Hello, I’m Rebecca Thorman and here’s the latest:
After living in the Midwest my entire life (Illinois, then Wisconsin), I just moved to Washington, DC. My job at the start-up company Alice.com graciously let me keep my position so I work remotely spreading the joy of receiving toilet paper and toothpaste in the mail. I manage PR and Community for the company. My boyfriend Ryan is the co-founder and COO of the start-up company BrazenCareerist.com.
My background is in design, and starting my blog is the best career and life move I’ve ever made. Blogging is how I met Ryan (we’re dorky like that), and Modite has been featured in several media outlets including the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal.
Keep reading to find out more, and thanks for stopping by; I like you already.
Best Career Advice
Helping your career when you’re not middle class (36 comments)
Why Generation Y should job-hop, even in the recession (46 comments)
Skip grad school, life is better with experience (26 comments)
Personal branding, accountability & just be yourself already (34 comments)
How to step up and have anything but a normal career (31 comments)
Re-Thinking Workaholism (42 comments)
My relationship, made public
Real-life disclosures on the myth of work/life balance (51 comments)
Careers are like relationships, so ask your mom for advice (40 comments)
A New Residence for Home (31 comments)
Controversial posts on Women
Women will lead Generation Y – what will men do? (48 comments)
Generation Y breeds a new kind of woman (62 comments)
Career women should try harder – especially in the Midwest (44 comments)
I heart Social Media & Blogging
The four truths of blog networks to use to your advantage (31 comments)
My blogging paralysis (33 comments)
Stop writing about social media to be a successful blogger (51 comments)
Social media is difficult like intimacy (45 comments)
Social media doesn’t create new generation leaders (22 comments)
The Corruption of Authenticity (33 comments)
Where you live is important
Moving to a New City (39 comments)
The power of place – what do you think? (38 comments)
Will Gen Y ruin local community? (42 comments)
Getting Personal
How to decide if you have a good job (32 comments)
Trying isn’t good enough (29 comments)
Generation Y cheerleading
What it means to be a Gen Y leader (31 comments)
Generation Y is too quiet, too conservative (68 comments)
The rising rift between Gen X and Gen Y (33 comments)
7 concessions and a challenge to the Gen Y naysayers (35 comments)
Back off: Gen Y’s helicopter parents are a good thing (35 comments)
More Good Posts on Career
Niceness is the new career trend (32 comments)
Who hires in a recession? (23 comments)
Gen Y doesn’t need a reference (47 comments)
Don’t burn bridges is bad career advice (43 comments)
My Favorite
Don’t make career plans – here’s why (47 comments)
Connect with me
Follow me on Twitter
Fan me on Facebook – new!
Brazen Careerist
FriendFeed
LinkedIn
Commenting Policy
Read if you’re not planning on being nice.
Modite
[Mod-ahyt] ~ Noun.
1) Modern urbanite.
18 replies on “About This Blog”
[…] Truer words were never spoken Jay. But I hated that part of my first job too – I wanted to make the decisions, so I quit and did my own thing. Why shouldn’t Gen Y do the same? Rebecca Thorman actually describes a friend who is “straddling”, keeping one foot in the workplace and one in the entrepreneurial world. This isn’t a new concept, and I did that for a while too. Lack of sleep is pretty much the price to pay when becoming an entrepreneur and even when first entering the workforce, and I think that’s the real point that Recruiting Animal is making…that and the fact that Gen Y is just going through a point in life that we all go through, and that every generation goes through at some point. In short, that Gen Y is nothing special. That’s most likely true, but we all kind of think our generation is a little bit special, don’t we? It’s kind of like cheering for your favorite football team. […]
[…] The first is the word Modite which is a made-up word combining “Modern” with “Urbanite”. It’s a cute word and is the title of a blog written by a Gen Yer who lives in Madison, WI. While I have no desire to comment on the content of her blog, I do want to comment on the adequateness of calling herself an urbanite. Again, the urban we’re talking about here is Madison, Wisconsin and Madison is not my idea of urban. My loose concept of urban is NYC, San Francisco, Paris, London, Tokyo even Sacramento or Denver. You know, big cities. Lots of people. […]
[…] are a few people who I would consider to be big names in writing specifically about Gen Y, Rebecca Thorman is one of those names. On her blog Modite, Rebecca gives advice to "navigate beyond the line […]
[…] reading Rebecca Thorman’s entries. Have been bookmarking them. They are inspirational & encouraging without being […]
[…] Rebecca Thorman who writes about the modern urbanite at Modite […]
[…] About This Blog […]
[…] gracious host for my time in Madison was Rebecca Thorman, who keeps a great blog at Modite, and who runs MAGNET. She showed me around town, took me to meet […]
[…] is a provocative — and excellent — article from Rebecca Thorman on her Modite site called ‘Don’t burn bridges’ is bad career advice. If you think […]
[…] blogger Rebecca Thorman at Modite recently put up an interesting post about Millennials and Community. There is one aspect […]
[…] HomeAbout This BlogPressVideosContact […]
[…] Fighting balance across the fence is blur. And that is where I live. A life that should preclude me from having any sort of relationship with anybody or anything other than work, but in reality, betters those relationships. A place that makes me excited to be young and in love and working hard. […]
[…] from Gen Y, especially when it comes to careers. People like Dan Schawbel on Personal Branding, Rebecca Thorman of Modite, Alexandra Levit of Water Cooler Wisdom, or Ryan Healy of Brazen Careerist are cutting […]
[…] my good friend Rebecca over at Modite does this thing each month where she lays out about five or six goals for herself. […]
[…] & Life Design & Style About Photos Press […]
[…] only met Rebecca once, and I would be surprised if she remembered. (Since then, we’ve connected through the book […]
[…] Is all this busy work necessary? Valuable? What is the end in mind and the best path to get there? Rebecca Thorman, guest-writing about Social Media and Next Generation Leaders at Valeria Maltoni’s […]
[…] Rebecca Modite‘s blog is always golden, but this guest post from Sam Davidson was especially awesome. […]
[…] Rebecca Modite‘s blog is always golden, but this guest post from Sam Davidson was especially awesome. […]