Shelly Palmer

Everyone Has an Asterisk* Driving Their Career Success

Paul Bailo, a fellow member of the Marketing Executives Networking Group (MENG) and an executive and entrepreneur in the overlapping worlds of marketing/digital/data, recently told me that everyone has an asterisk. It was the first time that I’d heard of this concept.

On Google’s first page for “everyone has an asterisk,” most of the links discuss baseball where the asterisks related to players’ performances being unfairly enhanced.

A couple of links took the opposite point-of-view and complain that total career results had been unfairly limited. Examples: Reduced playing time due to injuries and bad judgment by managers.

Asterisks Are Relevant to Successful Job Search and Career Success

All of us should be able to:

Positive Asterisks

Paul tells his MBA students, “Asterisks are sometimes shining moments in our lives… you just have to know how to use them.” Examples for job search:

There are hundreds of additional positive asterisks that could be leveraged for career success. Some can be used often because they are based on your experience and positioning, while some are relative only to a specific opportunity that you need to research to discover.

Negative Asterisks

There can be hundreds of additional negative asterisks that need to be negated or even flipped to positives; the challenge is to identify these so you can address them proactively.

Common Ground

While the details of every person and every job search are somewhat different, “our experience of being ‘different’ has been the same.”  This quotation comes from another blog I found on Google… the only one that had nothing to do with sports: Normans.

This blog goes on to say: The truth is, everyone has an asterisk.  Some of ours are just a little bigger than others… I love my big asterisk.”

Rewriting this to apply to job search, I believe it means to embrace who each of us is and to communicate our uniqueness and our asterisks in ways that make us more obviously beneficial to our next employer.

It also suggests that we shouldn’t try to hide our asterisks but use them to our advantage, assuming they’re relevant. 

(Note:  Paul Bailo recently published another book that anyone searching for his or her next job should read: The Essential Digital Interview Handbook.)