Job Search Myths Exposed: Do Not Believe
Everything You Hear
By Carl Mueller
As a professional recruiter I have heard
and read many suggestions related to job searching
and career development. I've spent a significant
amount of time helping people find their dream
career and have also watched as some candidates
have made huge mistakes that have prevented
them from doing so.
One of the biggest mistakes I've seen is
when job searchers listen to advice without
considering the source. Often the source isn't
accurate.
As a recruiter, I get paid to help
people find new jobs so I have to know
what is right and what is wrong when it
comes to job searching.
Here are perhaps the biggest myths I've
encountered during my career in recruitment:
Myth #1: You can find a job in 14 days/30
days, etc.
I've seen several products on the Internet
that refer to things like finding your
dream job in 14 days and 3 simple steps
to find your dream career in 30 days and
things of that nature.
Quite simply, these products advertise
something they can't hope to deliver.
The truth is that once a hiring manager
has received a resume, it might take them
14 days just to bother to read it. Just
because they advertise to hire someone
doesn't mean they will do it right away.
Putting your faith in some sort of a time-bound
system just isn't realistic.
Hiring managers work on their schedule,
not on the schedule laid out by some Internet
product probably written by someone who
doesn't currently have a job.
In the real world, job searching is a
difficult task. In some respects, a job
search can almost become a fulltime job
in and of itself, it it's done correctly.
Your best bet is to ignore products and
concepts such as these and to concentrate
on doing perhaps 4-5 things very well
to properly manage your job search: talk
to friends and family and let them know
you are looking for a new job, speak with
decision-makers and influencers in your
industry, contact companies directly that
you are interested to work for and utilize
a small list of trusted recruiters (perhaps
3-4) that you feel can help your search.
Using a structured, proven approach like
this will yield better results than relying
on fly-by-night products that aren't accurate
or useful.
Myth #2: Hiring managers don't read resumes,
they skim them in 20 seconds or less.
Well, this one is somewhat true. Hiring
managers might skim your resume in 20
seconds or less...if you don't give them
anything that is worth reading.
Not everyone is a speed-reader. If your
resume is getting a 20-second look, it's
probably because it isn't worth spending
any additional time on. If you give the
reader something that is worth reading,
they will keep reading, believe me.
If a hiring manager wants to hire someone,
they will spend time properly reading
relevant resumes.
A recruiter is generally trained to skim
resumes for keywords, required experience,
etc so you want to ensure that you ensure
that your resume does easily highlight
key accomplishments and skills.
If your resume shows opportunities, actions
and results that you were responsible
for during your career, your resume will
get more than a 20-second read. If you
simply state the same stuff that everyone
else does, your resume will not get properly
read. It's really that simple.
Myth #3: My resume should only be 2 pages
maximum, 1 page ideally.
I'm not sure where this rumor started
but it's not true.
Yes, most job searchers will get by with
a two-page resume but you might find later
in your career that two pages simply isn't
long enough and you might need to go onto
a third page.
Most of us can get by with a two-page
resume and if you are at the very beginning
of your career or fresh out of school,
perhaps a one-page resume will work.
I've had hiring managers tell me that
they'd wished a job candidate had added
MORE detail into their resume to discuss
certain aspects of their career but I
can't recall any of them ever saying "I
wish this person's resume was much shorter
so I didn't have to read so much."
At the end of the day, you should be
more concerned with the content and style
of your resume than simply trying to adhere
to a myth that might not even be accurate.
How can you predict how long the hiring
manager wants your resume to be? You can't.
Concentrate on providing them with relevant
information in your resume, that's your
best bet.
If you have something to say in your
resume, say it. If it doesn't need to
be there, keep it out. Use common sense.
Myth #4: I need to get my resume out
to as many people as possible to get a
new job.
If you believe in the old adage that
if you throw enough you-know-what against
a wall that something is bound to stick,
then this is probably something that will
appeal to you.
The truth is that a focused, organized
job search is preferable to a strategy
of carpet bombing, where you fire off
your resume to anyone who has a pulse
and hope that someone, anyone, will want
to hire you.
The Internet has made it so easy for
you to send your resume to dozens if not
hundreds of people quickly. Unfortunately,
everyone else with an Internet connection
can do the same thing so mass emailing
your resume is pretty much just an exercise
in spamming and generally has the same
results as regular spam that you see in
your in box.
Treat your resume like it is something
that has value, which it does.
Send your resume to people who can actually
positively influence your job search,
not just to anyone who asks for it. I'm
always amazed when job searchers who are
currently employed simply fire off their
resume to a faceless recruiter that they've
never met and expect that a new job will
be sitting in their lap within a few days.
It doesn't work that way!
Plastering your resume up all over the
Internet sends a bad message to hiring
managers (why can't you get a job with
all that exposure?) and drives recruiters
away (recruiters don't like working with
job searchers whose resume is easily found
on the various job boards).
Take control of your job search and remember
the long term: protecting your resume
and treating it as something that is valuable
will make you more valuable in the eyes
of hiring managers and recruiters when
they knock on your door and don't see
your resume plastered all over the Internet.
Carl Mueller is an Internet entrepreneur
and former professional recruiter. Carl
has helped many job searchers with their
job searches and would like to help clear
up some of the job search myths that exist
while also making job searchers aware
of things that they can do to improve
their chances at landing their dream job.
Visit Carl's website http://www.find-your-dream-career.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Carl_Mueller