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RBC Business
Articles: encouragement | purpose | success |
Any advantage that you can get to help get your resume to the top of
the pile is worth looking at. I have some employment agency contacts
that I asked about what people can do to put them to the front of the
line when the jobs are being handed out. I've put together their
replies. These tips apply to whether your going for a permanent or
contract position.
1. As in every business, personal relationships are crucial. If you
have any agents with whom you have a good relationship, keep in touch
with them, especially if you have done a good job for them in the past
2. Send your resume out to as many agencies as possible. It does no
harm, and they take most notice of you when your resume first arrives.
Often it is sent around to all the sales people at the company. Send
out a certain amount each week, e.g. ten, to keep you in the mind's eye
of at least some agents
3. Make sure that your resume is presentable and easily readable. Make
sure that your best skills are right at the front. Don't clutter up
your resume with old skills and ones that you don't have much
experience in - unless they're very marketable
4. Keep calling agencies even though it is soul-destroying. Keep
yourself in the front of their minds. The right job might have just
come in and you'll be at the front of the line. Out of sight, out of
mind. If you haven't been in touch for a while, they'll probably assume
that you're off the market for whatever reason. Have a list of agencies
that you call every two weeks, calling a selection of them every day
5. Always, always, always adapt your resume for each job that you are
applying for rather than just sending out your standard resume. It's
not the job of the agent or the employer to find the skills that they
are looking for. It's up to you to bring it to their attention. They
may have dozens of resumes in front of them (or even hundreds) and they
aren't going to give your resume more than thirty seconds in the first
crawl through to cut the possible candidates down to a more manageable
number
6. Be friendly and alert when an agent calls out of the blue rather
than surly and suspicious. He may be one of those reference spammers,
but he also may be the genuine article and could be put off by your
response
7. Send scanned references along with the resume when applying off any
of the job boards with managers contact names blanked out so that
agents don't mine them for leads. It always looks good and impresses
agencies to no end. If you send them and others don't, then you've
gained a little competitive advantage on them - and that's crucial in
the current climate
8. Follow up the resume with a friendly, positive call. Agents are human, too, and react positively to a friendly approach.
9. One contractor that I've heard of actually told the consultants at
one agency that he would pay whichever recruitment consultant got him a
job a personal bonus of $3,000. According to the guy who owned the
agency, this put the contractor right to the front of the line.
10. When you do get an interview, do some research on the company so
that when you're asked the inevitable "Do you know anything about us"
you don't end up saying "I think I've heard of you".
Preparation, hard work and a friendly demeanor are crucial to getting
your resume to the top of the hiring manager's pile. Try these ten tips
today and see what will come of your job or contract search.
*****************************
Gerry McLaughlin has fulfilled every role in Software Development from
Trainee Programmer through Systems and Business Analysis, Project
Leader and Manager, Systems Manager and Chief Information Officer with
a department of 80 people. Tens of thousands of IT Contractors visit
www.ITContractor.com each month to keep themselves in touch with the
market.
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