5 Steps to Stand Out in a Crowded Job Market

iStockphoto.com | undrey

iStockphoto.com | undrey

The employment market is about to get crowded with job seekers. The numbers are sobering – according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, in March unemployment rates rose among all major worker groups, and over the last couple months over 26 million Americans have lost their jobs. The numbers will likely worsen before they improve, and while many prognostications are being made nobody really knows when and how the economy will rebound. You should prepare to stand out from the crowd. Here are five steps you can take today.

Step 1: Maximize Your Resume

A massive surge in resumes means recruiters and hiring managers will use stricter standards to separate the wheat from the chaff. Make sure your resume is:

·      A professional story with you as its hero. Make yourself shine by ensuring it is accomplishment and metric driven.

·      An eye-catching, but not gimmicky, modern design.

·      Properly formatted and free of typos, misspelled words, and grammatical errors.

·      Paired with a cover letter that focuses on the value you will bring to your next employer. Spell out your value proposition and your aspirations for the future.

·      Tweaked to particular roles you apply to, in order to ensure it has the right keywords to navigate employer Applicant Tracking Systems (resume databases).

 

Step 2: Your LinkedIn Profile

You need to be active on as many fronts as possible. Don’t just update your LinkedIn profile (and create one if you don’t one already!) – polish it.

·      You must have a recent professional-looking profile photo. It’s your first impression.

·      If you’re unemployed, your Headline and Summary should indicate you are actively pursuing new opportunities.

·      Update your work experience to include your last position.

·      Show off your most impactful achievements and the progression of your career.

·      Polish the content and verbiage of your profile.

 

Step 3: Your Approach

You have no choice but to try harder. Here’s some additional steps you can take to get noticed.

·      Leverage your network. You may get your next job through someone you already know.

·      Don’t just apply online. Make the extra effort to identify the hiring manger and send a personalized note to them.

·      While not the exclusive source you should use, LinkedIn is a great research tool to source recruiter and hiring manager names by company.

·      LinkedIn Premium gives you the advantage of sending a limited number of InMails per month to recruiters and hiring managers who have posted jobs. It is worth the investment if you have the resources.

 

 

Step 4:  Keep Your Eyes on the Prize

Throughout each step of the job search process, do your best to accommodate the recruiters and/or hiring managers. They have never dealt with something like our current situation either. For example: 

·      In phone screens, or Zoom interviews, be as personable as you can. Be energetic and positive.

·      Be flexible when scheduling interviews, and adapt to whatever format in which the interview will take place. Being a team player during challenging circumstances should help you stand out from the crowd.

·      Salary negotiations are tricky when the job market is so crowded.

o   Companies need to keep costs as low as possible, which puts you at risk of underpricing or overpricing yourself in the discussion.

o   Push salary as late in the conversation as possible.

o   Focus on the job. Emphasize that your primary concern is finding a role at a great company in which you can grow and develop, and that salary is a secondary consideration.

 

Step 5: Thank You Notes

Send a thank you email and a traditional thank you note – both handwritten and through the regular mail. People will remember the extra touch (you’d be surprised how few people bother to do this).


Philip Roufail contributed to this article.

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

Making A Portfolio That Pops – Showing Off Your Creativity As A Job Hunter

iStockphoto.com | FoxysGraphic

iStockphoto.com | FoxysGraphic

If you are a designer, artist, photographer, model, or advertiser you rely on your portfolio – a case, binder, or notebook showcasing your most accomplished work. For “creatives”, the portfolio is a traditional and essential tool used during the course of their work and when a job search is on.

Contemporary portfolios have expanded to include the digital domain, social media networks, and can also be an optional but effective differentiator among “non-creative” professionals. Portfolios give you an additional opportunity to in a deeper way.

No matter who you are, or whether you have a traditional portfolio, a digital one, or both, it needs to be polished and professional. Here are some guidelines for you to consider

TRADITIONAL (I.E., PHYSICAL) PORTFOLIOS

  • For creatives, especially designers of every sort, the physical portfolio is the first choice he or she makes that reveals his or her professionalism and style. The portfolio itself can be just as beautiful as what is inside and makes just as strong of a statement about the person carrying it. Choose a portfolio that feels like a natural extension of who you are.

  • Everything must be important. With a traditional portfolio, you are limited by physics. Your case can only hold so much. This forces you to formulate a “portfolio strategy” to compile and assemble the work in a way that dovetails your job/career goal.

  • Choose your best work by committee. Enlist some trustworthy opinions to select a cross-section of your most spectacular and, if branded, recognizable work. A range of perspectives will temper self-criticism and parental bias alike.

