Saturday, May 30, 2020
6 Common Job Hunting Mistakes to Avoid
6 Common Job Hunting Mistakes to Avoid Job hunting and resume writing offer many pitfalls to the unwary. Knowing which mistakes to avoid increases your chance of impressing an employer with your credentials and securing that all-important job interview. Here are six common job-hunting mistakes you need to avoid: 1. Lack of a Cover Letter Its unclear what the source of this statistic is, but some sites claim 50 percent of cover letters never get read. The implication is you can skip writing a cover letter altogether. Ah, but theres a catch, isnt there? If half of all cover letters are ignored, it follows the remaining half are read. So not including a cover letter is like playing the job applicants version of Russian roulette. Employers expecting to see a cover letter will dismiss any applicant who hasnât taken the time to write one. Even if an employer doesnât read your cover letter, donât assume they arenât looking for one. Companies use some odd strategies to cull job applicants. An employer may not read the letter, but still cull applications without letters. If so, your unread cover letter might still get you through a round of the applicant selection process. Frankly, when the job market is this intense, not including a cover letter is a major mistake. At worse, it wont get read; if it is, your letter gives you a chance to sell yourself and your resume to the employer. Donât take chances! 2. Not Networking Its reasonably common for people with good resumes to assume their work speaks for itself. As a result, they think they donât need to network. Unfortunately, many of these confident, talented people remain unemployed. In todays competitive job market, you cannot afford not to network and social media makes networking easier than ever. LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter allow job hunters to display their resumes, make industry connections and build a reputation on industry forums and message boards. For example, an expert in contractor software might offer advice to software users on one of LinkedIns forums, building connections that eventually lead to a job. Donât assume online networking eliminates the need for in-person networking. Nothing beats a face-to-face meeting. Join professional networks and attend local events likely to attract professionals in your industry. 3. Overly Creative Resumes Weve all heard tales of people who secured employment because they created elaborate, creative resumes. Sometimes taking an unorthodox approach to your resume works. In most cases, attempts to make a resume stand out only work long enough to get tossed on the reject pile. Perfumed paper, bunny stickers, weird font choices and outlandish graphics all fall under creative flairs best left for birthday cards, not resumes. If your normal email looks something like HotBob45@party.com create a new email with a more professional feel. Employers arenât impressed with unprofessional emails. You may use online acronyms among friends, but use of words such as LOL, IMO and other online shortcuts on a resume wonât make a good impression on employers. Nor, for that matter, will spelling errors. Use your spell-checker. A single spelling mistake can make or break a resume. On the other side of the creativity canyon, donât use a standardized resume template, such as the ones Microsoft Word provides. Hirers have seen thousands of cookie-cutter resumes, and recognize them immediately. A template resume implies you lacked the will and imagination to write and format your own resume. Even worse, theyre boring. 4. Unfocused Resumes Some resumes meander from education history to employment to skills without focusing on whats important: why the employer should hire the applicant. Your resume should quickly and concisely tell your employer what he or she needs to know. Donât waste time. Youve only got a few seconds for your resume to make an impression or its going into the reject pile. Use bulleted lists for your skills and achievements rather than burying them in dense, hard-to-scan paragraphs. Tailor the resume to each specific job, but donât take large amounts of text from the job description. Employers recognize this instantly after all, they wrote the job description. Youâre better off paraphrasing short parts of the job description and modifying your resume to suit the job. Which brings us to the next huge job applicant mistake: 5. Lying or Elaborating on an Application I get it. I really do. The current job market is competitive and sometimes you need an edge to get noticed. Exaggerating a few areas of your resume tempts many job applicants. Some people pad their academic achievements. Others exaggerate their job accomplishments or neglect to mention certain parts of their job history. Ethics aside, I can provide a very compelling reason not to, ahem, fictionalize your resume: youll get caught. Employers can cherry-pick their employees in a tight economy. They check facts online or pay for professional background checks. If the results of their research donât match whats on your resume, youre not getting hired. 6. Applying without Cause Finally, avoid the temptation to apply for jobs where you lack qualifications. A school of job hunting suggests under-qualified applicants should apply for jobs anyway because doing so shows moxie and gets applicant names onto the hirers desk. Your resume will indeed wind up on someones desk, but they wont be impressed by your moxie. They wont think Heres a real go-getter, lets keep him in mind for other positions. Theyll just toss your resume. If they remember you at all, their opinion will be negative. Apply for jobs youre capable of performing. Tailor your resume for each application, and keep your networking ear to the ground for upcoming positions. Donât lose hope; eventually persistence and hard work will pay off, and youll find the job you want.
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