Type 5 -Mini Resume
Job searchers benefit from use of a Mini Resume because of its brevity, utility and portability. A synopsis of career achievements, industry-specific knowledge, credentials, and other qualifications is useful on a HyperCard (business card CD), recruiter inquiry email, references use request, online summary requirement, two-fold business card, or social and professional networking venues.
RL Stevens & Assoc. Corporate Blog Career Change
Our clients have a significant competitive advantage in the marketplace:
* They have targeted companies that have shown an indication of need and they make contact with a solutions-based approach. They come to the employer as a person of value, as opposed to someone desperately seeking a job.
* They are competing with proven, professionally-written marketing materials.
* Some clients elect to have an RLS-designed web portfolio and hypercards; differentiating them even further from the crowd.
* Before the interview, our clients know as much as possible about the company, the competition, the industry, and any market changes that could affect business. Our clients know how to turn an interview into a business discussion.
* They come prepared to show value. The goal is not to just get the job offer, but to blow away the competition, leaving the employer with no viable second choice. Then, RLS provides professional negotiation assistance to make sure that no money is left on the table.
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
10 Resume Types: Which one for you? RL Stevens Type 5
Posted by VP InfoSys at 10:22 AM 8 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice, resume preparation, RL Stevens
10 Resume Types: Which one for you? RL Stevens Type 4
Type 4 -Target Resume
Job searchers desiring to quickly communicate to recruiters and hiring managers that they possess an exact match in qualifications and experience to an open position benefit in writing a Target Resume. All content including detailing of accomplishments, key words, summary / overview are geared toward the position’s requirements
Posted by VP InfoSys at 10:19 AM 2 comments
Labels: career counseling, Career Transition Advice, resume preparation, RL Stevens
10 Resume Types: Which one for you? RL Stevens Type 3
Type 3 -Combination Resume
Job searchers changing industries, functionality or are returning to a former industry or industry sector will benefit from a Combination Resume because it highlights relevant-to-the-job skills, credentials and competency. This is a good choice to meet employer demand for a Chronological resume but quickly communicates employer-need relevancy.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 10:16 AM 3 comments
Labels: career counseling, Career Transition Advice, resume preparation, RL Stevens
10 Resume Types: Which one for you? RL Stevens Type 2
Type 2-Functional Resume
Job searchers changing career or have employment history obstacles such as gaps, short histories, workforce re-entry, or a background that doesn’t match the job desired will best overcome perceived liabilities using a Functional Resume
Posted by VP InfoSys at 10:13 AM 0 comments
Labels: career counseling, career direction, employment counseling, interviewing techniques, RL Stevens
10 Resume Types: Which one for you? RL Stevens Type 1
Type 1-Chronological Resume
Job searchers with a strong, consistent, progressive work history do well with a Chronological Resume. Employment is detailed in reverse chronological order. Chronological Resumes most preferred by employers and recruiters due to ease of viewing background and accomplishments in each job.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 10:11 AM 2 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice, RL Stevens
10 Resume Types: Which one for you?
Employers are interested in your skills, achievements and how you will contribute to increasing their organizational effectiveness, profits, and customer / client experience. Resumes are no longer useful to decision makers by detailing a career obituary of work experience. A one-size-fits-all document does not align with recruiter and employer demand for knowledge of what you can do for them, now and in future. The following are core resume types and recommendations for usage:
Posted by VP InfoSys at 10:10 AM 2 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips- RL Stevens Tip#14
Tip #14: Don't look for a job Conventional wisdom says the time to look for a job is at the start of a new job (although most job seekers never think of it). Today, the time to look for a new job is never. Transition to the job you need now, but concurrently begin to engage in active career management -- career management that relies on value, continuous learning, proactive positioning, and generous "give to get" networking. Over time, you will become visible, viable, and valuable. You will be the hunted, not the hunter. Opportunities will come to you…in time, if you persist.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 11:49 AM 2 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips- RL Stevens Tip#13
Tip #13: Don't put all eggs in one basket Job search in a market flooded with candidates is a "we want 125% fit because we think we can get it and we're not in a rush to hire" environment. Even top performers experience post-interview difficulty getting an answer as to why the process is taking so long, or if they are on the short list, or even if the position will be filled. You need a healthy bit of skepticism - don't put your search on hold while waiting for the offer you are sure is coming. Even if you think the job is a sure thing after a great interview, in this market, there's a real chance it isn't.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 11:48 AM 2 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips- RL Stevens Tip#12
Tip #12: Be prepared to wait Career transitions, especially in volatile markets, are longer job searches. Longer searches also occur if: an industry or field of work is shrinking; if there are mass layoffs; if a job searcher is looking for a second career as he/she nears retirement; if one is seeking an upper executive position. You can, throughout your career, plan for these things by creating a flow chart of planned job search activities and by getting your finances in order so that you can make your resources last. Knowing that you are prepared and protected will keep you focused and on-task as the weeks and months pass. And if a job searcher is fortunate to find a new position quickly, the strategic planning is even more valuable.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 11:47 AM 1 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips- RL Stevens Tip#11
