6 Second Job Search Tips: Resumes

 

A six second video about your resume.


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Jeff Altman, The Big Game Hunter has been a career coach and recruiter for what seems like one hundred years.

Follow him at The Big Game Hunter, Inc. on LinkedIn for more articles, videos and podcasts than what are offered here and jobs he is recruiting for.

Visit www.TheBigGameHunter.us. There’s a lot more advice there.

Connect with me on LinkedIn

Pay what you want for my books about job search

Subscribe to TheBigGameHunterTV on YouTube  for advice about job hunting and hiring. Like videos, share and comment.

Trying to hire someone? Email me at JeffAltman@TheBigGameHunter.us

Do you need more in-depth coaching? Join my Coaching program.

Want to ask me questions via phone, Skype or Facetime? Have your job search questions answered

Changing Careers? Get Used to Rejection (Video)

 

If you think and act as though everyone will say yes to your idea to change careers, you will never be successful or get out of the starting gate.

 

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Do you really think employers are trying to help you? You already know you can’t trust recruiters—they tell as they think you need to know to take the job they after representing so they collect their payday.

Jeff Altman, The Big Game Hunter has been a career coach and recruiter for what seems like one hundred years.

JobSearchCoachingHQ.com is there to change that with great advice for job hunters—videos, my books and guides to job hunting, podcasts, articles, PLUS a community for you to ask questions of PLUS the ability to ask me questions where I function as your ally with no conflict of interest answering your questions.

Connect with me on LinkedIn

The Most Important Lesson from a Recession Plus Five More

The job market started to slow down in March, 2001, and was about to exit recession in August, 2001, when terrorists destroyed The World Trade Center. In the aftermath, millions of people lost their jobs and struggled for years to find work.

Because the job market collapse was so sudden and so deep, few were prepared for what happened.

That should never be the case with you.

You see, the most important lesson I can give you from the last recession is this:

1. Make sure you have a functioning network of resources in place in case you need it. Connect with as many people as you can on LinkedIn, MySpace, Facebook, Xing and any other social network sites that you can but do not overestimate their value.

2. Exchange personal e-mail addresses and phone numbers with co-workers and former co-workers.

3. Stay in “good graces” with as many leaders in your organization and former organizations as you can.

4. Have lunch with someone new and/or different every day.

5. Write your resume.

6. Get involved with a networking group proactively.

Don’t wait for a crisis to take action.

 

© The Big Game Hunter, Inc. Asheville, NC  2016

Figure Out Where You Want to Go

It is to figure out where you think you want to go with your career. You can adapt this later on. This is not cast in stone. The decision you make today may be a different one than you make two or three years from now. We’re always changing, and the circumstances of life are always changing.

The work world of today is a vastly different one than the one I entered in the 1970’s.

These days, we start by figuring out where we want to go. From there you start breaking it down to figure out what you’ll need to do in order to get there, including what’s most important to you—your values—because not everyone has the same value system as another.

Until you get clear of your values, you’re in danger of following someone else’s path—like the one your parents set you on, for example.

Once you understand what your values are, you can ask what will be the most important things to you in the next job or organization. What are you going to need to see or hear or feel in order to know it’s the right place for you?

 

Exercises to Help Figure It Out

 

You can do this in a variety of different ways. It might be useful, first of all, to take some time with yourself and figure out through journaling, and then speak with someone else to see if you’re being realistic. So, for example, the beginner who says, “I want to change jobs now and I want to become the Chief Financial Officer with an organization with my next job change,” is certainly being unrealistic. The likelihood of such a thing happening is next to non-existent. You might need a reality check.

Once you’ve had an opportunity to identify where you want to go in the next few years, speak with a trusted advisor. It could be a trusted current or former colleague, a mentor or clergyman, but ideally it should be someone from the profession that you’re in or want to be in. Someone who has gone through what you want to go through.

It is definitely a balancing act. In fact, what I hope you get from this program is the understanding that I don’t want you to be a drone. I don’t want you to be the next cog in the machine. I want you to be able to dream and be able to achieve the big things in life. At the same time, I want you to have the opportunity to be practical, because you’re going to have to take steps between now and that dream in order to get there.

 

Let’s look at some of the very basic things you can ask yourself. What kind of job do you want to have? What’s the nature of the work that you’re willing to accept? What are you trying to find in the next firm? What are you trying to get away from at your current firm? Sometimes, you need to go to the negative and identify that in order to get to the positive.

What are you going to need to see or hear or know to determine if the next firm is a fit for you? What sort of conditions or qualities do you want to continue from your current circumstances? What do you like about your current job? What are the qualities in your boss that you like and dislike? Are there certain benefits that you’re going to need, like a particular type of health insurance, that will also be important to you at the next firm? Is tuition reimbursement a critical item for you? What’s the nature of the work or location? What other sort of things just come to your mind that are going to be important to you in the next firm?

