News and tips for Job Seekers and Career Coaches on your iPhone! « Career Management via LinkedIn

by admin on September 21st, 2010

News and tips for Job Seekers and Career Coaches on your iPhone! « Career Management via LinkedIn.

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Grow Your Career Networking Seeds Organically | Career Trend

by admin on August 13th, 2010

Grow Your Career Networking Seeds Organically | Career Trend.

Whether you call it networking or netweaving, the idea of building these relationship opportunities may be daunting. Whether an introvert or extrovert, the focused and proactive careerist and job seeker must look beyond those polarizing labels and think career value and prowess that will not only add value to others but will circle back and nourish your career, as well.

Courtesy of Careertrend.net

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The Search – the Next Step to Landing that Job

by admin on August 13th, 2010

Step 4: The Search – the Next Step to Landing that Job | Crossroads Career Network.

Identifying the Right Approach to Your Job Search Efforts

From antidotal evidence, the percentage of job seekers who are using the wrong approach to the search is 80%+ – that’s a HUGE number. Let’s look at the various approaches and it will be obvious where you want to spend the majority of your efforts searching for that next opportunity.

Courtesy of www.rossroadscareer.org

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Get Recruiters to Find Your Resume

by admin on August 9th, 2010

LinkedIn allows you to connect to individuals within your professional network online. It also lets you connect with individuals who are connected to their professional network. Therefore, your database knows no boundaries.  The site gives you the ability to post your resume (complete with links and buzzwords) as search-engine friendly, give and receive recommendations, build a reference list and post updates about yourself.

LinkedIn has become a comprehensive tool with versatile features.

  • Sync your blog to your LinkedIn account.
  • Follow companies, keeping tabs on their activities
  • Follow your twitter network through LinkedIn with a new feature called “Tweets.”
  • Relay your twitter updates directly to LinkedIn.

Aside from visibility within LinkedIn, your information is also on the web. If someone googles “Jane Doe” and Jane Doe has a LinkedIn account, her results will be displayed.  Who needs members-only databases and password protected uploads when you can have it all at your finger tips.

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Words that Sabotage Your Resume « The Doostang Blog

by admin on July 21st, 2010

Words that Sabotage Your Resume « The Doostang Blog.

Here are some things to avoid:

Soft-skill Descriptions

Age, Health, Appearance

Passive Voice

Myers-Briggs, DISC and other profiles


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Career Coaching

by admin on July 13th, 2010

Courtesy of Suite101.com, feature writer Paym Bergson in Career Coaching.  Learn how to market yourself
Create a Culture of Success and Innovation at the Workplace
Make Work Great is the latest book by Ed Muzio, and shows how to build (and be part of) a positive and motivating culture within any department or division.
Jun 6, 2010 – Paym Bergson

Leadership Secrets of Hillary Clinton by R. Shambaugh: Review
This self-help book utilizes the leadership style of Hillary Clinton to create a blueprint for success for others to follow, through exercises & checklists.
May 7, 2010 – Paym Bergson

Work With Passion in Midlife and Beyond by Nancy Anderson: Review
Reach your full potential and find a better career/better lifestyle. This guide helps anyone looking for a way to fulfil goals, not just those in midlife.
Apr 22, 2010 – Paym Bergson

Read more at Suite101: Career Coaching http://careercoaching.suite101.com/#ixzz0taE2TZep

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How to Reapply After a Rejection

by admin on July 8th, 2010
Great article we found on TheLadders.com

Don’t give up! Here’s how to tweak your resume and try again.

by Lisa Vaas

She was a senior human-resources professional who was laid off in summer 2009 from her job at a large hospital in Texas. After the layoff, she did everything she knew from her years in HR would help her land a job. She woke early every day, put on her business suit, networked like mad, lunched with contacts … the whole nine yards.

Still, no job offers came; just those cold-as-silicon, automatically generated rejection letters. You know the kind: vaguely worded, anonymously sent e-mails saying they’ve received your application and will contact you if they see a fit.

Yeah, right. Don’t hold your breath.

The HR pro didn’t. Instead, she contacted Laurie M. Winslow, principal at Talent Innovations Group. Winslow looked at her resume, saw that it did a good job making the case that she was management material, reformatted the document and used the HR pro’s list of connections until she found one who knew a senior management member of one of the companies to which she had already applied. She then told the HR pro to resubmit the new resume to all those automatic online application sites.

The job seeker did reapply, changing her e-mail address so it wouldn’t appear to be a duplicate. She was hired for one of the positions for which she was originally rejected.

Was it the contact that did the trick, or was it the reformatted, resubmitted resume? Probably both, but what really matters is that she bounced back, tweaked her resume and reapplied.

