Recently, I stumbled across a very curious case.
As part of a job interview process (yes, some interesting updates coming soon), I had the opportunity to present "my proudest moments" regarding my career.
Gosh, that was hard. After being brave enough to move to the software industry, I have been nothing but fortunate to work with wonderful teams of any size.
(even when I made this meme the second time I heard "we've been acquired")
So, being honest with myself, I had so many proud moments to share:
However, I thought that maybe people won't be interested in these proudest moments, the job was very marketing & strategy related, so I had to dig into some numbers, GTM campaigns, and product launches.
Now that's where the devil lies.
I have some assets and notes from my previous company activities, but as we all know, leaving the company means leaving your work as part of your legacy. Clean the laptop and embark on a new journey. Some companies have strict regulations about what information a person can own/share.
But I was not prepared for the moment when a company and a job you were proud of are now gone from the big, wide world. As part of the acquisition processes, marketing materials, assets, videos, or products may no longer exist. Dead links, missing videos and interviews, rebranded apps, deleted social media accounts.
So, you, as a marketer who loves backing up their stories with data and proof of success, are now a storyteller of a non-existent story.
It was a massive lesson learned for me and my potential new process of describing myself as a marketing professional. But it was also a reminder of the fragility of our work as creative individuals.
I would love to hear your thoughts about how you present yourself when you've lost valuable assets that prove your achievements and experience. Especially if you have ever gone through a similar story.
P.S.: It's good that I have the Atlassian Community and my extensive list of articles discussing how marketing teams can achieve more with proper communication, collaboration, and tool adoption. 😌