Sunday, May 24, 2020
Its Counterintuitive for Job Seekers - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Itâs Counterintuitive for Job Seekers - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career It would be interesting to review a few perceptions that job seekers have on issues stemming from feelings rather than from thinking. Such perceptions are based more on gut feelings rather than logic. Examples follow. The interview is about me. People feel good when asked to come in and interview, because they think the interview is about them. In fact, it is not. The interview is about the interviewerâs needs and the interviewerâs competitive evaluation process that considers the candidateâs ability to provide what the interviewer needs. Accept LinkedIn invitations only from people you know. When in transition, itâs not about whom you know so much as it is who knows you. After all, itâs you who is looking for a job. And the more connections you have, the more opportunities youâll have. If youâre hiding in a box, no one will find you. Create your own résumé. People in transition need to preserve their savings, and so many compose their own résumés, which eventually get changed or edited or rewritten by others equally unqualified yet willing to help. The typical outcome is a less than competitive résumé that generates very few or no bites. The best advice, therefore, is to hire a trusted and recommended professional, certified, and experienced résumé writer. A less expensive solutionâ"provided youâre absolutely certain your résumé is a good oneâ"is to have it edited by a professional editor. Such an editor or resume writer knows what sells and would put that knowledge and expertise to work for you. And yes, the good ones are not inexpensive. No need to tell family about being in transition. Many people feel uneasy or embarrassed about revealing too many details of their transition. Thatâs a big mistake, because family and friends really are the people who will go out of their way to be of help. No need to pay for career coaching. Again, like with the résumé, people want to preserve their savings and do not want to spend on professional help such as experienced career coaches. This too is a huge mistake. A career coach will not only shorten the in-transition period but also teach you pertinent interviewing skills as well as how to negotiate a job offer. In most cases, fees spent on career coaching are dwarfed by the benefits gained from knowing how to negotiate a better compensation package. Focus only on your past career path and ignore other possibilities. In todayâs fast-changing business environment, new jobs are being invented every day, and many of the pastâs traditional jobs are morphing into new ones or becoming totally eliminated. Job seekers who do not consider job opportunities in fields unrelated to their past ones make a mistake. Some reach a pointâ"possibly because of age discrimination or the elimination of their traditional jobsâ"at which a change in career might be a wonderful solution. It worked for me extremely well. Author: Alex Freund is a career and interviewing coach known as the âlanding expertâ for publishing his 80 page list of job-search networking groups via his web site http://www.landingexpert.com/. He is prominent in a number of job-search networking groups; makes frequent public presentations, he does workshops on resumes and LinkedIn, teaches a career development seminar and publishes his blog focused on job seekers. Alex worked at Fortune 100 companies headquarters managing many and large departments. He has extensive experience at interviewing people for jobs and is considered an expert in preparing people for interviews. Alex is a Cornell University grad, lived on three continents and speaks five languages. Itâs Counterintuitive for Job Seekers - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career It would be interesting to review a few perceptions that job seekers have on issues stemming from feelings rather than from thinking. Such perceptions are based more on gut feelings rather than logic. Examples follow. The interview is about me. People feel good when asked to come in and interview, because they think the interview is about them. In fact, it is not. The interview is about the interviewerâs needs and the interviewerâs competitive evaluation process that considers the candidateâs ability to provide what the interviewer needs. Accept LinkedIn invitations only from people you know. When in transition, itâs not about whom you know so much as it is who knows you. After all, itâs you who is looking for a job. And the more connections you have, the more opportunities youâll have. If youâre hiding in a box, no one will find you. Create your own résumé. People in transition need to preserve their savings, and so many compose their own résumés, which eventually get changed or edited or rewritten by others equally unqualified yet willing to help. The typical outcome is a less than competitive résumé that generates very few or no bites. The best advice, therefore, is to hire a trusted and recommended professional, certified, and experienced résumé writer. A less expensive solutionâ"provided youâre absolutely certain your résumé is a good oneâ"is to have it edited by a professional editor. Such an editor or resume writer knows what sells and would put that knowledge and expertise to work for you. And yes, the good ones are not inexpensive. No need to tell family about being in transition. Many people feel uneasy or embarrassed about revealing too many details of their transition. Thatâs a big mistake, because family and friends really are the people who will go out of their way to be of help. No need to pay for career coaching. Again, like with the résumé, people want to preserve their savings and do not want to spend on professional help such as experienced career coaches. This too is a huge mistake. A career coach will not only shorten the in-transition period but also teach you pertinent interviewing skills as well as how to negotiate a job offer. In most cases, fees spent on career coaching are dwarfed by the benefits gained from knowing how to negotiate a better compensation package. Focus only on your past career path and ignore other possibilities. In todayâs fast-changing business environment, new jobs are being invented every day, and many of the pastâs traditional jobs are morphing into new ones or becoming totally eliminated. Job seekers who do not consider job opportunities in fields unrelated to their past ones make a mistake. Some reach a pointâ"possibly because of age discrimination or the elimination of their traditional jobsâ"at which a change in career might be a wonderful solution. It worked for me extremely well.
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