Appendix: Marketing "YOU INC." - Preparing A Personal Marketing Plan
Appendix: Marketing "YOU INC." - Preparing A Personal Marketing Plan
Appendix: Marketing "YOU INC." - Preparing A Personal Marketing Plan
1. 2.
Understand the process of preparing a personal marketing plan. Know how to identify personal payoffs and values, establish priorities, and construct a personal mission statement. Know how to develop and write specific career goals. Know how to prepare a personal and industry situation (SWOT) analysis. Know how to identify and evaluate alternative career strategies. Know how to prepare an action plan.
3. 4. 5. 6.
Appendix
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This is one of the big questions both young and not so young job seekers ask. Sal Divita, in an article in Marketing News, answers: Absolutely. Both are achieved when the individuals personality profile is consistent with the demands of the job.1 Determining consistency in job fit is not a task taken lightly and can lead to unanticipated conclusions. Take this statement from a student who recently prepared a Personal Marketing Plan as a course requirement for an Introductory Marketing class. This paper turned out a lot different than I had originally thought that it would have. I started out with the idea of starting life with a comfortable salary to feed my family in Canada, and after I had evaluated all of the above, I then realized that many opportunities awaited me in Australia also. I wanted to finish my Bachelors Degree here in Kamloops . . ., and then perhaps get a job with a public relations firm. By writing this paper, it has made me re-evaluate my life, and the choices I will be facing in the very immediate future.2 All marketing has the single purpose of helping companies and individuals address and manage change. Companies plan their marketing strategies but, unfortunately, many individuals have no plan at all. Yet nothing is more important than a plan for managing the inevitable changes that life brings. A Personal Marketing Plan is vital if we are to harness and manage change. This textbook teaches the fundamentals of marketing: how to market goods and services and develop an effective marketing plan for a business organization. Many of the tools and techniques presented in the text have been proven to improve business profits, efficiency, and effectiveness. These principles can be adapted to market the most important product in your life: You. They are equally effective for an individual embarking on a career or a person in mid-life dealing with any inevitable job change. In a complex world of changing technology, uncertain economic conditions, increasing competition, and information overload, change is constant. Employees no longer have the luxury of counting on the golden handshake after a lifetime of dedication to one company. Today, the average worker can expect to change careers at least three times. Most will work for more than six companies throughout their career. This is the first time I have ever had to seriously delve into the uncharted waters of myself, and actually try and figure out what motivates me and what is important as well. . . . I preferred to swim happily along, oblivious to such information. I have (now) discovered . . . a great deal about my wants, needs, values and behaviour . . . Needless to say that in addition to completing a requirement of this course, I have also learned a lot about myself.3
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Appendix C
VISION
"What is my preferred future?"
MANDATE
"What constraints am I facing?"
MISSION
"What do I need to do to realize my vision?"
OBJECTIVES/GOALS
Priorities & payoffs "What do I want?" "What measurable evidence will I use as proof of the achievement of my mission/vision?"
SWOT Analysis
"What strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats impact on my situation?"
STRATEGIC ALTERNATIVES
"What paths can I follow to achieve my goals?"
TACTICS/WORKPLAN
"What do I have to do, by when?" Tasks, activities, deadlines
CONTINGENCY PLAN
"What could go wrong and what is my fallback position?"
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To achieve a fulfilling career, we all must identify and define our own measure of success. This involves an honest self-appraisal, which includes the following: 1 Identifying your own wants, needs, values, dreams, strengths, and weaknesses. 2 Judging the fit of your unique skills and resources against the often uncontrollable environmental variables. 3 Establishing and keeping focused on your most critical life priorities.
We face many choices in life. We may naturally gravitate to one choice or another, but sometimes we need to make hard decisions. Our resources are limited. As options increase, we find it more difficult to allocate our resources. Setting priorities helps us sort out choices and keeps us focused on our most valuable payoffs. A highly developed sense of priorities is an important planning skill and often marks the difference between an effective and an ineffective manager. A clear concept of priorities helps guard against a treadmill-like life. Exhibit C2 illustrates a priority grid.4 This tool helps sort out alternatives and identify the one with which to begin. The table is designed to rank ten items, but can be expanded.
