5 Tips to “Spring Clean” Your Resume – Part 2 of 2
3. BE ACTIVE.
In your Resume, use strong action verbs at the beginning of every sentence. Words such as “lead, launched, directed, built, managed and generated” have a lot more impact than a passive phrases such as “responsible for” or “handled.”
4. BE SELECTIVE.
Focus on information that is truly relevant to your career goal and edit out the rest. There is no need to focus on your high school achievements or volunteer work if they are not relevant to the career you are looking for or if they are in your distant past.
5. BE HONEST.
Never, never, never lie on a Resume. If you lie or “stretch the truth,” you will always lose in the long run.
Your Resume is a “living document” that will be edited and updated through the course of your job search and your entire career. Taking a good look at it this Spring, and at the start of every season, will help you get more interviews – and ultimately, better job offers!
Click here to watch helpful career success videos!
To read the entire article, click here!
You’re Invited – Seminar: Active interviewing: Win the Interview and Get the Offer!
Join us to learn about Active Interviewing, winning interviews, and landing jobs.
Good candidates like you often lose jobs they should be landing due to poor interview performance and bad interviewers. Many candidates try to prepare for interviews, but their preparation is inadequate or they are interviewed by employers who make bad hiring decisions. Even with all the available interview information, candidates continue to commit more mistakes in the interview than in any other stage of the job-search process – and hiring managers continue to make highly subjective and inaccurate selection decisions.
Interviews are “broken,” but you can learn to fix your interviews by using the latest Active Interviewing strategies. Active Interviewing is based on an entirely new, tested, and dramatically effective approach to interviews – treating the interview as a sales call and developing an interview presentation to help you actively sell yourself as the best candidate for the job.
This approach has helped hundreds of candidates win their interviews and land jobs. Active Interviewing is new, innovative, and targeted toward landing the right job in today’s hyper-competitive job marketplace.
Attendees will learn:
• How personal branding can be used to differentiate, promote, and sell oneself in an interview (learn to use the “phrase that pays”)
• Simple sales techniques that make a candidate more persuasive, memorable, and desirable (learn the best way to identify and overcome hiring objections)
• How to use an interview presentation to shift the dynamics of the interview, impress the interviewer, and communicate a high level of preparation and motivation (learn to present a Strategic Action Plan for quickly providing value to the company)
About the presenter:
Eric P. Kramer has extensive experience working as a Career Consultant with two of the country’s largest outplacement firms. He has worked with thousands of job seekers, teaching them job search skills and coaching them through interviews. Eric has extensive background as an independent consultant and entrepreneur. He is also accomplished in human resources, legal requirements, team building, and maintaining a healthy company culture. Eric has authored three books: “Active Interviewing: Branding, Selling and Presenting Yourself to Win Your Next Job;” “100 Strategies for Successful Interviewing;” and “100 Strategies for Successful Networking.” Eric is a licensed Psychologist, and is certified in Positive Psychology.
Here are the details:
DATE: Thursday, February 21, 2013
TIME: 6:30pm to 9:00pm
SPONSOR: Philadelphia Area Great Careers Group
PRESENTER: Eric P. Kramer
FACILITATOR: Ford R. Myers
INVESTMENT: $20.00 (pay with your online registration)
LOCATION: Bartley Hall, Room 1001, Villanova University, Villanova, PA (Corner of Lancaster and Ithan Avenues)
REGISTRATION: Advanced registration is required. Visit http://www.meetup.com/Philadelphia-Area-Great-Careers-Group/events/96151172/ or call Eric Kramer at (610) 420-4158
DIRECTIONS: Visit http://www1.villanova.edu/villanova/admission/visit/maps.html
QUESTIONS: Call Eric at (610) 420-4158 or e-mail
NOTE: You will need to register as a member of www.MeetUp.com (free) in order to sign-up for this event. Do this at http://www.meetup.com/Philadelphia-Area-Great-Careers-Group by clicking the “Join Us” button at the top-right section of the web page.
Be sure to reserve your place now, and start transforming your job interviews into job offers!
You’re Invited: Seminar – Networking – The Core of Your Career
You’ll look at your friends, family members, even your dry cleaner in a whole new light after this powerful seminar!
