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Job Hunting Tips #3 Organizing your Attack
Author: Virginia Bola, PsyD
Looking for work is an energy-devouring ordeal, often leading to
running in circles and not getting anywhere. A systematic
approach can help you focus on your goal, avoid wasting the
energy you need to conserve for interviews and employer
contacts, and lower your stress level.
Some resources you might find helpful include:
1. Newspaper classified.
Pro: you know that an opening does
exist or a company wouldn’t spend money to advertise.
Con: there
may be thousands of applicants for one position. Value depends
upon the kind of work you are looking for and the uniqueness of
your skills and experience. Certainly worth a weekend check but
cannot be exclusively relied upon.
2. Registering with agencies.
Pro: they only make money when you obtain work so they are
motivated to get you employment.
Con: they need you to take a
job, any job, so they can earn their fees and they work to keep
their real clients, employers, happy so often screen you out of
the really good jobs if they have any doubt about how well you
will fit.
3. Internet resources.
There are some good resources
Monster.com and Careerbuilder and the job finder section of most
major home pages. Beware of wasting time on groups. While some
(a very few) are well-managed and inappropriate postings
screened out, others (many) are choked with pornographic
messages.
4. Job hotlines.
These are useful for a weekly
check-in but they are primarily available with large employers
and jobs are more likely to be found with small and medium-sized
employers. The same caveat holds true for job fairs.
5.
Cold-calling. If your skills lie within a particular industry
where employers typically cluster together industrial parks,
medical centers, retail walking into offices cold, with a
smile, a resume, and a confident air, can sometimes identify an
open position long before any search for applicants begins.
6.
Personal contacts.
Listed last but of prime importance. By
networking -- contacting everyone you know to obtain help, and
following up on their contacts -- you may be able to marshal
several hundred job hunting aides which increases your chances
enormously.
7. Prioritize your activities.
Assess each method
for what looks most promising, try them for a short period, and
determine where you, personally, feel comfortable. Spend the
major part of your job search time there to avoid squandering
your energy on fruitless pursuits.
About the author:
Dr. Bola operated a rehabilitation company, developing
innovative job search techniques for disabled workers, for 20
years. A licensed clinical psychologist, she developed
vocational programs for the mentally ill, served as a Vocational
Expert for Social Security, Civil Court, and pioneered
vocational testimony in Workers’ Compensation Hearings. She is
author of The Wolf at the Door: An Unemployment Survival Manual
(Authorhouse.com)
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