Friday, August 3, 2012

It’s the Little Things that Matter – Five Small Details you Need to Pay Attention to When Looking for a Job!



Hello Internet!  I’m back from last week’s hiatus and ready to help you get a job!  Things are going great here in Iowa.  We’ve cooled down from last week’s heat wave where I counted at least seven times that I got in my car and saw a temp of over 105!  It really is amazing how everything is relative – today it’s going to be 96 and people are acting like its fall.  Ahh the Midwest!  Last night we experienced one of the  cooler things in our little corner of the world – The National Hot Air Balloon Classic.  My kids loved it!



Today I’m going to talk about some of the little details that help you get a job.  Of course you need to have an awesome resume, finely pressed suit, strong linked in profile and the like.  This is all really important.  However, many people have all of these things and still don’t get the job even though they are more qualified than other candidates.  Why?  It’s because they don’t do the little things that set them apart.  Below are five little things you can do to enhance your profile and get the job:

1.  Learn how to leave a voicemail
Here’s the deal.  Your voicemail’s say a lot about who you are. The first thing you need to know is that most people hate voicemails.  I mean they really hate them.  What do they hate more than voicemails – really long voicemails.  The problem with voicemails is that you really can’t help your candidacy as much as you can hurt it.  A long winded, stream of consciousness, bland voicemail  will either make you look a) incoherent, b) boring, or c) annoying.  So, what should go into a voicemail?  A good voicemail should have three things:

  1. Your Name – Hi Rick – It’s Jenny
  2. The Purpose – I’m returning your call, I’m responding to your ad, I think you saw my number on the wall.
  3. Your number – Please call me back at 867-5309

A couple of other things on this matter.  If you need to get more info across, let them know that you will follow up over email. Finally, smile when you leaving the voicemail.  It will come through.

2.  Learn how to send an Email
Email has become so informal lately and while I personally think that this is bad for us as a society it is acceptable to use it as some sort of bastardized version of instant messaging between people you know well.  However, if you are emailing someone that you are looking to impress – you know because they are maybe going to hire you, you should probably put a little bit of thought into it.  At the end of the day you should treat email correspondence with a potential employer as a way to set yourself apart.  Here is what you need in an email:
  • Give a salutation – the simple act of acknowledging that the other person has a name will put you ahead of the masses.
  • Use punctuation and capitalization – I don’t care if you are typing on the world’s tiniest iPhone – you appear stupid and lazy when you don’t take the extra millisecond to capitalize my name or put in a period.
  • Write in complete sentences with paragraphs – first of all its really hard to read without them.  Secondly, if you can’t take the time to write a coherent, grammatically correct and fully formed message – how much do you care about this job?
  • Spelling – errors or relying on spell check make you look stupid

3.  Follow Directions
This one is really, really important.  If a company tells you to email them your resume.  Email it. Don’t mail it. Don’t fax it (If you are using a fax machine still…that’s a whole other problem).  Secondly, if the ad doesn’t ask you to call – don’t call.  I will tell you that there is some gray area here with calling.  If you are responding to a posted job advertisement with a company – you shouldn’t call.  The reason – the person conducting the search has other responsibilities than the search alone.  I can guarantee that there are so many other people calling that you will not set yourself apart in any sort of positive way. 
However, there are two areas where you can call.  First, if it is an independent recruiter like me – call away – these people’s jobs are to talk to people about getting jobs all day.  If they are bothered by your call – find another.  Secondly, if there isn’t an opening at a company that you want to work for and feel that your background would fit with them it is acceptable to call the hiring manager (or a potential hiring manager) and ask for permission to send them your resume.  Anyway, back to following directions.
While companies don’t put directions on an ad as a test it still acts as an informal test.  The inability to follow directions will lead the company to make some (possibly) inaccurate assumptions about you.  Some things that they might surmise from this:
·        You don’t respect authority
·        You can’t read
·        You think you are smarter than the rest of us
·        You can’t do basic computer skills (this is for you faxers out there)

Anyway – I’ve written more about this subject before and you can read about it here:


4.  Cover Letters
It’s time for a dirty little secret.  Generally speaking the odds of someone taking the time to thoughtfully read your cover letter is virtually non-existent.  Yet – companies expect that you send one.  It’s just one of those stupid things that are a vestige from another time – like the fax machine.  So, how do you write a cover letter?  You need three paragraphs.
            The first paragraph should have about three sentences.  Introduce yourself, state the job you are applying for and where you saw it.  The last paragraph should be equally as short – it should thank them for their time, give them the phone number and email you would like to be contacted at and suggest an interview. 
            The middle paragraph is the most important.  It must be short  but powerful and use bullet points.  The paragraph should look something like this:
            I feel my experience would make me an excellent fit for this position.  Specifically when I worked at Initech I accomplished the following:
  • Organized paperwork using my Swingline stapler
  • Was the top producer of TPS reports in the company
  • Assisted in the removal of faulty office equipment
  • Successfully collaborated with a team to create a software program that made the companies finances more efficient

So – why should they be short?  It’s because there is an inverse relationship between the length of a resume or cover letter and the likelihood someone will read it.  In other words – people are lazy and busy and won’t take the time to read your cover letter if it looks like a chore.

5.  Short Answers
We live in a world where information is spoon fed to us in sound bites less than 30 seconds, messages with less than 140 characters, text messages and posts.  Why?  That’s all the attention span that our poor brains can handle.  When you are interviewing you need to know this and embrace it.  Now – I’m not telling you to start rolling out a bunch of LOL’s or BRB’s.  However, you need to limit how long an answer is and give the other person a chance to talk.  An interview should be a conversation – not a soliloquy or prepared speech.  So how do you do this?  It’s easy – practice and be conscious of time.  One tip I give people is to Google and find a list of the top interview questions.  Pick a couple of them and practice answering them in front of a mirror with a stop watch.  If you are under 2 – 3 minutes you are doing well.  If you are pushing five minutes or more – you need to get out more and get that out of your system.

That is all I’ve got for today.  As always let me know your thoughts on this and feel free to leave a comment.  Also feel free to email me directly at sthompson@insurance-csg.com.  

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