Once you’re done answering all of these questions—and you should write down as much as you can–I hope your list is enormous, because then I want you to do next is prioritize the items: take a look at this list and figure out what’s the most important thing on this list, the thing that you must absolutely have? What is the second item? What’s third? What’s fourth? What’s fifth? Normally, the top five is enough, but you may need six or even eight items. Whatever the number, you need to figure out what the critical items are for you and then what the preferred things could be.

 

© The Big Game Hunter, Inc. Asheville, NC  2007, 2016

Short Stories and Job Interviews

You know when many people put their kids to sleep, they tell stories. The stores are designed to engage the child and also to relax them.

As adults we forget the power of stories and there’s no place more powerful to tell stories than the workplace, particularly on an interview.

There is a winning format you need to follow called SOAR and you need to be prepared with a view stories that might be relevant to the job you are being interviewed for for every interview you go to.

You start off with the SITUATION that you were involved with — what did you just step into, what was the problem that you were asked to address, the OBSTACLES that you overcame when you dealt with those situations, the ACTION that you took, what did you take a more to solve that problem and the RESULTS you achieved.

Results need to be quantified. You can’t just say, “Everyone lived happily ever after (you can joke about that on an interview).  However, use the format of a story following the situation you were involved with, the obstacles that you faced, the actions that you took and the results that you achieved quantified by money earned or money saved where ever possible quantifying using metrics. There’s no better way to stand out from the competition then using metrics.  After all, your competition isn’t using them.

When employers is trying to evaluate what you did, as a recent guest of mine on “Job Search Radio” said, employers are looking for measurements of results, whether it is the size and scope of a project that you worked on, or the results of what you did, numbers are very important.

Follow the format of situation, obstacles, actions and results in your interviews; it will definitely help your next interview soar.  That’s true of in-person interviews and phone interviews alike.

 

 

 

© The Big Game Hunter, Inc. Asheville, NC  2016

 

Jeff Altman, The Big Game Hunter has been a career coach and recruiter for what seems like one hundred years.

Would you like me to critique your resume? Let me critique your 1-3 page resume or your 4 page and longer resume.

Follow him at The Big Game Hunter, Inc. on LinkedIn for more articles, videos and podcasts than what are offered here and jobs he is recruiting for.

Visit www.TheBigGameHunter.us. There’s a lot more advice there.

Connect with me on LinkedIn

 

Building Your Snowball

 

Most people think a quick burst of activity will land their job.

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Jeff Altman, The Big Game Hunter has been a coach and recruiter for what seems like one hundred years.

Follow him at The Big Game Hunter, Inc. on LinkedIn for more articles, videos and podcasts than what are offered here and jobs he is recruiting for.

Visit www.TheBigGameHunter.us. There’s a lot more advice there.

Connect with me on LinkedIn

Pay what you want for my books about job search

Subscribe to TheBigGameHunterTV on YouTube  for advice about job hunting and hiring. Like videos, share and comment.

Trying to hire someone? Email me at JeffAltman@TheBigGameHunter.us

Do you need more in-depth coaching? Join my Coaching program.

Want to ask me questions via phone, Skype or Facetime? Have your job search questions answered.

The Negotiating Strategy Few Use

 

I discuss the mistake too many people

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Jeff Altman, The Big Game Hunter has been a coach and recruiter for what seems like one hundred years.

Follow him at The Big Game Hunter, Inc. on LinkedIn for more articles, videos and podcasts than what are offered here and jobs he is recruiting for.

Visit www.TheBigGameHunter.us. There’s a lot more advice there.

Connect with me on LinkedIn

Pay what you want for my books about job search

Subscribe to TheBigGameHunterTV on YouTube  for advice about job hunting and hiring. Like videos, share and comment.

Trying to hire someone? Email me at JeffAltman@TheBigGameHunter.us

Do you need more in-depth coaching? Join my Coaching program.

Want to ask me questions via phone, Skype or Facetime? Have your job search questions answered.

 

 

Job Search Radio – The Crystal Ball Show

Welcome to 2016 and let’s start focusing.
On this show, Jason Leverant and I look ahead at some of the trends we see in the job market and in hiring that will benefit you, your children and your grandchildren.
Listen to the Podcast on the web. Also in iTunes, Stitcher and other podcast services.
Would you like my help with changing jobs?
Schedule a coaching call with me and I’ll personally answer your questions and help you get focused on what you need to do to find your next job.

Connect with me on LinkedIn