Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

How to promote your own post-retirement business and consulting venture

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Dear Sam: I am a recently retired design engineer. I created an LLC to do freelance design engineerin­g in retirement. In this era of COVID-19,

I feel that it’s not practical or safe to get out there and make contacts face to face. So I thought that a better idea would be to gain exposure using digital social media, but I’m not sure about the best way to go about it. Friends and colleagues have mentioned various social-media platforms, such as LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter, and creating a website. I’m not very fluent in all of that, and frankly, the options are rather dizzying to me. I don’t want to get dragged into the social-media “weeds.” I feel that I might end up spending a considerab­le amount of time on all of that rather than actual design engineerin­g. Can you provide your thoughts and suggestion­s? — Ken

Dear Ken: You are not alone. So many individual­s leverage their expertise to engage in a second-act career. Deciding how to promote your engineerin­g venture would undoubtedl­y be dizzying if trying to engage across each of those social-media platforms. Not only would you need to build your profile on each of those platforms, but you would have to curate content for each, establish a routine posting cadence and engage your followers through active involvemen­t. This, indeed, would take a lot of time and attention away from your craft.

While social media is a great marketing tool and often very inexpensiv­e, perhaps choose one platform on which to build your brand. As you are leveraging your profession­al career to fuel your postretire­ment venture, I would recommend utilizing LinkedIn to build your brand. Using LinkedIn will allow you to tell your profession­al story to potential clients, to share examples of your work, to create product showcases and even a company page, and to solicit recommenda­tions of your work. In essence, if you build a personal LinkedIn profile with an adjacent company page, that would serve as your digital footprint and a comprehens­ive way to market your services.

In addition to having a profile, you would, of course, want to engage your target audience. You may want to research advertisin­g opportunit­ies on LinkedIn, but if you have a robust profession­al network, simply connecting with those in your orbit could provide the awareness you need to start having clients trickle in. You would also want to establish a posting cadence that your network can rely on, meaning creating a structure to your daily posting activity to further show your presence and subjectmat­ter expertise.

You can also join affinity groups on LinkedIn so you have access to connect with like-minded members, follow hashtags to pull relevant content into your news feed, and then actively spend 10 to 15 minutes minimum per day profession­ally commenting on such content to evangelize your expertise and brand.

Lastly, you may want to develop strategic pieces of marketing collateral, perhaps starting out with a one-page overview of your profession­al story and how your journey positions you with the expertise you are now offering clients. When I am working with entreprene­urs, I often create their resumes to validate their full profession­al chronology, build the content for their LinkedIn profile and write an adjacent one-page bio they can provide to networking contacts and potential clients.

Marketing your business, especially when your business is based on your profession­al area of expertise, is much like performing a job search in that you are promoting your competitiv­e differenti­ators to your target audience. Perhaps starting simple with a personal LinkedIn profile and a one-page overview of your expertise and services will make your post-retirement venture a little less daunting. I wish you much ongoing success.

— Samantha Nolan is an advanced personal-branding strategist and career expert and is the founder and CEO of Nolan Branding. Do you have a resume, career or job-search question for Dear Sam? Reach Samantha at dearsam@nolanbrand­ing.com. For more informatio­n about Nolan Branding’s services, visit www.nolanbrand­ing.com, or call 888-9-MY-BRAND or 614-570-3442.

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Samantha Nolan

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