It’s not you, it’s your resume

We contacted HR professionals who work with resume applicant tracking systems (ATS), and all of them said the same thing: If you’ve received a computer-generated rejection letter for a position for which you believe you are qualified, you should understand that your resume has been rejected, not you.

In such cases, the issue may be that your resume lacks specific keywords and search terms or the format caused a problem for the software. In that case, Winslow said, a smart applicant “will immediately contact the recruitment office of the rejecting organization. If they cannot get through to the appropriate recruiter, I would advise that they speak with a sympathetic administrative assistant —anyone who can guide them as to the best way for them to replace the resume currently in the ATS with one containing the correct keywords and phrases. And once their customized resume has been submitted, I would encourage them to contact the appropriate recruiter (or sympathetic administrative assistant) and request that their updated resume be reviewed for the open position.”

Read on for more tips about how to tweak a resume and reapply after receiving an automated rejection letter.

Best practices for jumping back into the ATS

Winslow advises her clients to change the e-mail address they use to submit their applications, since e-mail is the primary identifier used by common ATS software to sort resumes, and changing it will probably convince the ATS it’s a new application. (More-advanced ATS programs, like Taleo, use multiple candidate identifiers, Winslow said, but multiple applications are still OK, so long as the content remains accurate.)

And it doesn’t hurt to reach a human on the other side of the ATS. Winslow recommended applicants use LinkedIn or other networking tools to find a contact within the company to whom they can speak about why you think you’re a good fit for the position.

“Don’t be afraid to pick up the phone and call,” Winslow said. “Use LinkedIn or whatever networking tool you have to reach out and say, ‛Hey, have you really looked at this application?’ ”

Tell them that you’ve reworked your original resume to show more accurately why you’re the best candidate for the position and that you’d like to reapply, but make sure you don’t put anyone on the defensive by insinuating that they made a mistake.

Where to restrain your tweaking

When looking at a resume, recruiters look to make sure that, if there are multiples, no significant data has been altered. To avoid appearing flaky at best and fraudulent at worst, keep the work history consistent, and don’t change company names for which you’ve worked, titles you’ve held, education, or months and years at the companies. Bottom line: Executive summaries and bulleted lists of key skills and achievements are the areas to tweak, not work-history sections.

“As long as those things [in the work-history section] stay the same,” Winslow said, “if you just change the resume format to something more usable and more applicable to the job description, there’s nothing wrong with that, as long as you don’t falsify information.”

Tiffani Murray is the manager of technology and metrics for the talent-acquisition department of a major beverage manufacturer. Murray’s position includes managing the ATS for her large company, which uses the Peopleclick software application. Murray’s advice for applicants who initially get rejected and who want to modify their resumes is to pay attention not only to the resume — make sure the keywords replicate the job posting, for example — but how the data is collected in the system. For example, some company career sites merely allow you to upload your resume, while others require users to fill in specific fields, such as job title or skills.

In their rush to complete the online application, many applicants might skip over these and other fields with multiple selection boxes, she said. On the second attempt, Murray stresses the importance of applicants taking the time to fill in all of the information requested, even if it’s listed as optional. “I recommend this because in many of the systems, these fields of information become searchable for the recruiters on the other side,” she said. Fill it all in, even if information such as years of experience or degrees is listed on your resume. It’s impossible to know when a recruiter might sort by this information to filter out applicants, and filling in all fields will ensure you don’t erroneously get caught in a screening filter.

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21 Things Hiring Managers Wish You Knew

by admin on June 30th, 2010

21-things-hiring-managers-wish-you-knew: Personal Finance News from Yahoo! Finance.

I see too many job applicants who approach the interview as if their only goal is to win a job offer, losing sight of the fact that this can land them in the wrong job. Think of it like dating. This means being honest about your strengths and weaknesses and giving the hiring manager a glimpse of the real you, so he or she can make an informed decision about how well you’d do in the job…

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Brine Group Welcomes Robert Murray as Consultant for the Healthcare Recruiting Division

by admin on June 28th, 2010

BURLINGTON, MA – In the capacity of Consultant, Bob will be responsible for the continued growth and development of the Healthcare Division and will help Brine Group evolve in ways to better service its client’s recruiting and employment needs. Bob is a recent graduate of Plymouth State University with a degree in Business Administration. Most recently Bob worked as a contract recruiter for a healthcare staffing company focusing on clinical lab services. It is with tremendous excitement and optimism that they welcome Bob to the firm.

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LinkedIn Improves Groups with Follows and Likes

by admin on June 22nd, 2010

LinkedIn Improves Groups with Follows and Likes.

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