Sunday, November 17, 2019
7 Beliefs About Your Job Search That Are All Wrong
7 Beliefs About Your Job Search That Are All Wrong 7 Beliefs About Your Job Search That Are All Wrong If youâre like most job seekers, you approach your job search with a set of beliefs about how the hiring process works, what responses from employers are good signs and what responses are bad. But in many cases, those beliefs are flat-out wrong and some of them can hinder your search. Here are seven of the most common things job seekers often get wrong about their searches. 1. âIâm qualified for this job, so I should definitely get an interview.â If you see a job description that looks like it could have been written with you in mind, itâs easy to fall into this way of thinking â" you have everything theyâre looking for, after all, so why wouldnât you get a call to interview? But employers often have numerous perfectly qualified candidates, and they canât interview all of them, which means plenty of well-qualified people will end up getting rejected without even an interview. 2. âThe interview went well, so Iâm likely to get a job offer.â A good interview doesnât equate to a job offer. Other candidates might have interviewed as well as you or better. Or the job requirements might end up getting tweaked post-interview, and now youâre no longer as qualified as someone else. Or the employer might have an internal candidate they prefer, decide to hire the CEOâs nephew or put the position on hold altogether. Thereâs just no way to know from the outside, so itâs dangerous to let a good interview convince you that itâs in the bag. 3. âThey said Iâd hear back soon, so I expect to hear from them in about a week.â Employers and job candidates tend to be in different time zones when it comes to how quickly hiring moves. Hiring managers often juggle their hiring work on top of all their regular work, and it can become their lowest priority â" whereas for candidates itâs often the top thing on their minds. What's the best thing to do? Whenever an employer gives you an anticipated timeline, assume it will be at least double and possibly triple that. 4. âI havenât heard back yet, so I probably didnât get the job.â Maybe, but unless months have gone by, thereâs no reason to assume that yet. As in No. 3 above, hiring usually takes longer than people assume it will. But much worse than that is⦠5. âThis job is a sure thing, so Iâm not going to keep searching.â Slowing down your search or stopping it altogether because you think youâre likely to get a job offer is one of the worst mistakes you can make. Some people even turn down interviews with other companies because theyâre so sure an offer is forthcoming, and are left kicking themselves when the offer never materializes. 6. âI need to find a creative way to stand out to employers.â Job seekers sometimes resort to gimmicks to stand out, like using a fancy résumé design, sending gifts to an interviewer or having their résumé delivered by overnight mail. But gimmicks don't make up for lacking qualifications and will turn off many hiring managers. The way to stand out to a good manager is simple: Write a great cover letter and create a résumé that demonstrates a track record of success in the area the employer is hiring for. 7. âMy graduate degree should make me a more desirable candidate.â Grad school will make you more marketable if youâre in a field that requires or rewards it, but if youâre in one of the many fields that doesnât, employers may find it irrelevant. In fact, it can even make you less competitive if you apply for jobs that have nothing to do with your graduate degree, since some employers will think you don't really want jobs outside your field.
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