One of the keys to managing your career effectively is to build and maintain a strong and varied network. Every job seeker – and even those who are currently employed – should carve time out of their busy schedules for networking!
Your network is your most valuable career asset! (Far more important than a résumé). You’ll learn how to cultivate this often-overlooked and underdeveloped resource into a positive and dynamic tool to create long-term career success.
Every networking encounter will now be treated like a business meeting, complete with a purpose, an agenda and specific outcomes.
By leveraging your network in the proper way, you may never have to look for a job again. You’ll get the jobs you want, and even know how to have a position created for you!
About the presenter:
Ford R. Myers is President of Career Potential, LLC. His firm helps clients take charge of their careers, create the work they love, and earn what they deserve! Ford has held senior consulting positions at three of the nation’s largest career service firms. His articles and interviews have appeared in many national magazines and newspapers, and he has conducted presentations at numerous companies, associations and universities. In addition, Ford has been a frequent guest on television and radio programs across the country. He is author of two books: “Get the Job You Want, Even When No One’s Hiring” and “The Ultimate Career Guide.” More information is available at: careerpotential.com and fordmyers.com.
Here are the details:
DATE: Wednesday, February 27, 2013
TIME: 9:00am to 11:30am
SPONSOR: Career Potential, LLC
PRESENTER: Ford R. Myers, President of Career Potential, LLC
INVESTMENT: $25.00 (pay with your online registration)
LOCATION: Radnor Financial Center, 150 N. Radnor-Chester Road, Suite F-200, Radnor, PA
REGISTRATION: Advanced registration is required and seats are limited. Visit www.careerpotential.com/signup
DIRECTIONS: Visit www.careerpotential.com/directions_radnor.htm
QUESTIONS: Call Ford at (610) 649-1778 or e-mail
Sign-up now for this special event, and master the single most important element of your career and job search – networking!
5 Tips to “Spring Clean” Your Resume – Part 1 of 2
Spring is just around the corner (starts March 20)! If your Resume hasn’t been getting the results you want, Spring is the perfect time to “clean it up” and significantly improve it. Here are five tips to freshen-up YOUR Resume this Spring:
1. BE BRIEF.
Of the five main sections of a Resume – Header/Contact Information, Career Summary, Professional Experience, Education and Affiliations or Professional Development – the Career Summary is where brevity counts most. As they say, “Less is more!”
The Career Summary is a brief statement of who you are, where you’re “coming from,” and what skills and expertise you have to contribute to an organization. All you’ll need to grab the reader’s attention are five or six lines of text highlighting the benefits and contributions you offer as a professional.
2. BE SPECIFIC.
Resumes that get noticed focus on specific, tangible results. Quantify everything you can, including retention rates, sales numbers, profit margins, numbers of projects, numbers of people, performance quotas, and so on. Whenever possible, use percentages, dollars and hard numbers.
Although you should be as specific as possible throughout the entire Resume, quantification should be used most in the “Professional Experience” section. Here is where your past jobs, roles, responsibilities, and accomplishments are listed. This is also the section where most employers and recruiters focus 90% of their attention. The information you present here, and how you present it, can decide the fate of your candidacy within about 10 seconds of resume scanning time.
Click here to watch helpful career success videos!
To read the entire article, click here!
The Seven Truths of Career Success – Part 2 of 2
This article is being presented over a period of two months. Last month, we shared the first four “Truths of Career Success.” In this edition of “Your Career Advocate,” we reveal the final three items in our list of “Seven Truths.”
5. Always research and be “plugged in” to the competition
Research and be aware of the competition – whether it be information about other companies or other professionals in your industry. Always know who they are and what they’re doing. Endeavor to “know the competition better than they know themselves.” This will greatly enhance your competitiveness when jobs are hard to come by, and it will allow you to jump on opportunities that others might not yet be aware of!
Here’s an example of how important it is to be “plugged into” your competitors. One of my clients is the President of a small advertising agency. Her client base is solid, her creative work is excellent, and she makes a very good living in this role. But the thing that my client is most proud of is the fact that her firm is the envy of every small-to-medium sized agency in town.
