Author: moderncareers

  • Job Hunting Tips #3 …Practise

    Bicycles in Beijing. Or opportunities to practise, depending on your perspective.
    Bicycles in Beijing. Or opportunities to practise, depending on your perspective.

    Can you ride a bicycle? And if you can, did you jump on it and pedal off in to the sunset at your first attempt? Or did you, like me, have stabilisers and a patient father, who worked together to enable me to stay upright and out of the gravel?
    The point of course is this; I didn’t learn how to ride a bike, the actual learning bit was easy (keep the pedals going round). What I did was practised riding a bike. Practised until I could ride no-handed all the way to the shops and back and feel smug. Well, smug up to the point my little sister shopped me to the parents and I received a ticking off for dangerous riding. But am I bitter? ….I hardly ever mention it these days…

    …But silliness aside it’s worth noting all the things that we can now do to a good standard because we worked hard and practised at them. This would include reading and writing and talking, to name three. Job hunting skills are just a subset of these and the difference that makes the difference is how much you practise.

    Job hunting skills are there to be practised and if we want to get ahead of the competition then it’s up to us to put in the effort. Interviews can be predicted, networking conversations can be predicted, social greetings can be predicted…it’s surprising how much the patterns are there to be spotted, which makes rehearsal much easier.

    Pause for a moment and imagine you’re sitting in a waiting room with a smattering of other candidates. You’re the last in line to be interviewed and suddenly you realise that the other people are calm because they’ve all practised their interview answers, know how to keep eye contact and have great stories to sell their talents. You don’t, however, because you followed the other nine out of ten people I’ve worked with:

    You read your CV once the night before and decided to trust to luck. What more could you have done?

    …What more indeed? It’s up to you. My suggestion is that you make a choice:

    You can practise and increase your chances of success, or you can do nothing and risk falling off your bicycle. What do you decide?

    It could be a decision that determines how long you will be waiting to start your next job.

     

    More Opportunities To Practise

    There are more tips and worked examples in the book Job Hunting 3.0, which provides people with plenty of questions and answers to practise, in order to sharpen them up for their next interview. If you know someone who is looking for work then please point them at Amazon.

    Pass It On

    If you know someone who would be interested in this blog post please forward it to them, or ReTweet it, or let them know they can subscribe to regular emails via the box on the homepage. Many thanks.

    Next Week

    We’ll be looking at some statistics, to get people thinking. The numbers tell the real story.

  • Job Hunting Tips #2 …Add Numbers

    A Mystery: The Case of the Disappearing Walnut Whips
    A Mystery: The Case of the Disappearing Walnut Whips

    In the box on my lap I had six walnut whips and now I have just two left. I blame the rain really, as there’s only one thing to do when it’s all soggy outside; eat chocolate.

    Now up until this point you might be thinking that I have scoffed four walnut whips, and I may well have. I’ll tell you later.

    However, the key point here is that the story becomes more interesting when we have some numbers to give us a sense of scale or scope.

    It’s the same for CVs and cover letters as well. Adding numbers to our achievements serves three important functions:

    1) Numbers make them memorable. It’s easier to remember ‘a box of 6 walnut whips’ than ‘some walnut whips’. We tend to remember specific details more easily than vague descriptions.

    2) Numbers reveal the size of our achievements. This gives people a real sense of how we could add value to their business. If I could eat four walnut whips at home, I could come and do that in your business too!

    3) Numbers make things interesting. Plenty of CVs are dull, bland, full of clichés and generally lifeless. Stir in some numbers though and we become interesting and our stories gain life and style.

    All achievements can be measured in some way and there are no exceptions to this. It might take you some time to think through your own numbers, but it’s worth the investment as that could be the hook that snags your next interview. We can think about:

    • Time saved.
    • Money earned.
    • Targets met.
    • Process steps reduced.
    • Output increased.
    • Quality levels up.
    • Complaints down.
    • The number of people involved.
    • The number of countries visited.

    Things can be measured in £s or % or hours or minutes. As a result of your work did the trend line go up or down?

    If you’re struggling to measure your achievements it could be because the biggest net effect came from a downstream process. If this is the case it’s ok think about the consequences of your work and to focus on this.

    Examples of achievements can look like these handsome bullet points:

    • £50,000pa saved in factory overtime as a result of finding capacity increases by using Lean tools, such as single minute exchange of dies (smed).

    • 30% increase in the number of sales calls made each week by setting targets for the team and then reviewing progress each Monday.

    • 120 people trained in coaching skills, including 8 who went on to pass the senior coaches exam (100% pass rate).

    …These are broad examples to show how each achievement becomes an interesting little story when we add numbers. Your challenge is simple; take a fresh look at your CV or your marketing literature (if that’s more relevant to you) and add one number to each key achievement.

    Remember: Make numbers even more interesting by multiplying them up over a year. For example, a saving of £2,000 per week isn’t as eye-catching as £100,000 per annum.

    Once you’ve finished adding numbers, compare the jazzed up document with the original and ask yourself:

    Which version does a better sales job for me?

    Oh and the walnut whips? Well, I had one, the twins shared one and the other two were handed out to a couple of chums on Twitter…

     

    More Examples of Achievements

    There are more tips and worked examples in the book Job Hunting 3.0, which was described by a journalist recently as ‘a definitive guide to getting a job.’ If know someone who is looking for work then please point them at Amazon.

    Pass It On

    If you know someone who would be interested in this blog post please forward it to them, or ReTweet it, or let them know they can subscribe to regular emails via the box on the homepage. Many thanks.

    Next Week

    We’ll be looking at one of the easiest ways to do well in an interview. You’d be amazed at how many people forget to do this one thing.