  • Tell The Greatest Story Ever Told, Which is You. Organize your best work so it tells the story of you -- your unique perspective, your distinctive style, your inspiring journey, and your growth -- in whatever your field of endeavor.

 

DIGITAL PORTFOLIOS

If you’re already in a profession that requires hauling around a physical portfolio, you already have a digital portfolio as well, which, while necessary, have advantages and disadvantages.

Disadvantages:

  • Creatives like to be in-person when presenting work so they can act as its interpreter and chief advocate. It’s natural to have a pure vision of how your portfolio should be perceived, something is often lost during the transformation of that vision into the material.

  •  Online, you have no limits – and that is not necessarily good. It is tempting to include too much. Be cautious, too much information can lose the focus and achievement-oriented result you get with a portfolio-as-story approach.

  •  There is no substitute for the real thing. You can study photographs of the Sistine Chapel for years and it will not prepare you to see the real thing. A digital scan may not “pop” off the page like a printed piece.

Advantages:

  • The digital portfolio is on a website that is another opportunity for you to show off your skills in an organic way. Like the traditional portfolio, the website says just as much about you as its content. 

  • Anywhere, anytime. You can pull up a digital portfolio on any device to show to anyone at any time for instant self-promotion. The link to your work can be easily and widely distributed. No matter how great your 100-year old leather Tuscan case may be, it does not fit in your pocket.

  •  Your digital portfolio is a companion to your traditional one. This is yet another opportunity to tell you story. You can use the same work, but presented to take advantage of the medium, or different work as long as it follows your overall portfolio strategy.

  •  Links to your portfolio are often required on job applications. Online job applications for creative roles typically ask for links to any creative work you have done, so a professional well -organized online portfolio is a must.

  •  More and more creatives design in, and for, the digital world. A traditional portfolio isn’t as strong of an advantage for a game developer as a visual artist. For design that lives and breathes in the digital world, the digital portfolio becomes the primary channel of promotion.

 

PORTFOLIOS FOR NON-CREATIVE PROFESSIONALS

Portfolios are not considered required tools of the trade for professionals in non-creative roles, and it would seem awkward if a job candidate interviewing for an accounting position pulled out an oversized case and started highlighting their most complex Excel spreadsheets.

This doesn’t seem fair. Most people are limited to a cover letter and resume. However, in our contemporary online job market two paradigm shifts have taken place, 1) the now standard use of Automatic Tracking Systems, and 2) the rise of professional social media networks, notably LinkedIn.

  • It’s not a portfolio, but it’s portfolio-esque. The additional layer of the application process swept in by the use of Automatic Tracking Systems, often includes fields that allow anyone, not just Creatives, to include links to external websites, something you can’t do on a resume.

  •  LinkedIn has expanded the resume. Perhaps your local paper wrote an article about you, or you’re an engineer with several high-profile patent applications. Maybe you have a new certification, or documents you wrote for which you won an award. You can include all of these things on your LinkedIn profile, which every recruiter and hiring manger uses.

  •  Social media networks have made every professional with a digital footprint a portfolio. Like it or not, recruiters and hiring managers don’t just stick with LinkedIn. Every social media account, professional or personal, is fair game. This once again gives you an opportunity to showcase professional accomplishments that can’t be communicated, for one reason or another, through a cover letter or resume.


Philip Roufail contributed to this article.

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

So, You Want to Work in the Entertainment Industry?

iStockphoto.com | choness

iStockphoto.com | choness

Guest Article by Philip Roufail, CPRW

Breaking into show business isn’t a phrase that just applies to artists. Every entertainment job, no matter how small, has a mosh pit of hypercompetitive talent ready to brawl for it. The people on the inside are entrenched and want it to be as difficult as possible for new competition to “break into” what is a closed system by design. If you want to work in the biz, that is your starting point. Welcome to Hollywood.

For our purposes, “Hollywood” means film and television regardless of where in the country it is actually made (all roads lead to L.A. or New York). Music and sports, while owned and operated by the same people as film and television, have peculiarities that require them to have their own spotlight.

Here are some other phrases you may have heard about “Hollywood” that are also 100% true.

 

Truth #1: There’s no business like show business.

There is, in fact, no business like show business. To explain how Hollywood works would require a weekly post for at least a year, but here’s the pitch we’re going with: Hollywood is a cut-throat scrum of very crazy, very beautiful, and very talented people vying for a very limited number of deals and dollars. Anything goes. Anything.

 

Truth #2: Hollywood is a small town.