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
3 3 3 3 3 3 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
4 4 4 4 4 4
5 6 7 8 9 10
5 5 5 5 5
6 7 8 9 10
6 6 6 6
7 8 9 10
7 7 7
8 9 10
8 8
9 10
10
Total times each number got circled. 1 ___ 2 ___ 3 ___ 4 ___ 5 ___ 6 ___ 7 ___ 8 ___ 9 ___ 10 ___ Priority orderhighest # of circles highest priority etc. 1 ___ 2 ___ 3 ___ 4 ___ 5 ___ 6 ___ 7 ___ 8 ___ 9 ___ 10 ___ Rewrite your list beginning with the item that got the most circles. This is your prioritized list. Note: In the case of a tie, look back to see what you circled when you compared those two numbers. This should break the tie.
Source: Adapted from R.N. Bolles, What Color is Your Parachute, Ten Speed Press.
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Appendix C
Values relate to both preferred consequenceswhat you want to happenand modes of conducthow you will behave to accomplish what you want. They influence our vision and guide our actions to realize it. To ensure career fulfilment we must be conscious of the most important values in our life, as compromising them will lead to personal tension. Awareness of our values enables us to make informed and satisfying career decisions. For example, if you identify your core values as independence, creativity, equality, honesty, and ambition, you need to find an industry and company that reflects these values if you are to experience personal integrity. As Sal Divita says, The value systems between employees and employers . . . must be compatible in order to form a perfect job. 5
Once you have prioritized your values, you will have a clear understanding of the beliefs and attitudes that drive your actions and behaviours. Now you need to have a clear picture or vision of your values in action. Entrepreneurs have a vision of the company they want to create. Artists have a picture in mind of their finished product. Their respective visions guide their decisions and actions. So too, each individual must have a vision of a personal future. Initially, the vision may be hazy and incomplete, but knowledge of personal values helps one to refine and clarify it. Visualizing your values in action will help you clarify the future you want to create for yourself.
Businesses express their values and vision in the form of mission statements designed to guide the development of operational plans. They guide what a company will do and how they will accomplish it. Mission statements act as context for ob-
jectives, strategies, and tactics. Every organization/person has a mission or purpose, although some may not have written down their mission statement or intentionally developed a strategy to execute their vision.
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A mission statement creates boundaries on what is done. It also sets the tone for the overall direction and coordination of efforts and resources. Like businesses, individuals need a mission statement to guide what they want to be and how they will make it happen.
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Appendix C
Values and vision are the guiding principles expressed in your mission statement. Goals and objectives are the specific results needed to keep you on track to ensure that your values are preserved and that your visions are realized. Goal setting acts as a framework for making your vision a reality. How you conceptualize your vision influences the goals you set and the strategies you implement. Goals help outline problems, clarify opportunities, and understand threats. Goals are the practical side, the individual stepping stones of visions. A goal is a conscious decision based on logical analysis of the circumstances leading to your vision or dream. Goals give focus and direction, while vision provides purpose and energy.
The techniques for ensuring that goals turn into results can be summed up by the acronym SMART. For a goal to be truly actionable, it must be Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic, and True. Exhibit C5 summarizes the meaning of each letter. To ensure that your goal is specific, you must state unambiguously what you want to accomplishthe results you are striving to achieve. Your goal must express results in terms of specific and concrete evidence of accomplishment. For example, many of us want to be better organized. This, however, is not clear or specific enough to be a goal. Furthermore, getting organized is highly subjective. To one person, being organized may mean maintaining an up-to-date personal calendar. To another, it may mean having a clean desktop and all papers filed. Thus, a goal must suggest a clear course of action and specify the results that will be used as proof of its successful completion.
