Secrets of the Job Hunt

Career Advice Podcasts & Job Seeker Network

8 Rules to Getting a Job in a Bad Ecomony: Business as Usual

Show me someone who hasn’t fantasized getting in the car and leaving it all behind and I’ll show you someone who doesn’t drive. The banks are a mess, credit is awful, the U.S auto industry is a mess, unemployment is climbing still, we’re all out of money, gas prices are on the rise again … oh yeah … and according to the G-8 Summit our planet is melting!

Many people mistakenly assume if a company is not actively looking for someone then a job isn’t available. The experience of many job-hunters may say otherwise.

What do these successful job-hunters have in common?

For one, they have identified their key strengths, related achievements, talent and competences and where and how to apply them. Too, they have learned to engage in conversation that start others thinking about why they should create a job for them. If you have something people want, THAT’S the bottom-line. It’s business as usual: Someone recognizes a problem or opportunity and decided to do something about it.

What else do these people have in common?

They do not rely on convention; the career paths that were winners for most of the last century are often not providing much success; they’ve gone the way of the “eight track” (some of you may get that). These job-hunters also have certain rules in common. Some of them are,

1. Out with the old; in with the new: Make time and create room for new learning (this is increasingly necessary today)
2. Think small as in new, start-up, entrepreneurial not large, mechanistic and bureaucratic
3. “Let’s make a deal” wherever and whenever you can
4. Think like a Consultant: Help businesses from the outside looking in (i.e. opportunities for project work with downsized companies)
5. Get excited about competing; show a competitive drive (always grasping for the gold ring)
6. When life gets tough, tough! Build a bridge and get over it
7. Pay attention to the consequences of the economic downturn over the last couple of years and keep your eye on the future (watch affect on globalization, agriculture, R&D, Environment, etc.)
8. Showcase your leadership qualities: Think like a leader not a manager

What else can be said about these job-hunters and what they have in common? They recognize the need for objective input and feedback from someone or others they know and trust for the same reasons key decision-makers rely on staff or input from their Board. The easiest way to make smart decisions is to surround yourself with people “in the know”. It’s business as usual. Here’s one scenario:

A colleague and close friend phoned me. He is looking for a new career position and after speaking to a mutual friend of ours who too is searching for a new position he concluded “when I had my own company and had to make an important decision that would impact the company and me, I would gather up and consult with my Board as the President does his Cabinet.” He asked to meet with me to see if I would accept a seat on his Cabinet, which I gladly did, and he then preceded to fill 4 other seats.

The experiences of many of these job-hunters also tells us they have learned how NOT to get caught up in the think of thin things. They recognize that what matters most cannot be at the mercy of what matters least. The current economic challenges individuals and companies face in this recession is daunting. Changes in the marketplace, culture, the lightening-speed advancement in technologies… have made job-hunting more complicated now than it was even just a few years ago. However, to let your doubts about the market and your success cause you to give up transcend foolishness. “You have to expect things of yourself before you can do them” (Michael Jordan) and successful job-hunters do! They believe life doesn’t happen to them, it happens from them, and they keep moving on towards the “Gold”, for to them, that is business as usual.

Hope this Helps!

YT,
RT

Rob Taub, a Credentialed Career Master and CAREEREALISM-Approved Career Expert, is a 25-year veteran in the career consulting field who headed the RLS Executive Group, N.E. for RL Stevens & Associates http://interviewing.com, is Principal of RésuméPro Plus http://resumeproplus.com, and Creator of the blog, “The Job Search Corner: Job Searching with Rob” http://jobsearchingwithrob.blogspot.com/

Rob is also an EzineArticles.com Expert Author, has been a school teacher, a fund-raiser for Technology in Education, an auctioneer with WGBH Public Television, a debate moderator with Community Access Television, an instructor for Junior Achievement and a youth sports coach; and has been a guest speaker for community organizations, chambers of commerce and alumni associations on a wide range of subjects including Education, Technology, Career Management, Marketing Communications and Direct Selling. You can view Rob’s full public profile at http://www.linkedin.com/in/robtaub/

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Tags: advice, business, careers, coaching, counseling, education, employment, help, interviewing, job, More…jobs, marketing, networking, recesion, searching, unemployment

Comment by Barry Deutsch on September 20, 2009 at 3:33pm
Rob,

Excellent thoughts on what separates top job hunters from those required to take survival jobs as a recent blog post here suggested.

Top Talent Professionals conducting a job search also do a few other things that most job seekers DO NOT DO.

1. They have a detailed job search plan which they flawlessly execute. We recently published a simple scorecard to evaluate the ability of your job search to land you a great position within half the time it normally takes. Of all the candidates completing that scorecard, less than 5% had an effective job search plan that would guarantee a great job in a short time period.

2. Top Talent is disciplined, focused, and unrelenting in their efforts to find a new job. They treat it like a real job to find a job and show initiative in every element of their job search.

3. Top talent conducts a job search in which they master the fundamentals of conducting a job search: they buy products and services from experts such as yourself, read extensively books by experts such as those by you, other authors here, and my partner and I. They absorb all the iTunes and YouTube content for conducting an effective job search. They are life-long learners and treat their job search no different than if they were mastering a concept at work.

Barry Deutsch
Partner
IMPACT Hiring Solutions
http://www.impacthiringsolutions.com
Comment by Robert J. Taub on September 20, 2009 at 7:24pm
What a TERRIFIC comment with which to dovetail! Thanks for the adition, Barry.

YT,
RT

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