From the Government to Big Brands, From the Left Brain to the Right Brain

Three months ago, I made a huge change in my life. After eight years as a government consultant in DC, I picked up my family and moved to Chicago to work at Cramer-Krasselt. I went from DC to Chicago, from consulting to PR, from government clients to big brands, from the suburbs to the city, from leading virtual teams to being in the office with my entire team every day, from being at the tip of the spear of the #gov20 movement to being just another PR guy prattling on about social media – and for the last three months, I’ve been trying to adapt to this new life of mine.

As you can tell, a lot has changed, but a lot has remained the same too. I still spend way too much time in meetings. I’m still having varying levels of success managing office politics. And I’m still trying to change the status quo. I’m not ready to say that PR in the private sector is any better or worse than government consulting – it’s just different. And for me, different is good. Instead of being the grizzled veteran who’s been with the company longer than most people, I’m the new guy. Instead of being the guy everyone runs to for social media advice, everyone here at least knows the basics, with many knowing much much more than that. Every day, I feel challenged. Every day, I learn something new. Every day, I realize I’m in an entirely different world now. Even though I still do PR and communications, the clients and the environment are very different. So while there are some similarities, in many ways, it’s like a whole new career.

This isn’t to say that one is better or worse than the other – in fact, it’s the dichotomy of the two that I’m enjoying. While I find myself learning more and more about branding and advertising every day, I’m also teaching my new colleagues a lot about staff forecasting, team management, performance reviews, and strategic planning too. If I’ve learned anything over these last three months, it’s that the typical PR pro would be more effective if they thought more like a consultant, and that the typical government consultant sure could benefit from some more creativity and risk-taking.

If you’ve done PR in both the public and private sectors, what kinds of differences have you experienced?

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David B. Grinberg

Nice post, Steve. Change can certainly be good after a long career doing the same job and being the senior go-to person day after day. That eventually becomes too routine, boring and unchallenging. Change also brings new knowledge and new opportunity, as you astutely point out. Thus, kudos to you for taking a leap of faith — not everyone does. Good to hear it’s working out for the best.

DBG

Corey McCarren

Awesome infograph, Steve. I actually found it useful in helping with a recent career decision, so you’ve helped at least one person with this!