But in 2024 and beyond, that advice is obsolete. It is no longer just about ; it is about creating opportunity .
We have all heard the warning: "Be careful what you post online."
Stop consuming. Start contributing.
The next time you go for a promotion, your boss might not ask to see your old performance review. They might just ask, "Can you show me your LinkedIn feed?"
Your social media content is no longer a side note to your career. It is your career's front door.
Here is how to stop treating social media like a distraction and start treating it like the most powerful career tool you own. Your traditional resume lists where you worked and what you did. But social media shows how you think, who you know, and where the industry is going.
Stop doom-scrolling and start strategic posting. Here is why your digital footprint matters more than your handshake.
Are you using social media as a career tool or just a distraction? Let me know in the comments below.
The modern career economy rewards . If you are an accountant who never comments on finance threads, a graphic designer with an empty Instagram grid, or a salesperson with zero LinkedIn activity, you are invisible to headhunters.
When you share a lesson learned from a failed project, you become a teacher. When you comment a thoughtful insight on a leader's post, you become a peer. When you document your workflow (not just the final result), you become a resource. To use social media effectively for your career, stop trying to "go viral." Start trying to be helpful . Focus on these three pillars:
Your Keyboard is Your New Resume: How Social Media Content Shapes Your Career
For years, that advice was purely defensive—don’t let your boss see you at the beach on a sick day, and never tweet anything you wouldn't want your mother to read.
But in 2024 and beyond, that advice is obsolete. It is no longer just about ; it is about creating opportunity .
We have all heard the warning: "Be careful what you post online."
Stop consuming. Start contributing.
The next time you go for a promotion, your boss might not ask to see your old performance review. They might just ask, "Can you show me your LinkedIn feed?" OnlyFans.2023.Veronica.Perasso.Creampie.XXX.720...
Your social media content is no longer a side note to your career. It is your career's front door.
Here is how to stop treating social media like a distraction and start treating it like the most powerful career tool you own. Your traditional resume lists where you worked and what you did. But social media shows how you think, who you know, and where the industry is going.
Stop doom-scrolling and start strategic posting. Here is why your digital footprint matters more than your handshake. But in 2024 and beyond, that advice is obsolete
Are you using social media as a career tool or just a distraction? Let me know in the comments below.
The modern career economy rewards . If you are an accountant who never comments on finance threads, a graphic designer with an empty Instagram grid, or a salesperson with zero LinkedIn activity, you are invisible to headhunters.
When you share a lesson learned from a failed project, you become a teacher. When you comment a thoughtful insight on a leader's post, you become a peer. When you document your workflow (not just the final result), you become a resource. To use social media effectively for your career, stop trying to "go viral." Start trying to be helpful . Focus on these three pillars: Start contributing
Your Keyboard is Your New Resume: How Social Media Content Shapes Your Career
For years, that advice was purely defensive—don’t let your boss see you at the beach on a sick day, and never tweet anything you wouldn't want your mother to read.
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