|
How
To Get A Job In Half The Time
By Dr. Donald E. Wetmore
When I
received my degree in accounting in 1970, our graduation speaker
told us we ought to plan on three or four jobs in our careers.
When my daughter graduated from college just a few years ago,
her graduation speaker predicted that they ought to plan on
three or four different careers in their work lives.
Today, the average person changes jobs every three years.
Job change
is one of the less desirable tasks we must perform in life,
right up there with a root canal, for many. Why? We don't
like rejection. We don't like to be judged. And as if we only
played golf once every three years or so we wouldn't be too
good at it, so if we go through the job seeking task every
three years or so, we probably are not going to be comfortable
with our skills.
There
are lots of resources to help in networking, sending resumes,
and interview preparation. Let's discuss here how to do all
that in half the time.
First,
if you were out of work tomorrow, voluntarily or by choice,
how long would you estimate it will take you to secure your
next employment? We never know for sure, but it is important
to form an educated guess so that we know what we are up against.
To find out, talk with 5-10 people who have recently gone
through the same type of job search you are about to do. Ask
them how long it took to secure their new positions. You will
quickly get a sense of an average length of time it is likely
to take. Let's assume that for
your objective, in your industry, at your skill level, and
desired geography, it takes about 90 days to successfully
complete the new employment campaign. Certainly you may beat
those averages or maybe take considerably longer, but it is
useful to know a range of probability.
Next,
analyze the three building blocks for getting a new job. It
starts with resumes, targeted to specific recipients. This
leads to interviews done well. Get enough good interviews
completed and you will receive offers. Let's assume you would
like to have three offers to consider. How many interviews
does it take, in your area, to get one offer? Few really know.
How do you find out? Talk with 5-10 people who have recently
secured the type of job you want and ask how many interviews
they conducted and how many offers resulted. Talk with hiring
authorities for your type of position and ask how many interviews
do they typically conduct to generate one offer. Let's assume
you have ascertained that it takes, on average, five interviews
to get one job offer. If your goal is three job offers, you
need to create fifteen interviews.
How many
resumes does it take, on average, to generate one interview
at your job objective level? Don't know? Most don' t. How
do you find out? Ask. Who? Talk with 5-10 people who have
recently secured the type of job you want and ask how many
resumes they had to send out to secure one interview. Talk
with hiring authorities for your type of position and ask
how many resumes do they typically generate for your type
of job and how many interviews do they extend? Let's assume
you have ascertained that it requires ten resumes to generate
one interview. If your goal in fifteen interviews, you need
to send out 150 resumes during your campaign.
Why go
through all this? Job-hunting is a sales operation. Like good
sales people you need to know your "numbers". If you don't
know your numbers, the temptation is to "work hard", in the
blind, not really knowing how far along you truly are on the
path to that new position. And when you just don't know, it
builds in stress, fatigue and fosters discouragement. Now
having determined that it takes, on average, three months
to complete the job search campaign, knowing that you need
to circulate 150 well placed resumes, you now have a monthly
goal of 50 resumes or approximately two per business day.
So what's your goal tomorrow? Get out two targeted resumes.
Does that get the new job for you? No. But when you
go to bed tomorrow night, you know you have taken the right
first step on this journey. A week later, you have sent out
ten resumes, received three rejection letters, and no interviews.
Are you discouraged? No, you're on target. You're developing
the quantity to get to the quality. You understand your numbers.
So, how
do you get a job in half the time? Double the daily output
of targeted resumes sent from two per day to four per day.
You will "expose" yourself in the quantity necessary in half
the time and increase the probability of getting the required
quantity of interviews and resulting job offers in significantly
less time..
Reprinted with permission.
Dr. Donald
E. Wetmore-Professional Speaker
Productivity Institute
Time Management Seminars
60 Huntington St. P.O. Box 2126
Shelton, CT 06484
(800) 969-3773
(203) 929-9902
fax: (203) 929-8151
e-mail: ctsem@msn.com
Visit our Time Management Supersite:
http://www.balancetime.com
Professional
Member-National Speakers Association
Copyright
2000 You may re-print the above information in its entirety
in your publication, newsletter, or on your webpage. For permission,
please email your request for "reprint" to: ctsem@msn.com
|