1 / 19

Creative Job Search

Creative Job Search. How to Get the Job You Really Want X420 Discussion Session # 19. Five Objectives of the Career Change System. Set career objectives Identify job opportunities Techniques of the creative job search How to position yourself Control your own career.

halia
Download Presentation

Creative Job Search

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Creative Job Search How to Get the Job You Really Want X420 Discussion Session # 19

  2. Five Objectives of the Career Change System • Set career objectives • Identify job opportunities • Techniques of the creative job search • How to position yourself • Control your own career

  3. Seven Basic Principles of Career Change • There is nothing wrong with being out of a job. • The average successful person will have 10 full-time jobs and 4 career changes. • There are always jobs available. • Unexpected job loss is an opportunity. • Success in the job market is predictable. • Do what other successful people do. • There are always jobs for the creative person.

  4. Traditional Job Search • Answering Newspaper Ads • Sending Out Resumes • Using Employment Services

  5. Traditional Job Search … but, instead of that – or in addition to that – let’s get a little creative…..

  6. Creative Job Search • A different approach • Enables you to get a better job • Develops character, intelligence and imagination • Makes you a better and more optimistic person • Enables you to have more fun at work • Begins with you

  7. Where the Jobs Are Job Availability There are always thousands of jobs available. Every company is a job market. Every department in every company is a job market. Every individual who can hire is a job market.

  8. What the Jobs Are A job is an opportunity to render useful service. A job is labor applied to achieve a certain result. One person can help you create a job, if he uses the Universal Hiring Rule: An employer will hire you if you contribute more in dollar value to the company than what it costs the company to employ you.

  9. Qualities Most Desired by Employers Intelligence Leadership Ability Integrity Sincerity Competence Courage Determination

  10. Creative Job Search Three Key Points: Analyze your strengths and abilities. Seek out opportunities to maximize your personal potential. Select a career with the same care that you would as if you were getting married.

  11. Prospecting Identifying companies that can best use your talents, abilities, background and experience. List prospective companies. Rank you prospects in order of their desirability, and allocate your research time accordingly.

  12. Creative Job Re-Search Begin by moving from the general to the specific: Dictionary Encyclopedia Magazines Books Ask for advice Use your contacts Interview non-employers Ask for referrals Become an expert NOTE: An earlier discussion presentation may be useful: #84, Researching the Job Market. You can view the PowerPoint on line – check your X420 syllabus.

  13. Prospecting Pre-Approach – gather information about each company in which you are interested. Approach – get an appointment with your networking contact. Ask for informational interview.

  14. Informational Interviewing You are the interviewer. The first 30 seconds are the most important. Next 4 minutes determines whether or not the person likes you. Thank interviewee for his time. Go in with an agenda; questions. Write down answers. After 15-30 minutes, excuse yourself with thanks for the time. Leave door open, ask if you can come back if you have more questions. Write thank-you note. Never accept or respond to a job offer during informational interview.

  15. Informational Interviewing – The Challenge You are being judged People are not stupid – if you treat the informational interview like a direct job-hunting technique, they will feel used and it will do you no good. People are flattered by honest interest in their work – a good informational interview leaves them thinking well of you People will remember – if your questions and comportment reflect intelligence, sincerity and competence….of if not.

  16. Informational Interviewing – The Challenge You are being judged People are not stupid – They know, or will assume, that you are job hunting. Diffuse this by honesty…. “Yes, I am looking for the perfect job. I hope our interview today will help me define that for myself more clearly.” People are flattered by honest interest in their work … “Hello, I am interested in your field and wonder if you could spare a little time to help me decide whether it is the field for me.” Remember - People will remember.

  17. Getting the Job You Want Once you have chosen…. • Where you want to work • Who you want to work for • What you want to be doing • Call back the person you interviewed. • Keep in touch • Leave “feelers”

  18. How to sell yourself to a person who has not thought of hiring you: Sales Presentation Tell how you can contribute to the organization. Explain why you’ve chosen this company and this person to work for. List problems you could solve. Explain how your knowledge and experience relate to the job you want. Explain the benefits the company would get from hiring you.

  19. Evaluation Questions:Discussion Session #19Creative Job Search Use: a. Strongly agree b. Agree c. Disagree d. Strongly Disagree e. Don’t know 1) I found the presentation of material easy to understand. 2) This discussion session increased my knowledge on the subject presented. 3) I will be able to use some of the information from this discussion session in the future. 4) The presenter was well prepared for this discussion session. 5) This presentation should be repeated in future semesters.

More Related