The Columbus Dispatch

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

- With Samantha Nolan

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 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 post-retirement venture, I would recommend utilizing Linkedin to build your brand. Using

Linkedin would 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 built 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 your network can rely on, meaning creating a structure to your daily posting activity to further show your presence and subject matter expertise. You can also join affinity groups on

Linkedin so that you have access to connect with like-minded members, follow hashtags to pull relevant content into your news feed, and then actively spend 10-15 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 that 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 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 informatio­n on Nolan Branding’s services, visit nolanbrand­ing.com or call 888-9-MY-BRAND or 614-570-3442.

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