Tip #11: Stay connected and educated Isolation lets job-loss depression and inertia in the door. It saps energy. You must fight it! A recessionary job market requires supreme patience and perseverance. You must stay upbeat, keep in touch with colleagues, attend networking events and professional meetings (focusing on what you have to offer, not just what you need), have breakfast and lunch meetings with new contacts and old friends. Make time to attend professional development classes in your area of expertise, find education leading to certification in a new field of interest, or even teach a class in a local college. The connection with people and knowledge is a powerful stimulant for success.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 11:46 AM 1 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips- RL Stevens Tip#10
Tip #10: Do the job to get the job When you land an interview, you cannot be a passive interviewee. After your initial conversation with a targeted employer or influencer, you need to drop the theory, drop the past accomplishments, and get real to get the job. You must subtly drive the interview to a place where you can show your benefit and value. Continue honing your skills in asking questions about a targeted employer’s business and showing how you can think on your feet, deliver solutions, and create opportunity. You don’t have to give away your "trade secrets" but you can allow the interviewers to sample your value and style in a very concrete way.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 11:44 AM 1 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips- RL Stevens Tip#9
Tip #9: Develop a suite of value-driven career collaterals It’s well known that new opportunities come not from on-line job sites, but from the building of an on-line presence, a meet up at a professional event, a call from a recruiter or contact, or even an article that spawns some good PR. Each of these situations requires different personal marketing materials. At a minimum, today's jobseeker or career-savvy executive needs a targeted resume, and a solid 30-second elevator pitch for different avenues which all enhance your personal branding. Other marketing communications pieces that are sometimes needed are mini-statements or profiles for building your online presence in social networking sites, executive bios, and value statements. We can assist you in development of any of these if needed.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 11:42 AM 0 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Spot Opportunities Differentiates You from the Competition
Your can achieve direct access to key decision makers by sending a Spot Opportunity Letter that shows you understand their business challenges. It will position you as a solution to the company’s specific needs. I have included examples of Spot Opportunity letters in this Personal Marketing Plan. With my guidance, you can tailor it to your situation. When complete, I will provide consulting to you on any areas that need improvement to strengthen its message. We will discuss how to modify this letter to match the organization’s specific need, and then show you how to uncover others on your own. We will fish a little for you but we will also teach you how to fish because this skill of knowing how to “spot” opportunity will benefit you throughout your career.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 8:48 AM 1 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips - Tip#8
Tip #8: Don't rely on the resume to open doors Your original resume was probably populated with information tied to your past work. A resume is reworked because more than likely, the original did not attract attention on the job boards and employer databases because the key words they seek were not there, or the right ones were missing. Your resume needs to be a concise impact- and value-driven sales tool that builds a future-forward case for success by connecting the dots of your old accomplishments to new advantages for your target company. You must work your network -- and use multiple marketing channels deployed simultaneously to get that resume into the hands of a real person and to get face-time with decision makers. Transitions are a "pavement pounding, not keyboard pounding" exercise.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 8:34 AM 1 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips - RL Stevens Tip#7
Tip #7: Don't let on-line time derail success - It’s a waste of valuable time for you to get sucked into a black hole of job boards and endless research. It's easy to hope that the more places you post your resume the more activity you will attract. You know better - you know that technology and social networking sites, although useful for connections, are not as substitutes for real relationship-building. Relationships drive productive job search, especially in transitions. People are your best sources of information, best advocates for success, best connection to positive energy, and best way for you.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 8:30 AM 1 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips - RL Stevens Tip#6
Tip #6: Create employer desire - You cannot assume a decision maker will immediately understand how his value will translate to the company. Do the work to discover the company's (and industry's) trends and needs. Using that information, use your skills to predict impact with value-driven accomplishment stories and construct value-driven solutions that predict success and translate directly to the bottom-line.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 8:29 AM 2 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips - RL Stevens Tip#5
Tip #5: Begin yesterday - You need to lay a foundation – you cannot wait until a job loss or other crisis occurs. Research is a critical component of a multi-faceted portfolio of a job search toolkit. Use social networking tools like LinkedIn or Twitter to build visibility around your value proposition and to engage with emerging thought leaders in your targeted field. Write a blog and articles; attend industry events; make connections with movers and shakers; do field research by speaking with those doing the work you want to do; learn the industry trends and buzzwords.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 8:27 AM 0 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Monday, September 20, 2010
Research Levels to Uncover Unpublished Opportunities
source: Hoover’s / Dun & Bradstreet:
the benefit to you: Identify employment targets and decision makers, as well as Executive Recruiters.