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TTRUE
Besides identifying the specific evidence of accomplishment, a goal must be measurable. A goal must include specific quantitative measures and deadlinesactual dates and timing. This reinforces and seals commitment.
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Appendix C
Goal setting requires precision of thought, forecasting ability, and the fortitude to make commitments. Goal execution requires discipline and a concerted effort to avoid being thrown off course. Three key principles regarding goal setting should be kept in mind: 1 Define and clarify your payoffs. Payoffs (especially internal, subjective ones) must be clearly thought through. Hasty identification of payoffs can result in a loss of interest in a goal. The motivational power of the payoff must be strong enough to maintain the activities necessary to ensure success. Clarifying payoffs requires concerted self-examination. 2 Prioritize to avoid goal conflicts. Sometimes two goals work against each other. For example, we often attempt to accomplish two goals simultaneously, such as: 1. To get an A in a particular semester, and 2. To earn $5,000 from part-time work during the semester. Unless you have above-average skills and resources, the probability of achieving both at the same time is low. That is why it is important to establish priorities and focus your goal-setting efforts on your highest priority. Be willing to compromise on your lower priorities. 3 Review your goals often. Sticking to goals is difficult. Many uncontrollable variables in the external environment can distract and throw us off track. Be aware of distractions, review your goals daily, and resolve to accomplish small steps on a regular basis.
A SWOT analysis is a technique designed to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats and ensure that internal and external variables are consistent. Think of strengths and weaknesses in terms of internal or personal aspects, and opportunities and threats in terms of external, environmental conditions. Naturally, we have more control over the former than the latter. Exhibit C6 outlines questions you need to ask yourself when conducting a SWOT analysis.
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As with any corporate marketing plan, a thorough analysis of uncontrollable variables is necessary in order to identify opportunities and threats in the external environment. This step ensures that your vision and mission are viable. Use the framework in Exhibit C7 as a checklist for your external analysis. Plan to conduct research as if preparing a situation analysis for a company.
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Appendix C
Exhibit C7 Conducting a Personal Marketing Plan Situation (SWOT) Analysis For YOU INC.: A Marketing Framework
EXTERNAL (ENVIRONMENTAL) ANALYSIS OPPORTUNITIES AND THREATS Environment Checklist Economic conditions/trends Industry overview/considerations Legal/regulatory/professional issues Resource trends Societal & cultural issues/trends Technological trends Economic trends Location/mobility trends Implications Opportunities Threats Industry/Target Market Checklist Industry size and growth Industry/life cycle position Geographic scope Seasonality Industry structure/segmentation Employment rate/factors Segments, size, and accessability Target market(s) Industries Companies Hiring practices Decision makers, influencers, buyers, users Needs/benefits/Information wanted Mobility/promotion issues/opportunities Implications Opportunities Threats Competitive Checklist Intensity Skills Strengths/weaknesses Location Contact modes Objectives Resources Implications Opportunities Threats
available in these areas. If you have numerous areas of interest, use the priority grid to rank them. If you are considering starting your own business, you may first need to identify a market for investment sources, business advisors, and mentors. Begin with your highest-priority area, and gather information on your chosen career area.
Once you have narrowed your choice to a key industry, segment the industry and define potential target markets. For the industry and key market segments, collect data to assess market size, life cycle, growth trends, seasonality, and any other factors important to your identification of opportunities. Choose a target market with the best potential of employment, and then research individual companies to establish a contact list for your job search. Research employment trends, turnover, and promotion opportunities. How would you describe the climate and culture of your listed companies? Constantly evaluate the fit of your findings against your mission statement and goals. Do not be discouraged if your research results in a false start or causes you to change direction. A trial-and-error approach is a natural part of the process. As long as you keep in mind your mission statement and values you will find yourself selecting the appropriate tools for a successful job search. If you continue to experience positive signals, research the key decision makers. Determine the needs and the benefits they expect when employing a person with your skills and experience. Sal Divita recommends, When competition is intense, you have to provide the prospective employer with compelling evidence and rationale supporting your claim that youre the best candidate for the position. He further describes that compelling evidence as something that clearly and logically demonstrates that you offer the best solution to a need . . ., its what you can do for the employer.6
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Assessing competition
Research your competition. Consider graduation rates in your academic program or speciality, and labour market conditions, as well as the skills, resources, strategies, strengths, and weaknesses of other people vying for the same positions. How will you differentiate yourself? As Philip Kitchen comments, in a world of competitive job rivalry, differentiation and focus seem to be the best strategies to deploy.7 Identify your competitive advantage and unique selling proposition.
