When I reflect on my journey with social media, I often think back to the early 2000s—a time when very few of us were experimenting with blogs in India. What started as nothing more than “memos to myself” soon became the foundation of how I shaped my professional identity, found opportunities, and built a community of like-minded professionals.
Today, after years of being deeply engaged with social platforms, both personally and as part of my role with Philips India, I can confidently say that social media has the power to transform careers, build professional communities, and expand learning far beyond geographical boundaries.
Making Work Visible
One of the most valuable lessons I learned is what a friend of mine calls “making your work visible.” Traditionally, your work would be seen only by your boss or immediate team. But when you start writing blogs, sharing thoughts on LinkedIn, engaging in tweet chats, or answering questions on platforms like Quora, you make your expertise and learning visible to the world.
This visibility, over time, helps you connect with peers, industry experts, mentors, and even future employers. Many of my own career opportunities—such as joining 2020 Social, Brave New Talent, and eventually Philips—came directly because someone had read my work or followed my social presence.
Social Recognition Fuels Growth
In organizations, recognition has traditionally come from managers. Today, recognition also comes from peers—both inside and outside the workplace. A single “thank you” post on a company’s internal social platform could be seen by senior leaders, motivating employees and making invisible work visible.
Externally, the same holds true: when an industry leader responds to or retweets your thoughts, an entirely new network discovers you. I’ve had thought leaders like Tom Peters amplify my ideas, which not only validated my work but also expanded my connections exponentially.
Learning, Not Just Broadcasting
Too many people see social media purely as a broadcasting tool. For me, platforms like Twitter and LinkedIn have always been primarily about learning. Where else can you interact, free of cost, with global thinkers, authors, and practitioners in your field?
By following them, participating in their conversations, and humbly sharing your own reflections, you begin to establish credibility. Over time, learning and sharing build a cycle of growth—your questions, answers, and observations start adding value to others.
Balancing Personal and Professional
One challenge professionals face is blending personal and professional identity online. My own rule of thumb: avoid polarizing topics like religion and politics; focus instead on sharing knowledge, interesting finds, and the occasional slice of life that shows your human side.
People don’t want to engage with robots constantly pushing content—they engage with people who are knowledgeable and relatable.
Social Media and Hiring
Social platforms are not just branding tools; they are becoming central to hiring and career discovery. At Philips, we’ve hired colleagues we first connected with on Twitter or met casually at a tweet-up. Recruitment, increasingly, is about relationships built long before a job opens up.
On the other side, candidates themselves can demonstrate expertise by blogging, contributing to open-source platforms, sharing portfolios on Instagram or Pinterest, or answering knowledge-based questions on Quora and GitHub. When a recruiter discovers you through your body of work, your resume becomes just one small part of the equation.
For Newcomers: Start with Purpose
If you’re just starting out, the first step is clarity: why are you on social media? Is it to learn, to find a job, to build a consulting practice, or to develop a reputation? Without clarity, it’s easy to get lost in random activity.
Start small. Follow thought leaders in your field. Comment on their posts. Ask genuine questions. Share your learning. Over time, people will notice. Remember, social media is like planting a tree—its fruits are seen years later, not overnight.
The Future is Blended
Within organizations, social tools are reshaping learning and collaboration. At Philips, we’ve been rethinking the traditional classroom and e-learning models by blending them with social elements—discussion groups, ongoing interactions before and after training, and internal knowledge communities.
Externally, building an employer brand is no longer about marketing slogans—it’s about showcasing the real work, the real people, and the culture of collaboration that lives within the company.
Closing Thoughts
Social media is not about chasing followers or producing content for the sake of it. It is about authentic engagement, continuous learning, and consistent visibility of your work and ideas.
My own career is testimony to the fact that when you invest sincerely in sharing knowledge and building relationships through these platforms, opportunities come your way—sometimes in surprising and life-changing forms.
So, whether you are an HR professional, an engineer, a designer, or a student, start today: make your work visible, build your learning network, and nurture your professional growth through the immense possibilities that social media offers.