source: Career Research international--- Client Services Center
the benefit to you: Locate employment and spot opportunity leads, as well as additional company information.
source: Company Websites You Target
the benefit to you: In-depth information, important contacts and company news and sometimes, job opportunities not published any where else.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 8:42 AM 1 comments
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips - RL Stevens Tip#4
Tip #4: Concentrate on unique transferrable value A transition (indeed any hire) depends on value not skills. Determine what value you bring -- value that transcends the boundaries of industry or function and underlies all your successes. Examples might be an ability to 1) consistently deliver growth no matter what the circumstances, 2) always find the one thing within an already good process that makes it deliver even more productivity or revenue, or 3) motivate a team to gel and excel in difficult circumstances.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 8:30 AM 0 comments
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips - RL Stevens Tip #3
Tip #3: Leverage volatility When mass layoffs occur, smaller companies that could not compete for top-talent rush into to fill the gap and gobble up superior performers. When you experience a layoff, don't limit the search to your industry or function, an unrealistic salary, or a geographic location. This is the time that companies are thinking creatively and are more open to speaking with "non-traditional" hires with a great track record, and companies will be directing their recruiters to do so, too.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 8:13 AM 2 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Search Marketing Approach/Overview- Exposure
exposure: These are the marketing channels and multiple strategies used simultaneously, to gain maximum exposure for the client with the end-game that ensures the client's talents are purchased by targeted employer. These include
Posted by VP InfoSys at 8:07 AM 0 comments
Career Search Marketing Approach/Overview- Marketing
marketing: Marketing is the advertising communications conduits (written and verbal) used to promote the client's value and benefit to an employer if in a direct-hire pursuit, or to future customers / clients, if in an entrepreneurial / consulting pursuit. Development of a resume, letter / resume combo, marketing letter, executive bio / summary, or Value Offered Statement is all examples of these conduits.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 8:03 AM 0 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Comparison of how a Human Resource Manager will look at a job candidate differently than a Key Decision Maker.
Human Resource Manager Key Decision Maker Decision makers look at profit. They will look at how you will contribute to increasing revenues, profits and better customer / client relationships. Their focus will be on how you can help them be a better organization, rather than how you will fit a job description.
HR persons use criteria filters such as industry background, education, etc. They will look at how you fit into a job description. A person with your background and skills cannot afford to be “short-circuited” by a lower level HR person.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 11:00 AM 1 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Maximizing Your Exposure to Opportunity and Decision Makers
Using Marketing Channels and Multiple Strategies Simultaneously
Research will give you a head start towards the selection of your initial list of decision makers. Keep in mind that you have additional sources to review including further online investigation, blogs, social media sites such as www.linkedin.com, industry-specific discussion forums, trade associations, trade journals, and dialogue with influencers in venues such as informational meetings, and the research department of your local library.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 10:38 AM 0 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Search Marketing Approach/Overview-Positioning
POSITIONING
Positioning is the identification of a client's career focus which covers job role and industry target or targets and which leads to targeting a specific "customer" for the client's talents, background and qualifications. Identification of career focus which "positions" him / her in the appropriate market is found through probing of a client’s interests, credentials, background. The probing is done through the use of the RLS Profiles, additional assessment tools deployed at the discretion of the RLS marketing consultant, and deep, subterranean attentive, interactive discussions with the client.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 10:02 AM 0 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips, RL Stevens Tip #2:
Follow the money
New, growing, and emerging fields like green technologies, clean energy, social media, and others, will have fewer job applicants trained in those precise areas. They are looking for the best, but know that the best will often have to come from somewhere else. If your value and experience speak to employer needs, transition is assured.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 10:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Career Transition in a Volatile Market - 14 tips-Tip #1
Start with the known
During your career, if you are ever laid off or you just want out of your current field, companies, industries, and functions that have some connection to that field are often the most productive to pursue. Examples might be healthcare to biomedical; teaching to educational sales; consumer products brand management to B2B marketing; banking to corporate finance; engineering to green technologies; software development to new media.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 9:57 AM 1 comments
Labels: Career Transition Advice
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Where are all of the Jobs?!
Did you know that the published job market (i.e. all published job postings from newspapers, Internet, etc.) only represent 15.5% of the available job market in today's economy?
What makes up the other 84.5%? Can you name the other sources, and if you can, do you know what percentages they would be?
Are you only utilizing the 15.5% mentioned above? Is it providing the desired results from your job search? Do you find your job search frustrating and ineffective?
Have you ever wondered if you are truly maximizing your full marketing potential and utilizing all the resources available while conducting a job search?
An hour of your time with us, with no obligation, might make a world of difference! Call us and get to know what you truly don't know.
Posted by VP InfoSys at 1:17 PM 0 comments
Labels: spotopps