But not in the way you think. The entertainment industry is nine companies that own everything: NBC Universal, CBS, Time-Warner, Fox, Viacom, Disney, Netflix, DirectTV, and Dish Network. In film and television, these companies employ over 900,000 people and support up to 2.5 million total jobs. That may sound like a lot of people but almost none of them can impact your career; the ones who can are the buyers who can green light projects and the talent who can actually make those projects on schedule and on budget. That is a comparatively small number of people, thus a small town.

 

Truth #3: You don’t work for a living, you live to work.

Hollywood is the eternal hustle. From the studio executive on down, you’re always hustling for the next job because there is never a guarantee the one you have will last or that there will be another one to follow.

 

Truth #4: In Hollywood, it’s all who you know.

Who you know is the key that opens every door. That is how everything gets made, so no two projects get made the same way. It’s so abnormal and antithetical to sound business practices that Hollywood is more like a dysfunctional royal court than anything else.

Now that you’re super excited to jump right into your new entertainment career, some Hollywood 101 is required.

The Hollywood scrum is made up of the following categories:

“The Buyers”

·      Film Studios/TV Networks/Netflix

 

“The Producers”

·      Film/TV Production Companies with Studio/Network/Netflix Deals

·      Film/TV Production Companies

·      Independent Producers, which can mean one or any combination of non-union, guerilla (no permits), and without a completion bond.

·      Talent Managers/Talent Agents (more on this below)

 

“Above the Line Talent”

·      Above the Line Talent are the artists who guide the creative process: producers, writers, directors, cinematographers, actors/actresses, singers, comedians, and other performers.

·      People in this category can also be “Producers”.

·      People in this category, depending on their level, may employ lawyers, publicists, personal assistants, financial professionals, social media managers, coaches, trainers, and personal shoppers (yes, that’s a job – and a very well paid one).

 

“Talent Agency and Talent Management Companies”

·      Talent agents find work for above-the-line talent and represent their interests in negotiations.

·      Talent agents find and recruit new talent.

·      Talent managers have the same role as agents, but more intimate, and can also develop and produce packaged projects. “Packaged” means with their clients attached.

·      Talent Agents, forbidden for over 80 years by SAG agreements to engage in producing content, can now do so, with restrictions. However, this puts talent agents alongside talent managers as “Producers”.

  

“Below the Line Talent”

·      Below the Line Talent are the creative people involved in film/TV production who are not above-the-line, like set designers, production crew, costume designers, camera operators, sound engineers, etc.

“Exhibitors”

·      Movie theaters (Corporate, theaters, real estate)

·      Streaming platforms

 

“Satellite TV & Streamers”

·      Satellite quietly created a new and dominant distribution channel whose main players, DirecTV (now owned by AT&T) and The Dish Network, account for a combined $45 billion in annual revenue, and have now pushed their way into other categories (e.g. Dish Network launched streaming service Sling). And let’s not forget Netflix, Amazon, and the other players who have changed the way that entertainment is produced and delivered.

 

“Unions”

·      Unions may be struggling in many places, but in Hollywood they are still major power players.

·      There are unions for animators, cinematographers, editors, and production crew (among others) but the most influential unions are:

o   Producer’s Guild of America (PGA)

o   Director’s Guild of America (DGA)

o   Writer’s Guild of America (WGA)

o   Screen Actor’s Guild & American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA)

o   American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP)

 

As you can see, there are plenty of areas in Entertainment, all with juicy job titles you’ve never heard of, any one of which may be your dream job. But in Hollywood it’s all about who you know, so while the instruments of a normal job search exist, such as studio websites with online job postings and applications, an actual normal job search does not. To start, you must change the way you think about finding a job. You are no longer looking for a job. You’re looking to know people. The right people.

There are a few important factors to understand before we can proceed.

First, none of what follows applies to above-the-line creative talent, who exist in a labyrinth with few to no proven pathways to success. Statistically, it is almost impossible to be a famous movie/TV star, or a blockbuster making director, or an Oscar/Emmy winning Producer. There is no good advice for you or easy steps you can take. Good luck!

Second, Hollywood’s glitz and glamour is in the production, which is among the most laborious and boring endeavors you could ever undertake, but the truth is that Hollywood isn’t a production business. It’s a marketing business.

And third, you will never know about most entertainment job openings because they are on secret lists circulated only among insiders.


So, what’s the solution? Become an insider. Here’s how:

 

Recommendation #1 – Research

If you want to be a Hollywood insider, you have to know what insiders do.

