Thursday, July 23, 2020
Lazy Job Search Preparation It Shows! Dont Sabotage Your Hard Work!
Lazy Job Search Preparation It Shows! Donât Sabotage Your Hard Work! Lazy Job Search Preparation We can tell! Youâre not fooling anybody! I know⦠weâve heard all of the excuses in a job search:â I donât have time; itâs just a phone interview; Iâll do the research when I get the interview; I know enough about them.â Jonathan found the perfect job posting at a local company that he really wants to sell for. They posted a brand new sales executive position, seeking someone with his skill set, but itâs in an industry he hasnât sold for before. Oh, well. He was so excited, he clicked on the âSubmit your résumé hereâ button and attached his latest résumé. Done! Now he waits. And waits. And waits. The very same day, Leslie saw the same job description. She didnât have experience in that industry, either. And she was missing some other skills that were requested in the job description. So she sat down and wrote out a plan. Here is what she did: Step 1: Leslie studied the company, the industry, and its competitors. Step 2: Leslie found a LinkedIn Group for the company and saw a number of sales professionals having a dialogue there. She even asked a few questions to the group like, âCould any sales executives share his/her background to the group prior to working here?â On LinkedIn, Leslie also saw that a sales manager was a 2nd relationship from one of her contacts so she asked to be introduced. Step 3: Leslie completed a Cut the Crap (CTC) Job Description Profile (JD Profile) to compare her own skills and experiences to that of the job description. It was much clearer where her gaps were and where her strengths were. She then had a plan for how she was going to apply. Leslie took a few more steps to be sure her application had the highest likelihood of being looked at and selected for an interview. She knew that it was going to be challenging and competitive since other applicants probably will come from the companyâs own industry. Step 4: She altered her résumé to be sure to use similar language. The hiring manager that wrote the job description is looking for âcold-callingâ experience but Leslieâs résumé used the term âprospectingâ so she made simple edits. Step 5: She refined the critical 1-pager that sits on top of her résumé: the JD Profile. It paints the exact picture a screener, recruiter or hiring manager needs to be able to answer, âWhy should we consider this candidate for this specific job?â Leslie highlighted her strengths, quantified her years and depth of experience in key categories, and wrote âeager to learnâ where she has gaps. Step 6: She wrote a great Cut the Crap (CTC) Cover Letter, too, drawing from her Step 5. She pulled out 3 of the most important categories where she is a fit and requested an interview at the end. Step 7: She stitched all three documents together her cover letter, Job Description Profile and Résumé into one Cut the Crap (CTC) Candidate Packet. Step 8: She proofed the entire packet 3 times prior to submitting. She pressed âenter.â Did you know that if you donât apply expertly you wonât get the interview? Amazing how that works! Why are so many applications JUST résumés or JUST a résumé and a poorly-written, standardized cover letter? How will that inspire someone to call you and say, âCome on in for an interview?â Poor preparation is just laziness and being part of the herd mentality. Yes, the website says, âPost your résumé here.â It does not say ââ¦and nothing else,â does it? Câmon, job seekers. Whether you are searching within your company or externally; whether you are employed or unemployed; do your BEST prior to applying for a role!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.