Not because of the creative awards my client has won, and not because of how impressive her offices are – although these are certainly noteworthy achievements. The reason my client is so envied is that she always seems to get the most prestigious accounts and the most interesting assignments. My client also has a real knack for getting the best designers in the region to work for her. The other agency owners in the region just stand around, shaking their heads in disbelief and frustration. “How does she do it?” they ask themselves, repeatedly.
Well, just between you and me – it’s not because my client’s work is so much better than the work of the other agencies. No, the way she keeps winning, over and over, is that her investigative research is superior to that of any of her competitors. She makes it her business to know what’s going on in her market – what company is doing what; which accounts are going where, who’s working for whom, what challenges or trends are affecting local companies – and all the rest. The bottom line is simply that my client is far more “plugged in” – and she has used this knowledge to beat out the competition, year after year after year!
So what does this mean to you? It means you should start to “research your way to success.” Read industry publications, trade magazines, your local Business Journal, your daily newspaper’s business section, Business Week, Fortune, Forbes, The Wall Street Journal, and so on. Pay attention to other local, regional, and national sources of “business intelligence,” such as web sites, newsletters, blogs, and radio or TV shows. Learn to frame your expertise, your ideas, and your value in terms that are relevant to the current business and economic landscape.
Connect with people, companies, and groups that you read about. If you can move and shake with the movers and shakers, so much the better. If you can’t – you should at least know what they’re thinking, what they’re concerned about, and what opportunities they see ahead. The more you know about the competition, the easier it will be to get a job when no one seems to be hiring.
6. Networking is not as important as you think it is
It is more important!! Put time aside every week for active networking to maintain established relationships and develop new ones – both inside and outside the company where you work.
You should always be positioned to leverage your professional and personal contacts when the need arises. So, adopt the discipline of blocking-out time on your calendar specifically for networking activities – every week, every month, and every year, for the duration of your career!
I’ll never forget a story I heard when I was facilitating a “job search team” several years ago. We had about 15 people in the conference room. After I conducted a brief presentation about professional networking, one of the participants asked if she could share a personal story.
She said that she had just been laid-off from her employer of almost 25 years! She had started at the company as an entry-level Customer Support Representative. On that same day, another individual started at the company in the same job. They discovered that they were just about the same age, and that their backgrounds were very similar, in terms of education, interests, family history, and so on. My client and this man worked well together for about two years, when he was suddenly transferred to another department, and at a higher level, within the company.
She didn’t see him much after that, but she did occasionally hear about how well he was doing with the firm. Years passed, until eventually she was laid-off and wound-up at my office in need of career help. “By the way,” she said, “that man who started at the company with me became, and is still, the President of that company!”
At the time of her layoff, on the other hand, my client had held the same position for which she was hired nearly 25 years ago. When I asked her to tell the group why she thought she had remained at the same level, while her colleague had moved up to claim the Presidency of their company, she said, without hesitation, “Oh that’s an easy one. He was always a master networker. Me? I was just doing my job.”
This story proves, without any doubt, how important it is to keep networking in both good economic times and bad – and to continually update your success file so that you can “promote yourself” to greater levels of responsibility!
7. If YOU’RE not managing your career, nobody is!
When I speak to audiences about career management strategies, I show a slide that has the following quiz on it:
QUIZ: Who is responsible for managing your career?
| Human Resources | Executive Search Firm | ||
| My Manager | Career Consultant | ||
| Recruiter | None of the above |
At different times and under different circumstances, perhaps any combination of these would have been the correct answer. But in today’s economy, the answer is clearly “None of the above.”
It doesn’t matter what your Human Resources department says about “succession planning” or “leadership development” or “career pathing.” It doesn’t matter that you have great relationships with recruiting firms – perhaps even the one that connected you with your current position (remember: recruiters work for employers, not for candidates). It doesn’t matter if you’re working with the world’s best Career Coach. It doesn’t even matter if your boss loves everything you’re doing, has big plans for you, and has nothing but glowing praise for you at every performance review.
The bottom line is that YOU, and only you, hold the keys to your career, your future, and your own brand of “career security” – even if there is no longer such a thing as “job security” (and there isn’t).
