Stepping Up To A Better Career

Professional Resume Service & Advice

  • Subscribe

  • RSS Careers That Don’t Suck

    • Hot Job: Human Resources Gener… November 21, 2009
      Hot Job: Human Resources Generalist/Finance Specialist … (Denver, CO): Human Resources Generalist/Fin.. http://bit.ly/077f5Mf Hearthis post Related PostsHot Job: Accounting & Finance …Also if you could improve cust…Be a millionaire. Create bette…@chicagoinfo lost my hot pink …Lost my bag in a cab in Chicag… […]
      D.D. Johnice/Careersthatdontsuck.com
  • RSS Survive Unemployment

    • Progress Is the Child of Struggle November 13, 2009
      Overcoming fear by doing things that make you uncomfortable is difficult but well worth it A couple of days ago I disclosed my lifelong phone phobia. Even calling people I've known forever is challenging for me, but cold calling to drum up business? Forget it. I literally break into hives just thinking about it. read more
      chuck
  • RSS How I Got Laid Off

    • So much bias October 21, 2009
      Well, where do i begin…when you think and are made to think that your are safe, YOU ARE NOT! that is what happened to me at a well known law firm that does personnal injury. I gave them my all, sometimes staying late and coming in on holidays. The girls there were [...]
      Ana

Archive for the ‘HelloTxt’ Category

Get Interviewed!

Posted by ayeshawrites4u on July 9, 2009

Okay, we’ve all been there!  You have a great resume.  You have an even better cover letter.  You have the qualifications.  But your phone just keeps on failing to ring.  Oh, you’re getting phone calls from friends and family – but the phone call you’ve been waiting for, the one that comes from the employer of your dreams, is just not happening.

Day in and day out you resend your resume to another company thinking this one MUST be the company that will call you and get you out of your rut of a job.  But what if that doesn’t happen?  How do you ensure that your resume will be viewed and will result in an interview?

Attack! Consider yourself a marketable good and think of creative ways to present yourself to an employee as an exclusive commodity.  Don’t just send out your resume or worse yet, click send an application on your monster account and wait for the phone calls to start ringing.  You have to really put yourself out there.

What does that mean for your job search?  Well for starters, you can forget about applying to every job that catches your eye.  This is a waste of your valuable time.  Instead, what you are going to do is choose nine companies, nine positions and stick with them for the next two weeks.  During that time, you are going to do the following:

  • Make initial contact – If there is a company you are interested in, whether they are hiring or not, you are going to make a friend.  This does not mean you are going to be shopping buddies.  No, you are going to contact someone who is in a similar position or who is in the same department as the one to which you are going to apply.  You are going to call them and schedule an informational interview (see Importance of Networking).  During the interview, learn as much as you can about the prospective company and be sure to ask the person if it is okay to mention them during an interview or on your cover letter.
  • Go straight to the head – Call the company and see if they are hiring.  If you’ve already seen a posting advertising a position, then you are going to respond to that posting.  But first, you are going to find out who is responsible for the hiring process and send your resume and cover letter directly to that person.  This first resume will be sent in TWO formats – the ASCII format which is an non-formatted resume that can be pasted directly into an e-mail and will be able to undergo an employer’s keyword scan.  The second resume will be formatted and sent through snail mail.
  • Follow Up! Follow Up! Follow Up! – Here is where things get tricky.  Depending on how badly you want the position, your follow up can take a number of different formats – sending a follow up letter, making a follow up call, having your inside contact recommend you, or finding out a secret indulgence the HR manager has and feeding into it.  For example, if you know the HR manager loves chocolate, you can send a box of chocolates every day with your business card demonstrating to the HR person that you are eager, a go-getter, and know exactly what you want.  Now this strategy may not work for everyone.  Only you know what your limits are to being determined versus being pesky.  Either way, you must take some form of follow up measures to let the employer know you are a serious candidate and not arbitrarily sending out your resume to everyone (See Most Common Resume Mistake).

If you utilize these strategies, along with maintaining a professional image through your paper choice, resume and cover letter formatting and words, finding a job should be a quick, painless process.  Remember the key to finding a job is casting a wide net through networking, but being selective about which fish you actually want to bring home with you.

As always, good luck with your job search.

Sincerely,

Ayesha Long

www.AyeshaWrites4u.com

Stepping up to a Better Career with Professional Career Documents


Get Follow Me Buttons

Share

Posted in Business Sense, Career Consulting, Employment, HelloTxt, Job Search, Job Searching & The Internet, Networking 101 | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Most Common Resume Writing Mistake

Posted by ayeshawrites4u on July 9, 2009

It takes an employer thirty-seconds or less to scan a resume before it hits the trash pile.  It takes forty seconds for it to hit the cycle pile, which means it stays in the system, but never gets used.  It takes less than ten seconds for him to look at your resume and know that you are the perfect fit.  So why isn’t it happening to you?

The answer is simple.  Most employees create one resume and send it out to every job opening available.  Employers can easily spot a generic resume and are turned off by lazy job seekers.  If you couldn’t take the time out to create a customized resume, why should they take the time out to interview you?  So if you are looking to get hired, but don’t want to spend the time creating a new resume for every new job opening, here are three options for you to try.

Option 1 – Use your transitional skills.

If you want to change careers, but haven’t found a career that best suits your personality, then you can create a typical functional resume.  In a functional resume, you start off with your transitional skills, as opposed to your work history.

You take a look at your highest skill sets or the skills needed for most of your jobs of interest and group them into categories.  For example, a customer service professional looking to transition into the IT profession can clump her skills into: Technology, Communication, and Collaboration.  Then under each subfield, she would show explicit examples demonstrating that skill utilization during her work or educational experiences.

If an IT hiring manager is looking for those three categories, she will definitely stop to look at this person’s resume.  However, be forewarned, that many employees are leery of resumes that are only functional (see Chronological? Functional? Or Combination?).

Option 2 – Lead with your job sets.

If your current job is less than satisfactory and you want to return to an old career, you can use a career-styled functional resume.  In this functional resume, you group your work history into career sets.

Similar to a standard functional resume, you will have a different section on your resume for each career field.  So someone who has been a medical assistant, nursing assistant, and phlebotomist and is willing to work in either field again could have three sub-sections for their work experience – Nursing Assistant Experience, Professional Medical Assistant Experience, Phlebotomy Technician Work Experience.

Then for each job he applies to, he can lead with the section that best applies. If it’s a medical assistant position, then the Professional Medical Assistant Experience section would be the first section in the work history, followed by the other two career sets.  If it’s a nursing assistant position, he’d lead with the Nursing Assistant Experience.

Option 3 – Create a new resume for every job.

If you have the time and energy to recreate a new resume for every job posting, then this is the best option.  However, this option is the most time-consuming and is generally meant for employees who are looking for positions within the same industry.

For example, an elementary school teacher trying to become a math coach or social studies cluster teacher can use the same resume and add bits and pieces to the objective, summary of qualifications, and job history to highlight her experience and expertise in each field.

This resume will still look like a chronological resume and will include the work history listed in the dates of descending order, but it will highlight the skills necessary for each position.

Using, Ayesha Long’s tips, your job search should be more proactive.  If you need assistance or are still not getting the results you like, Contact, AyeshaWrites4u at (866) 620-2741 or visit the site at www.AyeshaWrites4u.com.

As always, good luck with your job search.

Sincerely,

Ayesha Long

www.AyeshaWrites4u.com

Step Up to a Better Career with Professional Resume Services


Get Follow Me Buttons

Share

Posted in HelloTxt, Job Search, Resume Formats, Resume Writer, Resumes | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »