hang with is looking for work.  That networking group of techheads is shrinking because of time limits, attrition, and people finding work.

All those geeky/progeeky groups have needs, and interested people.  They’ve got plenty of progeeks who could benefit from the two groups teaming up . . . 

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