This may seem like a lot of responsibility “on your shoulders,” but this is also liberating in the sense that you have a lot more control over your career success than you might have thought!
Read Part One of “The Seven Truths of Career Success”
Click here to watch helpful career success videos!
To read the entire article, click here!
The Seven Truths of Career Success – Part 1 of 2
This article is being presented over a period of two months. In this edition of “Your Career Advocate,” we have included the first four of our “Seven Truths.” Next month, we will reveal the final three “Truths” of career success.
1. The most qualified candidate does not necessarily get the job offer
Many times, candidates with lesser qualifications get job offers simply because they’ve prepared and presented themselves in a more compelling way. In other words, they’re better self-marketers than the other candidates!
In a tight job market, being qualified is never enough. You must DEMONSTRATE to the employer that you’re the best candidate for the job. Depending on your age and how your parents raised you, you may be operating under a “wishful thinking” mindset regarding the concept of meritocracy. This would include the following cultural messages and ingrained assumptions that many of us had “drilled into our heads” by well-meaning parents and teachers:
- Getting good grades guarantees success in college and in life
- Being smart means that you’ll do better than people who are not smart (or at least not as smart as you)
- Hard work is its own reward – and is also the best path to other rewards
- Achievement and recognition go hand-in-hand. In other words, just do well and other people (teachers, professors, employers, bosses, the CEO) will recognize and reward you for it
but not sufficient, to find a job you love and earn what you deserve.
Let’s say that you’re competing against another candidate whose qualifications are just as strong as yours. What is the hiring manager supposed to do? Well, the answer is obvious – they will be influenced by how good a job you do in MARKETING, SELLING and POSITIONING those strong qualifications.
At the end of the day, it’s the best self-marketer who gets the job. Don’t be fooled into believing that the business world is a meritocracy – it’s not. This can, obviously, be either good news or bad news, depending on how you’ve positioned yourself up to this point in your career. You need to boost your self-marketing skills to the point where you can land a great job regardless of the economic “weather,” unemployment news, or latest Wall Street implosion!
2. The best time to work on your career is when your job is secure
Even if you’re very happily employed today, you never know what may happen tomorrow! To avoid a career disaster, you should incorporate the concept of “Perpetual Career Management” into your professional life.
Vital tasks like keeping your success stories up to date, or networking regularly with professionals in your industry, should be incorporated into your routine whether the economy is good or bad – and whether you feel you need to or not.
Here’s a real-life example. A few years ago, I had a client who was in a senior-level sales and marketing position at a large manufacturing company. He had everything going for him with the employer – he was a member of the senior management team, he had been with the firm for 13 years, and he was consistently praised for his hard work and professionalism. Needless to say, he felt very comfortable and secure in his position. He never saw what was about to happen.
Due to an economic downturn and an eventual acquisition of the company, my client was suddenly let go on a crisp November morning. An hour later, he found himself sitting in his car in the parking lot – asking himself over and over, “How could this have happened? I did such a good job for them!” And worst of all, my client was totally unprepared! He had none of the tools necessary to find another appropriate position within a reasonable period of time. Naturally, he felt concerned and scared. He later told me that toughest part was feeling completely helpless.
What does this mean for you? It means that you should consider adopting a different approach, the “Perpetual Career Management” approach – not only to avoid feeling helpless, but to truly take charge of your career once and for all.
As we said earlier, instead of focusing completely on your job, you should focus on managing your career – at all times, regardless of where the economy or job market happens to be!
That’s the key that will help you to chop months off your next job search, significantly boost your salary, get promoted faster, and never worry again about job security or layoffs.
3. Graduating from school is the beginning of your education, not the end
In good economic times or bad, you should always look for ways to advance your industry knowledge and professional qualifications. Attending seminars, reading trade journals, pursuing certifications, etc. – these activities should be a part of your ongoing professional development process. It’s imperative that every professional remain current in his or her field. No company wants to hire a candidate whose base of knowledge is out of date. Moreover, why would your current organization and current boss want to work with someone like that? NOT upgrading your knowledge and skills on a continual basis is a risk you can’t afford to take.
As a professional, you should continually build your credentials, which will make you more attractive and marketable as a candidate – both inside your company and in “the outside world.”