Objectives Checklist Dreams Values Likes/dislikes Industries/jobs of interest Decision criteria/priorities Wants/needs/goals Key life categories Priorities
A SWOT analysis must also address internal or personal variables. A thorough self-analysis will help develop an effective personal marketing plan for YOU INC. As Sal Divita explains, Its entirely possible that someone will hold the right job, but be unhappy with the work. This happens when the dominant personality of the company does not mesh with that of the person.8 Personal success demands that we lead from strengths and minimize weaknesses. A self-analysis enables you to do this by examining past and current objectives, resources, and results. Avoid any self-deception when conducting a personal analysis. You can organize your self-analysis into three areas: 1 What you want. 2 What you have. 3 The results you have achieved to date. Exhibit C8 provides a framework to assist in your self-analysis.
Exhibit C8 Conducting a Personal Marketing Plan Situation (SWOT) Analysis For YOU INC.: A Marketing Framework
1. INTERNAL (PERSONAL) ANALYSISSTRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES Resources Checklist Personality Social style Support network Contacts Reference/peer groups Financial Education Assets Energy level Health Experience Skills Results Checklist Milestones/life happenings Successes/disappointments Growth potential Strategies/tactics Product positioning Product Price Place Promotion Competitive advantage Unique selling proposition (USP) Opportunities lost Costs Obstacles Risks Payoffs Lessons learned
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Appendix C
Exhibit C9 Dream ListKey Life Categories: Worksheet Brainstorm your wants and needs for each of the categories below. Let your imagination soar. Do not edit your reactions, trust your instincts. Prioritize when completed.
FAMILY ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ CAREER/WORK ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ HOME/LIVING/LOCATION ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT/SPIRITUAL ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ SOCIAL _______________________________________ _______________________________________ _______________________________________ _______________________________________ FINANCIAL _______________________________________ _______________________________________ _______________________________________ _______________________________________ EDUCATIONAL _______________________________________ _______________________________________ _______________________________________ _______________________________________ PHYSICAL _______________________________________ _______________________________________ _______________________________________ _______________________________________
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and limitations, develop a list of your strengths and weaknesses, skills, interests, likes, and dislikes. Many analytical tools exist to help organize a personal profile. Be ready and willing to use personality tests such as Myers-Briggs, management/leadership profiles, skills inventories, and school and employment records. Career counsellors, friends, and relatives may contribute to your analysis. Include support networks and mentors. As with all tools, the better they are, the better the results will be. Be tough and honest to present a realistic picture. The future is the culmination of what you do today. An honest self-appraisal will help clarify and refine your vision.
Look at the strategies and tactics you have implemented and the results you have achieved to date. How would you describe your past activities? Have they been successful? If not, what needs to change? Evaluate your results and your level of satisfaction with them. What lessons have you learned? In what direction do these lessons point? When you have completed your situation analysis, you need to make sure your marketing mix reflects your career and personal priorities, will deliver high payoffs, and is consistent with the industry or employment area you have selected.
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Appendix C
As with any business, whether by choice or chance you are still making marketing and transaction decisions for YOU INC. In order to ensure the best match between your personal resources and objectives and the external environment, you need to plan and execute a personal marketing mix.
