12 Dec 2013

Hanze UAS and Sharism Era

Today (12th December 2013), Hanze University of Applied Sciences (UAS) hosted another successful event in its facilites at Zernikeplein, Groningen, the Netherlands. "Meet your IC Future" as mentioned in my last post, is an event targeting the 1st year students of Hanze's International & Intercultural Communication undergraduate course which aims to provide some insight about what students can expect upon graduation in what regards their professional life.

It is relevant to remark that this was the second time I received the prestigious invitation to be a speaker there. I believe "Meet your IC future" is a very good initiative because it proved once again that students are indeed curious about what they can do in the field of International Communication.


When we start a University degree we are full of doubts, uncertainties whether or not we have chosen the right road, what it is really about, if we will be successful in this profession and so on. Evidently, I approached what to expect from the course itself, how is the job market and what skills to develop. But also it is key to find out whether they like the course & profession or not. That is why I had an important message I repeated for all students attending one of my three afternoon sessions today, which was:

"Do things that make you smile. Find out if you are really passionate about International Communication, culture, networking, socialising. Because you will be doing that for the decades to come of your lives and it is really important that we do things that we like, we got to be happy!"

I think my message was well received and correctly decoded by at least some of the students. One of the students came to me after the last session and said that he felt I had truly spoken from my heart. Like the Dutch say: "Ja, dat is waar!". I truly did! I am passionate about communication, people and culture. That is something I genuinely love. So I am actually happy when I have to work. It really makes me smile :)

Getting back to the title of this post... Hanze and Sharism philosophy. For those who have lived the 1990's and early 2000's a lot were told at that time about the Information Era, how information was all-powerful and how important was to have it secured in order to create some sort of information capital. It is evident that information is still very important. However, the perspective has considerably changed.

Nowadays, it is all about who is more shared, liked and followed. We are living the #Sharism Era. The more we share, the more we are shared and, consequently, the more we are, indeed, important in the digital world. But to be liked, shared and followed you have to be relevant. It is all about creating relevant content for your conterparts in the social sharism universe. It is about the person who shares, how it is shared and to whom the information is shared.

It was so pleasant to see people coming all the way from the South of the Netherlands and even from Germany, leaving their jobs on an end-year time where everyone is busy. But they came. They came to share, to share with young minds that in a few years will be part of the international communication industry. 

It is central for us - junior & senior professionals - to share the best practices and talk about the skills required to be a good intercultural public relations professional, this way we are directly contributing to the development of the communication world. 

As I mentioned in my last post, professor Geert Hofstede in his lecture at Hanze UAS, last November, pointed to the main characteristics of a world-citizen. I do believe a good PR professional working in an international scale do require to be such a citizen of the world.

I would say Hanze UAS is in the right direction stimulating the sharism philosophy through their digital University world where students & teachers can interact and exchange assignments/reading materials/grades through a state-of-art intranet.

On top of that, the well prepared staff behind the International Communication course makes events like "Meet your IC Future" which clearly demonstrates how important it is to share - and they do find people that follow the same line of thought... as I do and the many other professionals that took the nearly the whole day off to share!



Many thanks to Ellen Koen and Hanze UAS for the opportunity of sharing & for the gifts. I love Dutch hospitality!


~ and keep on smiling :)

8 Dec 2013

Which are the skills International Public Relations pros need to have to be effective in today’s challenging global business world?

Next Thursday, 12th December 2013, I will be speaking at a very interesting event hosted by Hanze University of Applied Sciences (Groningen, NL) entitled “Meet your IC Future” - IC stands for International Communication. It targets the first and second year students of the International & Intercultural Communication undergraduate course of the respective University.

I believe it is a good initiative from the Hanze UAS staff because it gives the opportunity to students to have a clearer idea from the very beggining of the course of what to expect when graduating and the type of jobs that International Communication field has to offer. These advices will be given by young professionals that a few years ago were in the very same situation, full of questions...

Hanze UAS, Zernikeplein, Groningen/NL

There are a few areas of main concern – or doubts – when someone commences a University Degree. But first of all, what is central is to find out whether or not the course truly reflects what you want to do for the next decades of your life.

Once you start a University degree, I would advise you to check out its full content programme for the years to come, the modules you will have to study and if they are compatible with what you expected – and mostly important, if you can imagine yourself working with related subjects for a considerable part of your life from now on.

If you feel the course is right for you, great. If not, try to find your real vocation, everyone has an easiness for something, a natural feel for one or more areas, find yours and prepare yourself to be a good professional in that area(s).

The three main areas of concern are as follows:


1. What to expect from an International Communication course?
* The course will give guidelines, you have to go after what matters most to you within it
* Study and give a lot of attention to « Intercultural Communication »
* Do further research on the themes you have interest in working with
* Attend conferences, seminars and symposiums in your city, region, country and even abroad
* Participate in debates and forums
* Dig for opportunities – the web is a valuable resource to do it

2. What to expect from you as a student/professional/person?
*** To be a world-citizen – Professor Hofstede in his November 2013 lecture at Hanze UAS, pointed some of the vital characteristics for being considered a citizen of the world, which are as follows :
Live and work abroad
Suffer culture shock and learn from it
Intelectual curiosity on history, geography, literature
Recognise cultural differences between societies
Recognise one’s own cultural programming
Speak (fluently) at least one foreign language
Understand different communication styles
*** In addition, I would add some essential « soft » skills for IPR pros:
Cultural awareness
Open-mind
Out-of-the-box thinking
Resilience

3. What to expect from the job market?
**Competitive but always welcoming bright talents
**Demanding
** Foreign languages, international experience, industry experience (internships), volunteer work, social media scanning, etc.
** Worldwide Opportunities in :
PR, corporate communications, development & NGOs communications, public affairs, advertising, digital communications, strategy, research...
Intercultural induction training, executive coaching
**Jobs can be independent consulting, in agencies, in-house, Governments, NGOs, Academia, the spectrum is wide!
Alternative functions in HR, administrative roles

These initial reflections are merely an initial step towards the understanding of what could be expected within the large spectrum offered by the International Communication field.

In this scope, I would strongly recommend a new term to define PR professionals involved in international communication contexts. I do believe a good denomination for the area and its professionals would be: “Intercultural Public Relations”.

I will go through this new term proposal for PR across cultures in one of my next posts, wait for IT!

References:

 « Hofstede’s Lecture November 2013 » refers to Professor Geert Hofstede Lecture at Hanze University of Applied Sciences, Groningen/NL, which took place on November 18th, 2013. Hofstede lecture was part of an event discussing global workplace.

  ~ and keep on smiling :)