Get online and give yourself a crash course in entertainment job titles. For example, many entry-level jobs have the same title, “Assistant to _____,” but assistants aren’t secretaries. They are apprentices. If you work as an assistant on agent’s desk, you are training to become an agent. If you work as an assistant on a producer’s desk, you are training to become a producer, and so on. You will most likely have to work reception or start in a mailroom before graduating to an Assistant role on a desk.

Here is another one. Studios, networks, and production companies all have “development” roles, but “development” isn’t fundraising like it is everywhere else – it’s “story development.” A studio will have an entire story department for a single project, whereas a small production company may have one “development consultant.” These jobs are for people who love to read. You will read a lot.

Do you know what a Line Producer does? How about an Assistant Director? I’ll give you a hint. They don’t assist the director. Do your homework. Learn what these job titles mean. Learn what these people do.

 

Recommendation #2 - Work for Free. Everybody does it.

The only thing Hollywood loves more than money is not paying people. Hollywood has elevated not paying people to an art form, which is why studio accountants can prove in a court of law that a film that grossed $20 billion dollars worldwide didn’t turn a profit. However, Hollywood’s love of not paying people has created an unofficial network of ways to circumvent its regular aversion to outsiders. In Hollywood it’s all who you know, and you can get to know people by working for free.

 

Internships

There are (mostly unpaid) internships available in every entertainment sector -- studios/networks, production companies, agencies, theater companies, unions, etc. -- and is one of the best ways to get an early foothold in Hollywood. There are several advantages to pursuing an internship:

 

Advantage #1: An entertainment internship gives you the opportunity to test-drive the entertainment experience with no commitment to buy. You will learn fast whether or not it’s right for you.

 

Advantage #2: In general, nobody cares about where you went to college, your film degree, or your student film fest award. That’s where and what ­– and Hollywood is about who. Nobody at your school can green light a project and nobody is going to buy a ticket to see your student film, but during your internship you worked for a who.

 

Advantage #3: Hollywood is risk-averse, and that applies to hiring. Employers want as much insurance as possible that a new hire can hack it. Why? Because show business is very hard and not everybody has the right disposition to persevere. If you have an internship on your résumé and you’re back for more, that shows a potential employer you know what to expect and that you can hack it.

 

Recommendation #3 – Apply to a Page Program

Film studios and TV networks have Page Programs, which are like long-term internships on steroids. While specifics vary from place to place, Page Programs are usually based in Los Angeles or New York and are a year of interdisciplinary work. Most importantly, graduates of the best Page Programs are invited to apply for any open roles in the company. Invited! Unless you are somehow related to Steven Spielberg, you are not going to get better than that. To be expected, slots in the major Page Programs are limited and competitive.

 

Recommendation #4 – Leverage your alumni network.

Everyone in Hollywood has a group, where people of a feather flock together ostensibly to support each other achieve their entertainment dreams. For example, if you are a young woman with ambitions in movies, the industry group “Women in Film” is for you.

If you’re thinking about an entertainment career, or searching for that first internship or opportunity, there is only one group on the inside you belong to – your alumni group. If you are a student or recent graduate, tap into your alumni network as much as possible.

Ideally, attend alumni sponsored entertainment industry themed events, but they can be any alumni event. The goal is to meet people who may help you find that first or next job, and professionals who are active in alumni networks will help you – even in Hollywood – because those people were once you.

Tip: Some Hollywood “empowerment” or “networking” groups are alternate sources of employment. To use the same example, “Women in Film” is a non-profit organization with its own staff (and interns).

 

Recommendation #5 – Look into Training Programs

Several big talent agencies, among others, have training programs that are hyper competitive to get into and have attrition rates similar to Paris Island. The advantage is that you are on an actual professional pathway with predetermined, measurable benchmarks for advancement. That is an anomaly. It is worth exploring available training programs in the niche of the biz you wish to work. There aren’t many so bring your A + game.

 

Recommendation #6 – Sign Up for the Studios’ & Networks’ Job Listings

If you are interested in working at a studio or network, their websites have career portals with job listings, and you should go through the motions of creating an account and uploading your résumé. I have no reason to believe that anyone ever gets a studio/network job by applying on its website, but you should also go through the motions of applying for jobs that interest you for practice.

The studios and networks are the closest thing Hollywood has to normal corporate governance, so they have large Human Resources departments and recruiters and the like. Even if you have an “in,” you will eventually be asked to create a profile and upload your résumé so you should go ahead and do it in advance. The practice of applying for jobs will help you learn the makeup of the studio or network and familiarize yourself with the types of roles they need.


Philip Roufail, CPRW, is a Certified Professional Resume Writer with professional experience in the entertainment, wine, and project management fields. He can be reached at philipwritesresumes@gmail.com.