1 / 24

How to take control of the process and have fun doing it! Tom Broussard, Ph.D. Career Prospects, Inc .

Successful Job or Internship Search. How to take control of the process and have fun doing it! Tom Broussard, Ph.D. Career Prospects, Inc . Introduction. Know Yourself—what are your strengths, abilities, values and interests.

ping
Download Presentation

How to take control of the process and have fun doing it! Tom Broussard, Ph.D. Career Prospects, Inc .

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. Successful Job or Internship Search How to take control of the process and have fun doing it! Tom Broussard, Ph.D. Career Prospects, Inc.

  2. Introduction Know Yourself—what are your strengths, abilities, values and interests. Know the Industry/Field of Interest—conduct the necessary and appropriate research. Develop Your Campaign Plan—create a plan—start with the end in mind. Where do you need to be & when? Time is your most valuable resource.

  3. Job versus Internship Techniques for job searches versus internship searches have many similarities but may differ in dramatic ways as well—such as “How much time do you have?” They say that the best dissertation is a “done” dissertation. If an internship project needs to “get done” then it may require less “soul searching” than an attempt to select the “ideal” career path.

  4. Focus on Jobs • The HR Department Dance • Getting past the gatekeeper • Contacting leadership • Bringing down the “shields” • Functional versus chronological resume • Networking works for job & internships

  5. Focus on Jobs • Potentially longer view than internships • Let’s talk about the “ideal” job • Every job is an internship • Every internship is a job • Almost everything about jobs and internships can be approached in much the same way

  6. Focus on Internship • Type of site to select & location (US, overseas) • Educational/what are your interests • Do-able (Paid versus unpaid)—Budget • Be imaginative, creative, “blue sky” • Potential for long & short term benefits • Enjoyable

  7. Internship—site selection • For-profit • Non-profit • Your previous employer or friend’s • Foundation (mission driven, geographic, etc.) • Community Development Corporation • Education (research, academia, etc.) • Non Governmental Organization (NGO) • Government (local, national, international)

  8. Internship—site selection • Determine limited & finite list of potential initial targets (recommend 3 to 5)—start here though list may grow through networking • Have they had internships previously? • If not, do they display the potential? • What connections to the target can you find? Board members, school connections, industry connections, family, friends, heritage, etc. • Internships have different (and differing) levels of trigger mechanisms than job search.

  9. Do your homework! • Mission and goals of organization • What do they do, what do they make, what are their needs? • Who are their competitors? Or collaborators? • Research their business and sector prospects • Learn organization structure, pay ranges, benefits • Study organization current events—recent press • Identify organization leadership and background • Read Annual report (on website) or Form 990 (for non-profit) on www.guidestar.org

  10. Advertised Opportunities • Job Boards-Monster • Other Internet sites • Classifieds—newspapers & online • College and organization job boards • Other job boards—associations, etc. • Industry magazines, conferences ~20% • Organization websites • College & university career services web sites

  11. Unadvertised Opportunities • Organization & Association websites • Google—articles, etc. • Annual reports • Business magazines • News articles • Trade magazines • Books—authors • Industry magazines, conferences ~80% • Business Chamber • Networking—alumni, friends, family, faculty, other referrals • Email/Letters

  12. Why Internship? Why me? • Why should the target agree to an Internship? • What is in it for them? What are your mutual interests? • Understand their motivations, goals and needs. Interns can be valuable. • Demonstrate what you can do to advance their goals while advancing yours • Contact—Initial contact is very important

  13. First Contact • Thought and strategy of first contact & desired first impression • Decision maker contact—bypass HR • Who works there? • Who is on their board? • What are their connections? Why are they on the board? • Who do you know? Who do their connections know?

  14. Follow up Contact • Cover letters, letters, resume, bio • Email, Phone • Articles, papers, references • Websites • Visits (face to face, virtual) • Digital camera • Other Accessories (ZAZZLE, stamps, post cards, bumper stickers, stationery, business cards, email “signature”, etc.)

  15. Use of Time & Multi-tasking • Multi-tasking is a 21st century skill • Parable of the Three Rocks • Assign yourself tasks based on • “task size--time slot” matching • Know your internal “clock” & use it • Bullet time—seeing things in slow motion • Flip Books—connecting actions over time • Consciously develop multiple applications for your work and time invested • Time, trust and credibility in the virtual world

  16. Networking—getting started • People you know--alumni, family, faculty, etc. • People you do not know—largest potential source of useful leads • Web research—snowball research • “Top Ten” lists—Safest, Best Trainers, Family Friendly, Women Employers, etc. • “On the Move” reports—letters of congratulations, inquiry, assistance, etc.

  17. Networking • Building community—this is really about building a (small) society of mutual aid, mutual interests and trust over time • Organized—as the hub in the relationship you must be extremely well organized • Small world—Six Degrees phenomenon • Relationships matter—the contact must be more than a means to an end. It can be a small “r” but it must be an “r”.

  18. Networking • Mutual responsibility—mutual interests means mutual responsibility • Technology rules—email etiquette (“netiquette”) builds trust and credibility • Perpetual curiosity—this is the fuel that makes networking work—ask questions • Be interested, generous, share, volunteer,actively listen, be genuine, be specific

  19. Networking • Strength of weak ties—this phenomenon helps to understand why networking works • Asking for help/connecting—help comes to those who can use it as opposed to those who simply need it. People want to help—you have to make it easy for them to act on that desire or impulse • Pursue obscure/tangential references—in a “small world” of networks one never knows where the connections may lead

  20. Networking • Possibility thinking—“Fortune favors the prepared mind” Assume things will work out while taking nothing for granted. Look for patterns of possibilities. Take risks. • Informational interviewing—in essence, this is what all your communications are • Gimmick free—ironically there is no quid pro quo in effective networking • Thank you—the secret to it all

  21. Summary You are in control! Never relinquish responsibility for action Focus on hosts’ & contacts’ needs first Maintain genuine & sincere communications Do not expect things of others—make it easy for them to provide whatever they can and be grateful for whatever they do Consider the future—you are building important bridges into both yours and theirs

  22. References Djeddah, E. (1971). Moving Up: How to Get High-Salaried Jobs. Berkley, Ten Speed Press. Friedman, T. (2005). The World is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century. New York, Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Gladwell, M. (2000). The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference. Boston, Little, Brown and Company.

  23. References Gladwell, M. (2005). Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking. New York, Little, Brown and Company. Gleick, J. (1999). Faster: The Acceleration of Just About Everything. New York, Vintage Books. Goleman, D. (2006). Social Intelligence: The New Science of Human Relationships. New York, Bantam Books.

  24. References Granovetter, M. (1974). Getting a Job: A Study of Contacts and Careers. Cambridge, Harvard University Press. Lipnack, J. & Stamps, J. (1994). The Age of the Network: Organizing Principles for the 21st Century. Essex Junction, VT. OMNEO. Watts, D. (2003). Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age. New York, W.W. Norton & Company.

More Related