Although Joe Brown 鈥02, editor in chief of Popular Science, is happy with his meandering academic and career journey, he is careful to tell students not to follow in his footsteps.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to find your own way and that is going to be the exact right way for you,鈥 said Brown, an English major, during a Nov. 1 talk on campus. He told students that his journey through Cornell included taking a couple of years away, time he spent taking stream flow measurements, attending auto tech school and working in Ithaca restaurants.
The reassuring message he had for students? Cornell always welcomed him back.
鈥淎t Cornell, you can study pretty much anything. You can take Latin, you can take dendrochronology, you can take a six-credit course on Joyce鈥檚 鈥楿lysses.鈥 鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd sometimes you wander off the path, but (advisors and professors) will say 鈥榣ook at this delicious garden you鈥檝e discovered鈥 and I think that is the arc of a university: making sure students can wander off one path and discover another.鈥
Brown spoke as this year鈥檚 Munschauer Speaker hosted by the 麻豆视频 & 麻豆视频鈥 Career Development Center. The Munschauer Career Series was endowed by the former director of the Cornell University Career Center, John Munschauer, to provide funds for Arts & 麻豆视频 alumni to return to campus to benefit current A&S students' career education.
During his time at Cornell, Brown said he didn鈥檛 write for the Daily Sun and didn鈥檛 have any internships, but he was a waiter at Banfi鈥檚, which was a formative experience for him. 鈥淚 was a great waiter,鈥 he said, adding that staff there still remember him. 鈥淏efore that time, I didn鈥檛 have experience being really good at stuff and that gave me a lot of confidence.鈥
Another thing he was good at, though, was writing, and he also loved 鈥済adgets鈥 and technology, so he headed to the city after graduation, where his restaurant experience came in handy while he 鈥渁pplied for every job in New York City,鈥 in the media industry.
He landed a night shift job at 鈥淯s Weekly,鈥 (where he said his boss called him Alan because that was the name of the guy who had his desk during the daytime), and eventually he got an email from Popular Science, which was looking for an entry-level editor.
鈥淥nce I got there, I was on a mission to get as many bylines as possible,鈥 he said, adding that he had his first cover story one year later. 鈥淚 thought I had fooled somebody into hiring me and I was not going to lose that opportunity.鈥
Every month, one of his main objectives was to scoop Wired Magazine, a main competitor. As the person in charge of Popular Science鈥檚 auto and gadget sections, he told companies with new technologies to come to him first rather than Wired if they wanted to be covered. When editors at Wired starting losing stories to Brown, they hired him away to job in San Francisco.鈥淚 learned so much about being a journalist at Wired 鈥 I learned about ethics, trade craft, sentence structure,鈥 he said. Plus, he started a blog about cars, 鈥渟o I could get car companies to let me drive cool cars.鈥
Attracted to the online world, he went to work for Gizmodo with a mission to bring more highly-polished journalism to the digital world, he said. He eventually returned to Wired and then to Popular Science in 2016, even though the magazine was struggling at the time, he said.
鈥淭his seemed like a terrific opportunity to pick up a brand that has an amazing history,鈥 he said, plus Popular Science readers were a more diverse bunch than those at either Wired or Gizmodo, and he found that prospect challenging.
Brown shared a few career tips with students:
- Although networking may be painful, it鈥檚 worth the effort.
- Don鈥檛 sacrifice your ethics to get ahead, that鈥檚 the most important thing you can protect.
- Keep your resume to one page 鈥 your cover letter is more important.
- A car antennae can be handy in a fight.
- Working late doesn鈥檛 always mean you鈥檙e committed, sometimes it means you have time management issues.
- Ask people you admire to buy you coffee.
- Always negotiate. Don鈥檛 think you鈥檙e too junior to negotiate.
- Remember that we鈥檙e all faking it.
Perhaps the most important message, though, is to follow your own path.
鈥淲e鈥檝e all got this tiny voice in us that says, 鈥榤aybe you should go this way and not that way鈥,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 am a big fan of listening to that voice.鈥