Your target market is an industry or employment area and those companies which you want your marketing mix to appeal to. This includes the people who have the power to hire you. You may have identified a single, specific target market or a number of attractive segments. Thus you may develop marketing strategies to appeal to one narrow market. On the other hand, you may be considering a broader, combined market or multiple target markets. Whatever approach you choose, a clear concept of your target markets will help you determine the best ways to appeal to each one. Exhibit C10 shows how you might adapt the traditional 4 Ps of marketing to reflect your personal marketing plan. For each element of the marketing mix, you will need to develop objectives, strategies, and tactics.
Product
The product is YOU INC.: your personal goals, resources, strategies, and results. As quoted in a recent news story on personal marketing planning, Tom Peters wrote, To be in business today, our most important job is to be head marketer for the brand called You.9 Write a concise and objective statement of product strategy outlining your features and benefits, key competitive advantage, and the image you want to project.
Place
Place is your preferred working location. As with any element of the marketing mix, you need to set objectives to guide your strategy. Assess what YOU, the product, needs in terms of your work, home, and leisure environments. Identify your preferred geographic location. Include other potential influences such as company culture, preExhibit C10 Personal Marketing MixStrategy Decision Areas PRODUCT (YOU INC.)
Vision Mission Values Skills Resources Results Competitive advantage Objectives Short-term Long-term Strategies Tactics Priorities Payoffs
PRICE (INCOME)
Objectives Expectations Short-term Long-term Type of compensation Benefits Constraints Strategies Flexibility Tactics
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ferred working environment, and mobility factors. Will you implement an extensive, selective, or exclusive distribution strategy? Do you require intermediaries to assist you?
Price
Price is the income you want to receive. Again, objectives set the tone for your shortand long-term expectations. Are you profit, sales, or status quo oriented? How flexible can you be? Will you price yourself higher, or lower, or equal to the competition? What type of compensation plan is most appropriate for you? What benefits do you expect?
Promotion
Promotion is how you communicate your benefits to the target market. Should you strive to inform, persuade, remind? Is your goal to attract attention, arouse interest, create desire, or achieve action? Which promotion area will be your priorityMass Selling? Personal Selling? Your promotion strategy should outline the broad how of creating your message and reaching your target. How will you position yourself relative to your competition? How best can you communicate your competitive advantage? How will you best reach your target audience? What blend of tactics will you usersums, networking, interviews, direct mail, cold calling?
Evaluating alternatives
The alternative you should first take action on should be the one that is the easiest to implement in terms of avoiding obstacles and minimizing costs and risks. Your text outlines a number of ways to evaluate and select the best alternative. One quick and simple method, the CORP method, outlines key decision criteria and enables you to objectively evaluate each alternative. Costs reflect your resources and values. Costs fall into three categoriestime, money, and energy or emotional costs. Consider each alternative in terms of the level of resources needed. Obstacles represent the barriers you are likely to encounter while implementing the strategy. These can be internal or external. For example, your strategy may require you to change a habit in order to reach your goal. Or there may be external problems, such as high local unemployment rates or strong competition, to be overcome. Often, identifying obstacles leads to the development of sub-steps that must be executed before or simultaneously with your main strategy. Risks are the opportunities foregone by focusing on one particular strategy. Risk assessment makes it easier for you to consider the implications of taking an unproductive or dead end route. Finally, assessment of the payoffs for each option enables us to focus on the relative rewards of each strategy. For maximum motivational power, every alternative should carry a high payoff. If your first assessment does not result in a high payoff, rework the strategy until it does, or alternatively, abandon it and replace it with a higher-payoff alternative. Exhibit C11 provides a framework for choosing the easiest yet highest-payoff strategy. When you apply CORP criteria to strategies, you consider both positive and negative implications. For each criterion, specify whether the expected outcome is high, medium, or low. When first choosing outcomes, trust your instincts. An intuitive reaction results in better truth. Often the computer of your mind can process complex data more efficiently than a conscious, calculated approach, so trust your initial instincts. As with any kind of screening method, both qualitative and quantitative criteria are valuable.
