New Graduates Guide To Getting a Job
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Transcript of New Graduates Guide To Getting a Job
New Graduate Best Practices Finding a Job, Writing the Resume, and Winning the Interview - 2012 Edition
FINDING A JOB
INTERVIEW TECHNIQUES
Resume Tips
WHAT TO WEAR
YOU
THESE STRATEGIES AND TACTICS ARE FOR RECENT UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE GRADUATES.
THE MOLECULE OF THE NEW YOU
In This Booklet
How to Use This Guide
THIS BOOKLET CONTAINS THE MOST IMPORTANT
INFORMATION YOU DIDN’T LEARN IN COLLEGE, BUT
WILL NEED WHEN LEAVING COLLEGE. THIS BOOK
CONTAINS INFORMATION ON : HOW TO START FIND-
ING JOBS. HOW TO WRITE A KILLER RESUME WITH
TIPS ON HOW TO PRESENT YOURSELF PROPERLY
AND COHERENTLY TO AN EMPLOYERS. LASTLY,
IT HAS GUIDANCE AND INFORMATION ON HOW TO
INTERVIEW, WHAT TECHNIQUES TO USE, AND ES-
PECIALLY WHAT TO WEAR. THIS GUIDE IS FOR YOU
ABOUT WHO YOU WILL BECOME IN YOUR CAREER
AND WORKING LIFE.
EACH SECTION OF THIS GUIDE BUILDS OFF THE MOLECULE OF YOU. THESE SKILLS ARE EASILY
TRANSFERABLE FROM THIS BOOKLET TO YOUR BRAINS IN 60 SECONDS OR LESS. EACH SEC-
TION WILL GIVE YOU THE BEST PRACTICES ON FINDING A JOB, WRITING A RESUME FOR THAT
JOB, UNDERSTANDING HOW TO INTERVIEW FOR THAT JOB, AND LASTLY WHAT TO WEAR TO
MAKE THE RIGHT IMPRESSION.
AFTER THAT, IT’S BASICALLY RINSE, LATHER, AND REPEAT UNTIL YOU GET THE JOB YOU TRULY
KNOW YOU SHOULD HAVE.
“Whatever your life’s work is, do it well. A man should do his job so well that the
living, the dead, and the unborn could do it no better.”
Martin Luther King, Jr.
J Finding a Job Right Out of College
With the unemployment rate stuck above 9%, the jobs picture appears
dim. But there are rays of hope for new college graduates. According to
a survey by the National Association of Colleges and Employers, 19%
more graduates will be hired in 2012 than were last year.
To find out how they’re landing their jobs, We researched two recent
college graduates who found full-time work with benefits in the last six
months and a third who is working in a temporary post that is likely to
lead to a full-time position
Start Online
J Finding A JOb Online
Knowing what to look for is about as easy as choosing you major - It’s difficult. Looking online at job boards and aggregates will help you start getting an idea of what jobs you degree can open the door for you or completely shut you out. Being a liberal arts major or an Engineering major is going to require searching very different pools of jobs. Start joining web-sites like Indeed.com and SimplyHired.com
HOT TIPS: 1) Best day(s)) to spend two hours searching and applying is Sunday & Tuesday 2) Best time to send an email with a resume attached is at 1:45p or 10:35a
Career Services
J WhO yOu knOW, nOt WhAt
The saying goes that getting hired at a real job is about “who you know, not what you know”. This can be true to a certain degree, but cannot be proven as fact. However, utilizing the career services office at your University or Community College gives you the people who know people who need people.
Career service is a excellent source of finding out names, positions, and the asses to kiss in order to get your ass in the door. Don’t be shy; you paid for a University education, use the resources you paid for!
Career Search
J CAreer SeArCh tipS
When starting to look at work and employment keep these six principals in mind at all times for success:1) Be flexible and focused. 2) Apply for as many jobs and recruiting opportunities as possible; It’s a numbers game3) Go to every interview. Not showing can ruin future opportunities.4) Network with people as extensively as possible. 5) Do an internship if possible, just not unpaid. 6) Never panic, even if you have waited until the last minute.
R Resume Techniques
Resume writing is not rocket science. But a great resume can rocket
you ahead other applicants. Your resume must impress the reader in
seconds to be effective. Otherwise, your skills and experiences will be
recycled faster than you can say, “paper shredder”.
Formatting
R reSume Writing
To help you land a job interview, here is the anatomy of a killer resume:1. Your Contact Information2. Your Objective or Summary (or screw both)3. Your Professional Experience (as a new graduate, you should probably list your Education at the begin-ning.)
The Experience section is the body of your resume. It is the heart of the matter. If written well, it can make a hiring manager’s heart race with excitement. If phrased correctly, your experience will land you job interviews.
Always use active voice and active verbs. Think about how your experience relates to the job description or posting.
do’s & don’t
R reSume Writing
Don’t write a book: Your resume is to land you a job interview, not to publish your autobiography. Keep your resume to one page, or two maximum. Edit it down, do not be verbose or in other words, “wordy”.
