Saturday, May 30, 2020
?? 3 Simple Ways to Get Resume Responses Company Feedback
?? 3 Simple Ways to Get Resume Responses Company Feedback 88 Applied to many jobs and got no calls? Feel like applying for jobs online doesn't work? These tips are for you. Photo by Wynand van Poortvliet This is a guest post by Chandlee Bryan. You saw a job listing you were excited about. You applied. You told a friend or two you applied. Maybe you got an interview? They said theyâd call you. You never heard back. Ever happened to you? If your answer is yes â" which of course it is â" and youâve applied for loads of jobs and got no reply, itâs easy to start feeling like the title of a sad country music song: You Never Even Call Me By My Name Where Do I Fit in the Picture? What Hurts the Most (Is Nothing in My In-Box) While itâs never a good idea to go negative in a job search and storm the workplace to get a response, here are three ways you can work on getting better feedback and improve your chances in the job hunt. Do you typically contact employers before sending your resume? Yes No View Results Free bonus: The One Resume Resource Youâll Ever Need is a handy reference to make your resume get you more job interviews. Download it free now 3 ways to get responses from recruiters 1) Connect with employers besides applying From You Never Even Call Me By My Name to First Name Basis⦠Employers get dozens if not hundreds of applications for one job. Until you interact with the organization at which youâve applied, your name is a series of characters online. Make yourself real. Get mentioned. Hereâs how to do it: Follow-up after you apply. Be clever. Call the hiring manager. Send a fax. Get introduced by a trusted friend. It doesnât matter how you do it. Just make it happen. And when you do, go for what my friend Laura Labovich calls the âForrest Gumpâ or âJames Bondâ approach. Mention your name TWICE. As in, âIâm Forrest, Forrest Gumpâ Or âBond, James Bond here. Iâve noticed you have a need for someone with experience in defusing explosives.â Saying it twice makes you more memorable. 2) Check for employer updates From What Hurts the Most (Is Nothing in my In-box) to Knowing What Happened⦠Hereâs a secret not always shared- Often employers will give you feedback on the status of your job application, but you have to log back into the account you created to apply for the job to see this information. Sometimes the information you receive isnât what you wanted â" your application may not have been viewed, you may have gotten turned down, the job may no longer be available. But knowing what your status is can at least end the waiting game. 3) Follow up after rejections From Where Do I Fit in the Picture to Thereâs a Place for Me⦠Have you ever been told you are overqualified? Rejected because your experience far exceeds the requirements for a position? Too senior for a job offer? I call this the Goldilocks Syndrome: a unique condition wherein a potential employer decides you are over- or under-qualified for a job despite the fact that you may actually be a fit. One way to beat this syndrome is to follow up on your rejection, pleasantly express your disappointment at not having the opportunity â" and say what you would have learned from the job. Restate your interest in the organization. Worst case scenario: You still donât get the job, but you weren't going to anyway. Best case scenario: The employer reconsiders. Iâve watched a job seeker use this approach to turn a rejection into a job offer. Question of the article Do you typically contact employers before sending your resume? If so, what's your go-to outreach tactic? Tell us in the comments. What others are saying How Can 100 Job Applications Get Zero Replies? Here's How Your resume is not the problem Why donât I get a call back when I send in my resume???!!! No Response on a Job Application â" Do This Avoiding the Resume Black Hole: Why 95% of Resumes Never Get Read, and What You Can Do About It Bonus: Resume Not Getting a Response? Do This ASAP! About the Author Chandlee Bryan, M.Ed. is a job search strategist and resume writer at Best Fit Forward, she also serves as the Assistant Director at the Center for Professional Development at Dartmouth College. She is the co-organizer of one of the largest job seekers Meetup groups in the world and enjoys listening to â" and telling â" stories in her spare time. You can follow her career advice on Twitter at @chandlee. This article was part of the Over $5000 in Prizes: The 5th Annual JobMob Guest Blogging Contest, which was made possible thanks in large part to our sponsors: Marcus Tandlerâs JOBlog is Germanyâs oldest blog about job search careers. Rabbi Issamar Ginzberg is an internationally acclaimed advisor to successful business owners, known for his small business ideas. READ NEXT: How to Quickly Recover From Bad Job Interviews
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.