I thought I’d offer up a few gifts that, in a way, are a bit re-gifted: the very best business and career advice I’ve ever gotten.
No matter your job, your career, or your goals, these gems should provide at least some wattage of a guiding light. They’ve served me well and I’m proud to pass them on to you, whether you use them in your copywriting career or beyond.
Operate on a Three-Year Plan
Every three years, you should aim to either move up or move out.
Moving up may mean a literal promotion or it may mean getting a whole new set of skills and responsibilities, but it must involve growing. Moving out, of course, means moving on to a new company. Obviously, you may not make these happen in exactly three years, but it’s a good time frame to shoot for.
If you’re running your own business, it may mean letting go of some clients that you’ve worked with for several years to make room for new clients. (Or dropping some clients that you don’t enjoy working with.) You may have clients that you work with for longer than three years, particularly if you’re pitching new ideas and the client values your work.
But you may also find that you keep some clients around as a safety net, even when they can’t pay you your rate. These are the types of clients you can write for in your sleep and that aren’t helping you grow your business or your skill set. If this is the case, it may be time to ramp up your pitching and find new clients that allow you to expand your skills.
To Get a Promotion, Start Doing the Job You Want
The very best way to get a promotion is to find out the responsibilities of and expectations for the role you want and just start doing them. Once you’ve been doing them for while (and your company depends on you to do them), you can go into your boss’s office with a very strong case for a promotion.
If you’re freelancing, this may mean pitching new services to clients or offering to take on more of a role beyond executing copywriting projects.
For example, perhaps you love working with one of your freelance clients but you notice they don’t have anyone filling a creative director role. Start taking on more of a leadership role as you’re working with designers on projects. Push concepts further. Pitch new ideas. Just like in a full-time role, you can then make the case for how you can add value in this role with your freelance client.
No One Will Take Care of You But You
No matter how great your company or your boss is their primary purposes are not to take care of you. Especially if you’ve been at a company for a while, it can be easy to get lulled into the idea that the company will take care of you or that they owe you something.
Cynical as this sounds, all that they owe you is your paycheck each week or two and whatever benefits they’ve promised. The company’s goals are to do whatever it takes to make the company successful. That may, or may not, be what it takes to make you successful.
Never, never stop looking out for yourself. Play fair and be forthright, but keep your own best interests in mind.
Similarly, your freelance clients typically aren’t going to offer you a raise at the end of the year or continue to keep throwing you freelance projects even if they have month after month. If you need to raise your rates, it’s on you to do so. If you want work to continue coming your way, keep pitching your client new ideas and act as a valuable partner that is crucial to their business.
Never Stop Thinking About Your Next Step
You always have to be thinking about and planning for your next step in your career. Even if you plan to stay in a position for a while, you need to be thinking about what skills you can acquire there and how you can grow as a professional.
It’s easier than you think to get complacent and let several years go by before you realize it. Enjoy your current job and work hard at it, but always be planning for where you’d like to go and/or what you’d like to do next.
As a freelancer, it’s easy to have a handful of repeat clients and think you can coast. You need to always be pitching (even if it’s not as frequent) and you need to always find ways to grow, even if it means learning something new on your own, outside of your current client work.
Always be learning (and keeping up with trends in your industry).
If You Don’t Like Your Job, Fix It
You spend way too much of your life in your job to be miserable at it. If you don’t like your job, you have two options: either find a way to make it better or find a new one.
Everyone spends some time being unhappy with a job, but don’t be one of those people for whom work misery and complaining is a constant. Your job is often much more in your control than you realize: Make it better or make your exit.
Sit down once a quarter and evaluate your job or your current client roster (or both, depending on your situation). What is going well? Anything need to change? What possible solutions can you try to improve your situation?
We highly recommend you do a SWOT analysis to see what is working (and what isn’t) in your business.
Never Stop Growing
There is always something new to learn, and constantly pursuing new skills and knowledge will help to keep you sharp and engaged—not to mention a hot commodity in the job market.
Each year at the very least, find a new set of information or skills you know little about and make it your goal to master it. Technology and business are changing and evolving at lightning speed; you can practically flip open a business magazine, point your finger, and find a new topic to discover.
The more you learn, the more useful you are to your current and future employers—and the more you can charge for your services.
Your Turn
What’s the best business advice you’ve ever gotten? Let us know in the comments below!
Last Updated on October 18, 2023
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