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Appendix C
ALTERNATIVE 2 Net Cost (Time, $, Energy) Key Obstacles Risk Potential Payoff Potential
ALTERNATIVE 3 Net Cost (Time, $, Energy) Key Obstacles Risk Potential Payoff Potential
Action plans are the heart of accomplishing your goals and ultimately your vision. Exhibit C12 provides a format for summarizing the necessary information into a plan of action.
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SMART GOAL:
(Change of Routine, Problem, or Opportunity)
PROBABILITY:
Of Accomplishment with Current Resources? _______%
PAYOFFS:
(Concrete & Personal) 1. 2. 3.
ALTERNATIVES
Must Accomplish the Goal and Deliver Payoffs 1. 2. 3.
ACTION STEPS
EST. HOURS
DEADLINE
SOURCE
REVIEW
uct actions are necessary to accomplish your goals? What place, price, and promotion activities have to be coordinated to bring all the pieces together? As with any marketing mix, the individual elements must work in tandem. Marketing Demo C1 contains an executive summary from a personal marketing plan prepared by a student taking an introductory marketing course. It shows how one person, with a vision of becoming a marketing manager for a large retail chain, integrated the steps in the personal marketing plan process to produce a personal marketing plan.
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Appendix C
By applying the CORP evaluation criteria, I discovered that Alternative 2 would provide me with the highest payoff (no debt), with the least cost, obstacles and risks. Some steps I will take to implement my plan are: 1 Research scholarship opportunities. 2 Discuss workload and career possibilities with my store supervisor. 3 Develop a study schedule and stick to it!
Receiving my MBA would be a major accomplishment for me and would significantly improve my chances of securing a good retail marketing position.
backed up. You may have based your plan on passing a critical test or relocating easily to a new location. However, life circumstances change, and the more we consider and embrace potential change, the better prepared we are to adapt. A contingency plan acknowledges that no forecast is 100 percent accurate. It prepares you to be aware of and adjust to early warning signals that things may be moving off course.
Making it happen
Now that your plan is researched, written, and ready to execute, take a deep breaththe fun is just beginning. Now it is time to get out there and make things happen. In an article in Marketing News, Sal Divita says that there are four major problems facing a job searcher,10 1 Not knowing how and where to start. 2 Lacking in direction and focus.
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1. 2.
3 Imagining personal barriers [and allowing them] to contribute to a low sense of self-worth. 4 Lack of confidence in managing the future.
The preparation of a personal marketing plan will go a long way toward alleviating these problems. As Mr. Divita proclaims, Is there a perfect job for you? You bet.11 Effective self-marketing helps you identify it. A propensity for action ensures that you will find it.
Sal Divita, Perfect Job Awaits If Your Personality Is Right, Marketing News, 4/24/95, p. 10. P. Kolesnichenko, Personal Marketing Plan Report, University College of the Cariboo, BBUS 343 Course, 3/10/98, p. 11. 3. Personal Marketing Plan Report, University College of the Cariboo, BBUS 343 Course. 4. R.N. Bolles, What Color Is Your Parachute? Ten Speed Press. 5. Sal Divita, Perfect Job Awaits If Your Personality Is Right, Marketing News, 4/24/95, p. 10. 6. Sal Divita, How You Define Product Makes A Big Difference, Marketing News, 3/28/94, p. 10. 7. P. Kitchen, Self-Marketing Is Easily Taught, But Hard to Learn, Marketing News, 8/29/94, p. 4. 8. Sal Divita, Perfect Job Awaits If Your Personality Is Right, Marketing News, 4/24/95, p. 10. 9 . Tom Peters, You and Co, as quoted in The Vancouver Sun, Saturday, 11/1/97. 10. Sal Divita, Getting Started Is The Toughest Part of the Job, Marketing News, 8/28/95, p. 10. 11. Sal Divita, Perfect Job Awaits If Your Personality Is Right, Marketing News, 4/24/95, p. 10.