Plus, in a down economy, the greatest asset you have to sell is your knowledge and intellectual resources. When business gets tough, the demand for people who can think strategically and deliver results goes UP, not down!
4. An employer’s first offer is NEVER their best offer
Employers expect that you’ve done salary research, and they anticipate having dynamic negotiations with you. In fact, they’ll often be disappointed and question your candidacy if you DON’T negotiate – even when no one’s hiring. You might be tempted to think ANY job offer is great in a tough economy or that this is the WORST time to negotiate – but you’d be dead wrong.
Employers usually start with a low salary offer merely as a “trial balloon,” to see how you’ll react – and there’s almost always room to improve on the initial compensation offer, even in a tight job market. In a way, compensation negotiation is a game, with its own set of rules and guidelines. Be aware that the first offer is merely a starting point. If you don’t negotiate further, I guarantee that you’ll be leaving money – and possibly a whole lot more – on the table.
Click here to watch helpful career success videos!
To read the entire article, click here!
Begin With an “Internal Career Audit” – Part 2 of 2
As stated above, career transition is mostly “an inside game.” Your progress will have much more to do with “what’s going on between your two ears” than with the “external circumstances” of the economy or job market.
To get your job search started on the right foot, it’s important to build a solid foundation of self-knowledge and clarity. Use separate sheets if necessary to answer the following questions. Be as thorough and candid as possible, and take as much time as you need.
- Describe your current career situation as succinctly as possible; include both the “good” and the “bad.”
- Describe the way you would ideally like it to be. Be as specific as possible in identifying your primary career “desires.”
- What are you doing in your work that you want to continue doing? With whom?
- Does anyone else you know now have the kind of work situation you envision? If so, describe it in detail. What steps did this person take to get there?
- What is necessary for your future (goals) regarding money, time and quality of life – in one year? Five years? Ten years?
- What are you not doing professionally that you would like to be doing?
- What unique qualities or characteristics do you bring to your career?
- In your work, what skills and abilities are not being properly utilized or fully expressed?
- What predictable blocks (organizational, personal, emotional, financial, etc.) might prevent you from reaching your goals?
- What might you lose or leave behind if you were to make a significant career change, for a better situation? (Personal, practical, emotional, financial, status, etc.)
- Do you know what your career goal or objective is (short-term and long-term)? If so, have you written it down?
- What is the primary motivator/driver in your career? Has this been consistent, or has it changed?
- How will you know when you are on the right track – when you’ve “arrived?”
As you move through the career transition process, try to keep in mind the following words of career wisdom:
“People don’t succeed by migrating to a ‘hot’ industry or by adopting a particular career-guiding mantra. They thrive by focusing on the question of who they really are, and connecting that to the work they truly love. The choice isn’t about a career search so much as an identity quest.”
– Po Bronson, “What Should I Do With My Life?”
Click here to watch helpful career success videos!
To read the entire article, click here!
Begin With an “Internal Career Audit” – Part 1 of 2
“I want a more satisfying career, but where do I begin?”
When you’re considering making a change in your career, it’s difficult to know where to start. There are usually conflicting thoughts and feelings involved, and too often the result is a kind of paralysis. In addition, most people simply lack the necessary resources, knowledge and skill to conduct an effective search campaign on their own.
Although finding a better job or more satisfying career might feel like a very random and confusing experience, there is actually a proven approach to achieving this goal.
But we need to start at the beginning, and that means doing an “internal audit” of yourself. As I often tell my clients, career development is “an inside game.” We go inside before we look outside. If you want to achieve your career potential, you must first get totally clear on such questions as – who you are, what’s important to you, what you really want and need, what your long-term goals are, what motivates you to do what you do, what your professional preferences are – and many more. Only after you’ve gained clarity on these criteria, does it makes sense to “go out into the world” and manifest your own unique vision of career success.
Getting into resumes, interviewing, negotiating, networking, and all the other typical “job search topics” before you’ve lain a strong foundation is nothing but a recipe for frenzied activity without forward movement. Perhaps you’ve already experienced this. It can be very frustrating, depressing, and – worst of all – “de-motivating!”
Click here to watch helpful career success videos!
To read the entire article, click here!
