Archive for the ‘services for job seekers’ Category

Christmas Shopping for your next job?

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

Christmas feel like the worst time to be looking for a job!.  It’s easy to let things get you down.  The whole job market is dead, so you’re not going to find anything now until after the New Year.

The good news is that this just isn’t true.  These days, the recruitment market is far less seasonal than you’d think.  Employers advertise, interview and hire all year round.  It might be the time for giving, but it isn’t the time for giving up!

The “Season of Goodwill”, can however, be difficult to stomach is you have just been made redundant.”  You may go through an emotional rollercoaster very similar to that of Grief.

  • Shock
  • Denial
  • Anger
  • Acceptance

You may then find yourself with a renewed enthusiasm to change things in your life.  The good news is there is a lot of support out there, both on the web and elsewhere, to help you develop your own “Coping Strategy” and then to help you find that next job.

Recruitment Insider has a friend who set up http://www.newlifenetwork.co.uk/ which is jam-packed full of really good advice and tips (too jam-packed actually – but the design and style of the site hides some great content, so do persevere! 

There’s lots of other free online resources available, so spend some time on the web searching it out.

The best tip we can give you at Iwant2work.at is treat the job search with the same discipline as any other work-related project.  Set aside time each day to conduct your search, or do some related activity.  Set yourself objectives and tasks daily, and stick to them.  For most people, it’s a numbers game.  The more irons in the fire, the more your likelihood of earlier success.

Use all the resources available to you.  Find out what government support you qualify for.  It is really worth finding out.

Networking – you need to understand that the successful job seeker is a successful self promoter.  This does not fall naturally to most British psyches.  Our national trait means we often feel uncomfortable selling ourselves.  In fact we do the opposite, talking ourselves down, understating our achievements.  It’s nicer, more polite.

“Bigging ourselves up?”  That’s something Americans do!  But we need to get out of our comfort zone and make contact with the people we know and trust.

Make lists.  Formally organise your contacts.  Create a database or email folders and reach out to them.  Keep a note all of these interactions.  Treat these like you would a list of client contacts in a Customer Relationship Management system.  Use LinkedIn and any other sites you use – they really do work.

If a company has a need to hire, that need doesn’t go away over the festive period, but a lot of job seekers just give up.  Don’t be one of them, and keep up your energy over the Christmas break.  You have a real opportunity right now to stand out.  You might find the best present of all is just around the next corner.

Good luck!

The big CV Scam!

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

There are a large number of providers of CV services who will offer to write your CV for you, at a price, of course.  The many recruiters I have spoken to believe this is a complete waste of money and a mistake for most job seekers.  The person interviewing you is certainly going to have a copy in front of them, and think it is your own work.  As we have discussed in our previous post about creating a great CV, a great way to prepare for an interview is to write a CV and develop a complelling story.  As you go, you’ll find great ways of telling your tale.  And best way to speak fluently and convincingly about your experience, in a way that complements the written CV, is to have written that CV yourself.

I’ve been contacted a lot by companies selling CV writing services.  The latest story I was told was about a lady that asked them to tart up her CV and then, no doubt as a direct consequence, she has landed a great job – in PR.

What a story!  Surely if a PR person can do one thing, they can write their own CV!  PR people can sell you anything – that’s their job isn’t it?

I asked myself if the company hiring her would have taken her on if they had known that they were not reading her work.  I bet she didn’t tell them!!