AT WORK

For those in need of a little Job love and career inspiration

Hey recruiter, call me!

Hi, there lovely readers. Ever applied for a job that had your name all over it, sent your application then kicked back to wait for the call to interview? Instead, nothing. Nada. Crickets. Confidence starts to slide and soon the motivation to continue your job search morphs into couch slouching, watching dodgy mid-day movies while dust-busting biscuit crumbs off your chest.

Well now! That just won’t do will it? Let’s throw that discouragement to the curb, review the most common reasons recruiters might not be calling you back and take a course correction for better results ok?

First up, the Resume

Your resume is the first critical step to getting you through the door, that’s after the document has managed to make it through the scan bots (more on that later) into the 6-second read pile. So what annoys the recruiter the most?

Format: unusual fonts, tiny font size, colour, pictures, tables, former company symbols, excessive white space, misaligned paragraphs all serve to annoy the recruiter. Keep your resume crisp, clean and no more than two pages.

Grammar: Given 58% of recruiters will dismiss your resume thanks to a spelling error or two this is a critical element. I can’t tell you how many resumes I’ve seen as a personal branding specialist where the owner has listed ‘Attention to detail’ as a strength, yet poor syntax, punctuation, inconsistent tense and spelling errors all negate the statement. Print a copy and have a friend review. Moreover, if you’re concerned about your grammar, you may find ‘Grammarly’ helpful. A great little site that picks up errors provides important alternative words and checks for ease of readability.

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Why thanks Mr. Interviewer!

Hi, there lovely readers – a big thank you for following my blog! Oh! And while on the subject of ‘thank you’s’ – let’s talk about how valuable a simple thank-you can be in the world of work (after all, this year’s focus is on lovin’ that career of yours!). To the network friend who interrupted their busy schedule to respond to your question. To your new LinkedIn friend for making the effort to connect with you. To the recruiter who positioned you for an opportunity. To the interviewers who took the time to interview you.

My interviewers?

Yes, your interviewers! Sure you might have shaken hands and thanked the panel on the way out the door, patted yourself on the back for acing the interview and are now settling down to await the verdict – but you’re not done yet!

Would it surprise you to know that most hiring managers pay very close attention to how well (and how rapidly) you write a thank you email after the interview? Yes, that thank you may just synch the deal!

Prove it!

Geraldine had diligently crafted robust, quantified responses to questions she’d likely be asked as she prepared to interview for a Chief Financial Officer role. Our coaching session went well, and as I walked her to the door, she asked, ‘any last-minute tips?‘Don’t forget that follow up note, let me know how it goes and…good luck!’

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