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How will your friends react when you tell them you've landed
yourself a great job? How will you feel with the dreaded bank manager is off
your back because you have secured a substantial pay-cheque each month?
Most
graduates hitting the job market for the first time expect to have to fill in
loads of application forms, to take part in two-day interviews with all sorts
of aptitude and personality testing, and to travel up and down the country with
little to show for it.
But the truth
is job hunting can be a fun, exciting and rewarding as long as you stay focused
and concentrate on the profession you really want to follow.
It is unfortunate that many graduates get pulled along by the 'rush' to get
selected and therefore spend a lot of time chasing jobs that don't really suit
them. Hence this is why many graduates change jobs three or more times within
the first 18 months out of college/university.
So, how do you stay focused with 200,000 graduates all after the 'best' jobs?
Listed below are five top tips to help you tackle your job hunt in a systematic
and business-like manner:
1. Be
Realistic
It is tempting to think that you can be 'all things to all employers' but if
this is your approach you will be swamped by what is on offer and will be
unable to decide what to do. So, firstly and most importantly you need to
decide what profession you want to be in.
Why? Because it is the primary concern of the graduate recruiter to find
graduates who can actually do the job on offer and what better insurance policy
is there than someone who has done a related course or who has had practical
experience during his/her vacation work?
The closer your targeted job relates to your course or work experience the
higher your salary expectation can be. So high-tech electronics companies will
be looking for graduates with degrees in electronics or computing whereas a
broadcasting company is likely to be interested in graduates from a broader
range of disciplines with practical experience as well.
For instance, graduates who have had some experience of working on local radio,
a local newspaper, hospital radio or something similar will interest them more
than a graduate with a purely academic background. So decide upon your
profession and target your applications/CV accordingly.
2. Be Smart
Think about, then action your individual job hunt. Be ahead of the game by
re-writing your CV and application forms to have a business emphasis. Steer
away from the common student writing style which includes too much emphasis on
hobbies, course details, references, holiday travel and grades of every
examination ever taken such as swimming, gymnastics and dance.
Focus instead
on your language and choose words in your CV/application form that have a
business-like tone. Words like solved, performed, redirected, developed,
implemented, sold and supervised create a positive business-like impression and
say so much more about you than woolly words like involved, assisted,
hardworking, helpful and ambitious.
3. Be Special
Decide what is special about you? What are you offering your 'new' employer?
Many graduates feel that being a graduate is enough, so they don't work too
hard on what they have to offer. This can also apply to some graduates within a
job so they don't settle in or endear themselves to others once within the
organisation because the 'I am a graduate' bit takes over.
Overcome this hurdle by forgetting the qualification bit and thinking in terms
of your unique business skills. What can you do that would add value to your
chosen company? What are you going to bring to an organisation? What personal
skills do you have to offer? Yes, the focus is on how 'You' can make a positive
difference to your chosen organisation.
4. Be Sexy
The thing to remember is that a lot of graduate applications are very dull,
boring and lack enthusiasm for the job on offer. Create a bit of intrigue and
sex appeal by committing your enthusiasm and talents to paper.
Employers love qualifications but they are also looking to recruit the other
qualification, which is your personality. The bit, which determines how you
come across, and how much potential you have. It also gives you the edge over
other candidates with similar qualifications as yourself, so don't downplay its
importance. Remember that if you don't include it on your CV/application form
it could be assumed that you don't have a personality!
5. Be Professional
Invest as much time and effort as you can into researching your chosen
profession and putting your application together. So many graduates see a
position they like the look of and just throw anything down on paper in the
vain hope that it will get them the job.
Researching the company and writing a personalised CV/application form may seem
to be a fruitless exercise if you don't get offered the job but it is a catch
22 situation. If you don't put the effort in, your application doesn't stand a
chance.
Spend at least a couple of hours finding out about the position on offer and a
similar amount of time, if not more, writing the application/CV.
This time can be reduced further if you spend a little bit of time discovering
more about what makes employers choose certain applications rather than others.
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