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Social Media Skills: Resume Killer or Booster?

Once hyped up as the next big thing, the social media job market has recently undergone a considerable slowdown, according to newly released stats from career site Indeed.com. Growth in positions with the title “social media manager,” slowed to 50 percent in the past year, a dramatic decline from recent years when triple (and even quadruple) digit growth was commonplace.


Some of social media’s staunchest advocates are waving a white flag. “Social media managers, it could be time to find a new title,” cautions Quartz’s social media reporter Vickie Elmer. “Social media jobs, once much vaunted, are new frequently regarded with skepticism, even contempt,” writes social news site Buzz feed’s Rob Fisherman.


But don’t delete those social media skills from your resume just yet.


Behind the decline in social media managers is a sea change in the way that social media itself is used within organizations, say industry analysts and former managers themselves. Once the exclusive domain of digital gurus, Twitter, Facebook and other tools are gradually becoming everyone’s responsibility. “We are seeing an increased demand for social savvy candidates across the business - from human resources to product to customer service,” notes Amy Crow, Indeed’s communication director, in Quartz.


The numbers back her up. Compared to a year ago, there are 13 times as many jobs on Indeed that involve the use of social media in some way. “[We’re] seeing this demand span many levels, from executive assistants to senior vice presidents,” Crow explains. Buzzfeed contributing editor Fisherman, once a social media manager for The Huffington Post, concurs: “In speaking with higher-ups at outlets old and new, I heard from all of them that social was no longer peripheral, but core to their strategy,” he writes. “Concentrating authority in a single personage no longer made sense . . . .”


While these comments are in the context of news outlets, the same transformations are registering across a broad range of industries. “As a business solution, social has evolved, moving well beyond the marketing department, to address business objectives across the organization,” concludes a July 2013 report from MIT’s Sloan Management Review, which surveyed more than 2,500 businesses in 99 countries. Another recent report from analysts McKinsey pegs the collective value of extending social media company-wide at $1.3 trillion in improved productivity and customer awareness.


Customer service teams at many companies have already embraced social media, often out of necessity. More than half of consumers now use social tools like Twitter and Facebook to reach out to companies with questions and complaints, according to Nielsen’s 2012 Social Media Report. Meanwhile, sales teams are also turning to Twitter, LinkedIn and other tools for what is being called “”: sales intelligence, lead generation and network building. Last year, IBM saw a 400 percent surge in sales after implementing a social selling program, and 61 percent of U.S. marketers now use social media to generate new business.







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