Don’t screw with instructions: Not taking instructions well at this early stage in the hiring process is a sure fire way to get burned.
Don’t use your “hook-up” or facebook email address: If yours is: [email protected] - Don’t use your sinful email address on your resume. YUCK. Keep it clean and professional to get past the hell heap.
Do write your resume tailored to the job description: You recycle pop cans, not resumes!
DO’s&
DON’T
Not Stu
pid!
Style & Content
R reSume Writing
The style of your resume is one of the first things that a potential employer will notice. In this economy, employers have the luxury of being fickle with any resume that comes across their desk. So it is important that your resume makes a positive impression before it has even been read.
- Eliminate any ambiguity on your resume.- Keep your resume brief.- Remove any unnecessary or irrelevant information- The at-a-glance appearance of your resume should appear professional and attractive.
INTERVIEW TECHNIQUES
“There is no such thing as can’t, only won’t. If you’re qualified, all it takes is a burning desire to accomplish, to make a change.
Go forward, go backward. Whatever it takes! But you can’t blame other people or society in general. It all comes from your mind. When
we do the impossible we realize we are special people.”
~Jan Ashford
I
prepAring
I interVieWing
You are a special person. You know it. Your mom knows it. Your dad knows it. Your siblings know it (but probably will not admit it). Your mom really knows it. Your friends and relatives know it. But unless you convince the inter-viewer of your special talents and abilities, you will fade into that great dark abyss of Interviews Lost.
The best arsenal to overcome the job interview weakness question is to be prepared: from brainstorming strengths and weaknesses to scripting your answers and knowing the job for which you’re applying. Before you even set foot in the interview room, make sure you truly understand the job duties. Research the company, the job and ensure that your strengths match the job description.
beSt prACtiCeS
I interVieWing
When Interviewing follow these 5 Steps for Interview Success:1) Be direct. Begin introductions with a firm but not overpowering handshake. No one likes their hand put in a vice!2) Be confident. Make eye contact often - a must. It shows confidence. Remember the interviewer’s name, and use it once or twice.3) Be prepared. Come prepared with as much information about the company and industry as possible. Prepare questions of your own. Good job candidates want to know that the company to which they are applying is a good personal fit as well.4) Be careful. Think before you speak! This might be the only chance you get to convince a prospective employer that you are the right person for the job. Your answers during the interview are as important as the image you cast.5) Be outgoing. Don’t underestimate the power of humor. If you can subtly make your interviewers crack a smile or laugh - in an appropriate way - they may think you would be an enjoyable person to have in the office or on the team.
reSeArCh
I interVieWing
Know all you need to know before you interview is key to succeeding during an interview. Here are sug-gested options when trying to find out the “nitty gritty” on your dream job.
1) Local library - Tell the reference librarian that you are researching a local company and ask for any materials they may have2) Local newspaper - Most newspapers have keyword search capability for past articles, which you can then get a copy (for a small fee).3) Networking - Who do you know who knows someone who works there? Or knows someone who works for a competitor?4) Company itself - Call the employer, tell them you are interested in finding out more information about them - they may be willing to send it out. Or simply stop by.
WHAT TO WEAR
“There is much to support the view that it is clothes that wear us and
not we them; we may make them take the mould of arm or breast, but
they would mould our hearts, our brains, our tongues to their liking.”
~Virginia Woolf
W
mendreSS FOr interVieWS Your goal in a job interview is simple:
you want the job. How does your outfit help or hurt your chances of being successful?
The impression you make on your interviewer. In the first few seconds of meeting them their brain will be
trying to make the hiring decision on the only information they have: the way you look. Can they imagine you doing the job? Will you fit into the culture?
This may not even be a conscious evaluation.
W WhAt tO WeAr
WOmendreSS FOr interVieWS The impact that your outfit has on
YOU. You must also be able to im-agine yourself doing the job you are interviewing for. Above all, you need to feel confident and physi-cally comfortable. It’s your time to shine and the outfit must comple-ment your skills, not make you feel
self conscious about them.After the first few seconds, you want the interview to focus exclu-sively on your expertise and your ability to excel at the job. Your outfit should make the right first impres-sion and then get out of the way.
W WhAt tO WeAr
Quiz your SkillsCan you get a Job
QuiZ yOurSelF
You don’t have a clue what you want to do. Believe it or not, most people right out of college many times and most, at some point or another, don’t have any idea what type of work they want to do. Here’s some ways to determine what the right job / career is for you.
tAke Our Online teSt: www.myfuture.edu.au/GetThatJobQuiz
Q
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the information provided was the collaboration of major communication studies interview strategies and the latest research in employment information from the research and references presented by:
katelyn darrAce FanningJason Striker
Compiled and created for use in conjunction with the nAu-gCC Communication Studies program for CSt-312 under the instruction and pedagogy of dr. marie baker-Ohler.