The talk radio caller sobbed into the phone about how two years after completing his degree in computer science, he was unable to find a job and the net result would be homelessness in the next two months.
The caller had tried in vain to locate a job; he had applied for over 4000 positions and had landed only one reply, but no interviews. What was going on?
Prodding from the show host revealed the caller had applied for over 4000 positions over the internet and the response had been one email. I think after the 100th submission I would have tried another method, but you know how some people repeatedly do the same thing over again even though it does not work. There are specialists I have heard who attempt to fix this sort of thing.
You know the drill. Set up an account on Monster, Dice or Techies, fill in few boxes, create or upload a resume and surf thousands of tech jobs online. Appying for any of these positions requires one click and its off to the next vacancy notice. It's easy, isn't it?
Then how come the phone's not ringing? If you apply for a dozen jobs a day, there should be at least one email, phone call or interview, right?
Ah, but here is the problem: You are one of millions doing the same thing every day, worldwide.
And every job you apply for, hundreds, if not thousands of others are doing the same thing as well.
And if that doesn't lift your spirits, consider this: every job posted online is not always filled by an online applicant. In many cases, jobs are filled internally, through personal networks, through a placement agency, newspaper ad or past applicants.
Consider this diagram below. (Sorry for the spacing).
! Job !
The boss's kid
Current employees
Friends and relations of current employees.
Business relations, vendors, internal recruiters, company Human Relations department.
External recruiters, headhunters, contracted placement agencies Web ads, employment boards, newspaper and trade ads, newsgroups and mailing lists
Now, the top rung is the job - that is what you want. The bottom rung includes Internet employment sites.
If you are not in of the upper levels, you are on the bottom - the internet submitted resume. But don't feel bad, you are not alone, there are millions of others down there with you.
You are competing with other candidates not only in your town, state or country, but with those in countries you may never had heard of, (hint: the Internet is global, monster.com can be viewed in India, Ireland and China too).
The odds of landing that perfect job through an Internet job board are not as promising as one would think.
The reality is although the economy is recovering, hiring is still sluggish. Sitting in front of a computer all day may be your line of work, is not the way to get work.
So what can you do? Read on and follow, weedhopper and maybe one day you will snatch the pebble from my hand. Then you will be ready to leave.
Kontera Tag
My highly opinionated and insightful take on job searches, resumes, online job postings, outsourcing and anything else I care to pontificate about.
Tuesday, August 31, 2004
Why am I writing this?
Hi, my name is John. For over several years I worked in Information Technology for a public company based in the US. Then I got laid off. It took a number of months and mistakes before I landed at my next position. I had alot of time to think and learned many things that you need to consider when looking for your next job.
Whether you are fresh from school, recently unemployed or simply looking for your next position, there are some basic tenets of finding a job you need to know. Knowing these simple rules and practicing them regularly could make the difference in landing your next position.
Thanks and keep reading.
Hi, my name is John. For over several years I worked in Information Technology for a public company based in the US. Then I got laid off. It took a number of months and mistakes before I landed at my next position. I had alot of time to think and learned many things that you need to consider when looking for your next job.
Whether you are fresh from school, recently unemployed or simply looking for your next position, there are some basic tenets of finding a job you need to know. Knowing these simple rules and practicing them regularly could make the difference in landing your next position.
Thanks and keep reading.