Surviving the Job Search and Making the most of new opportunities
Treat the job search like a job.
· Have a fixed routine combination of networking
o Example:
o Morning. Job applications
o Afternoon. Networking (informational discussions).
o Exercise!
o Later Afternoon. Follow up letters.
· Informational interviews,
· Formal resume submissions
· Meetings w/ recruiters (if applicable)
· Take time to assess what you want to do, what jobs and where are in out and what is timeframe.
· Take the time to develop a plan
o Example: These are the types of jobs I would be interested in Portland , but by xx date will look outside the area, based on xx criteria. OR, I would move but on these conditions, etc. Have a timeframe and back up plans. Only compromise as a very last resort, or you will compound you problem. This is harder than you think
Maintain a contact management system.
· After a contact, put a placeholder in the calendar for the follow up. I used a simple calendar program, and set out a date a few weeks from the first call.
· Start building a list of contacts you never know what a oppty that doesn’t exist today could exist tomorrow. Great opportunities come to those who make the most of small ones
· Ask everyone you meet to suggest someone else to talk to.
Looking for new opportunities
· Indeed.com as one-stop-shop aggregator
· Yes, Craig’s list
· Job data banks for project mgt
· Univ resources
· Set up profiles for auto contacts.
Create your own jobs
· Suggest interim solutions e.g. internships
· Look for transferable skills e.g. project mgt..
· Consider volunteering but only if it doesn’t interfere with the search and has a possible job outcome
· Don’t volunteer as a way to avoid looking
Ride the emotional wave
· The only decision that matters is the next decision, past is past
· Anxiety is normal.
· Ignore what you read about job search challenges
· Accept waiting game. For everyone working one week = one day. Read this frequently
· Know that this too will pass and that change is good.
Resume
· Focus on what you’ve accomplished, not what you’ve done
· Make the accomplishments specific
· Tailor for each specific job and have decoder ring
Interviews
· Be well prepared with practice questions and answers
Well I hope that helps any of you out there trying to find a job. I've definitely found these tips to be useful. Sometimes it's easy for us to forget things that otherwise seem like common sense. Until next time...good luck on the job hunt!