resume

Ten Great Ways to Sabotage Your Chances of Getting the Job

Here are ten methods I’ve witnessed candidates – first-hand – employ to ensure that they do everything in their power to sabotage their chances to snag that dream job in the application and interview process.  It’s so easy to throw a wrench in the works!

  1. Arrive late for the interview. Don’t bother to call. Then act like nothing happened.

  2. Learn nothing about the company in advance of your interview. Then, when asked by your interviewer “What do you know about us,” make something up.

  3. Ask how much the job pays. Even after you’ve already had this discussion with the corporate recruiter. Ask everybody with whom you interview.

  4. Tell the recruiter you are close friends with the CEO, when you and she met once in passing. Maybe.

  5. Be friendly to everybody you meet in the company. Except to the recruiter. In that case, be a total ass.

  6. Bring extra copies of your resume. Folded up into a compact square in your pocket.

  7. Send a nice, thoughtful thank you note after the interviews to people you’ve met.  Generously sprinkle in typos and misspellings.

  8. Guess at your prior dates of employment on the job application. Go ahead, just guess. That way, when the company gets ready to hire you and runs the pre-employment background check, nothing adds up and you get disqualified for dishonesty.

  9. Leave your cell phone on. When your phone rings during the middle of the interview, casually take the call.

  10. Use your referral network to do everything possible to get in the door with the company. Make sure you ask an executive to sponsor you and they use every bit of their personal equity to push you through and get you an offer in another department. Then, AFTER you’ve received and accepted the offer, make your resume live and searchable on the job boards the company subscribes to, like Monster, so that the recruiter can stumble across it and inform the executive about it.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. He is a Human Resources professional and staffing expert with almost two decades of in-house corporate HR and staffing firm experience, and is a Certified Professional Resume Writer (CPRW) and Certified Professional Career Coach (CPCC).

Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, and career coaching services, including a free resume review. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.

 

 

Hey, Somebody Edited My Resume!

You've been in contact with a recruiter about a job opportunity, and he tells you the good news - you've got the interview!

So far, so good. You show up to interview, and you're sitting down with the hiring manager. The manager asks you to clarify something on your resume. You ask to see what she's talking about.

The manager shows you your resume, and it's unrecognizable. A quick glimpse at the resume she gives you shows that the formatting's been changed, your contact information has been removed, and it appears that there's been modifications to the body of the text. God forbid that any errors have been added in.

What. The. #*$!. Happened!?!?!?

Okay, brace yourself for this. Ready?

Recruiters may edit your resume to better suit their own needs. And it happens more often than you think.

A recruiter (even an internal, corporate recruiter) is in a sales role. He is held to metrics that such as placements, cycle time, etc.

At the minimum, the recruiter will remove your contact information to prevent an employer from going around them and reaching out to you directly, thus cutting them out of the deal.

But sometimes it goes further than that. Editing content, changing things around to appeal to a hiring manager, you name it - the recruiter may feel that he ishelping the candidate, but it's not always the case. A spell-check is one thing, modifying content is another.

You've put a lot of work into deciding how you would like to present yourself in your resume, what can you do?

  • If you have the opportunity send your resume as a PDF, do it. It's a lot harder for anybody to modify.

  • Bring your own hard copies of your resume to the interview. As the interview begins, provide a copy to the interviewer as your "latest version."

  • Understand that changes may happen - the resume is often out of control once it leaves your hands.

  • Make sure your resume is rock-solid before sending it to anybody. Make sure it's well-written, without errors or typos. Don't give anybody any reason to feel the need to edit your resume on your behalf.

 

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. He is a Human Resources professional and staffing expert with almost two decades of in-house corporate HR and staffing firm experience, and is a Certified Professional Resume Writer (CPRW) and Certified Professional Career Coach (CPCC).

Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, and career coaching services, including a free resume review. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.

 

Do Cover Letters Still Matter?

This should convince them!

This should convince them!

Every career adviser will tell you that when you prepare a resume, that you need accompany it with a personalized cover letter.

What exactly is a cover letter, anyway? It’s a one-page document that accompanies your resume, customized and addressed to the person whom you’re sending your credentials. Usually, it summarizes a few key accomplishments found in the resume, reiterates your excitement in the reader’s company and is intended to impress.

If the resume is your personal brochure, then the cover letter is the brochure for the brochure. In essence, the cover letter is the pitch to the reader why they should invest the time in reading your resume.

Cover letters were invented and became standard practice in the days when job applicants sent a resume to an employer as a letter by (get this!) the postal service. As in, paper mail. As in, you stick the resume and cover letter in a stamped envelope and drop it in one of those big blue boxes they used to have on every corner. The corporate mailroom would receive the envelope, it would mellow for a few days, and eventually the office delivery person would drop it in the recipient’s inbox (a physical tray which sits on the corner of a person’s desk, usually labeled “IN”) where it would sit for a couple more days. Eventually, the recipient would use a letter opener (a device which looks suspiciously like a dagger) to open the envelope, glance at the cover letter, and decide whether the resume was worth a read.

Got all that?

Incidentally, next time you complain about how nobody gets back to you the resume you sent to Company X, keep in mind that it used to cost real money - in postage and stationery - to send an application to an employer. I’m just saying that life wasn’t always better in the old days.

Times have indeed changed. People don’t apply for jobs the same way. In most cases, an applicant sees a job online and applies either through the corporate website or via a job board like Monster or LinkedIn. Often there isn’t even an opportunity to include a cover letter with your resume.

And here’s a dirty little secret of the recruiting world – most recruiters, who act as gatekeepers of the application process, don’t have the time or interest to read a cover letter. They usually take a look at first half of the first page of the resume and decide whether to keep reading. A cover letter, if included, is usually an afterthought. A nicety. An attachment, if you will.

And yet, there is a time and a place for a cover letter. It’s a valuable tool for certain situations, because it shows that you care.

A cover letter is appropriate – even essential - in the following situations:

  • You are targeting a position in a specific company and you have the contact information of a particular individual or department. If you really, really want to work at Chester’s Advertising Agency, and you have the CEO’s contact information, you have a unique opportunity to make a positive impression. A cover letter allows you to show the passion for working at Chester.

  • You are attending a career fair and want to stand out from the pack. You’ve done your research and identified five employers you would really, really like to work for. Handing the recruiters a cover letter customized to their company along with the resume would demonstrate that extra little bit of effort.

  • Somebody has referred you to an individual at a company. Let’s say that your friend Moe provides you with the contact for their friend Homer who works at the nuclear power plant you’d like to work at. If you don’t include a cover letter with the resume, Homer might never figure out it was Moe that referred you. And you’d like to make Moe look good for referring you, wouldn’t you?

  • You’re emailing a resume to a company. Sometimes job advertisements ask applicants to send an email resume. In the body of the email you should have something to say. A cover letter – even a brief one – helps interest the recipient.

A cover letter doesn’t matter so much when:

  • You apply to a job through a company’s website or a job board. Often there’s not an opportunity to even include a cover letter. Even if you attach one, it’ll likely be ignored.

  • You’re canvassing a job fair. You’ll come across a great number of employers you’ve never considered. They won’t expect a cover letter, and it would be impractical to provide one for every exhibitor.

Either way, it’s best to be prepared. Have that cover letter ready, you never know when you’re going to need it.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. He is a Human Resources professional and staffing expert with almost two decades of in-house corporate HR and staffing firm experience, and is a Certified Professional Resume Writer (CPRW) and Certified Professional Career Coach (CPCC).

Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, and career coaching services, including a free resume review. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.