Welcome

Search This Site

 

Alltop. We're kind of a big deal.
Comments
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Powered by Squarespace
Twitter Updates

  

Twitter Updates

    follow me on Twitter
    Networked Blogs
    « Advertising is Not What This Blog is About | Main | 8 Random Facts About Me »
    Tuesday
    31Jul2007

    Job Hunting with Heart: Finding the Right Fit

    Rowan Manahan has started a new writing project called the Definitive Guide to Clearing Job-Hunt Hurdles and I am happy to be a part of it.

    I have been involved in the job hunt process as a person hunting for a job and as a person hunting for qualified applicants. As a job hunter, I have taken the process from beginning to end, from making the oh so important and often tough decision to seek a new position, through resume building, identifying opportunities, applying, interviewing, accepting offers and living with my decisions. As a candidate hunter, I  managed the process from beginning to end, from identifying necessary qualifications for the job to be filled, reviewing resumes, qualifying, screening, interviewing, determing fit, selecting candidates and living with my decisions.

    Sometimes my decisions stood the test of time, and other times they did not. How do you, as a job hunter, ensure (the best that you can in such an unsure world) that your decisions during the job hunt will stand the test of time? Time is relative here as the test of time could be 2-3 years for an employee right out of school, looking to gain as many different experiences as possible or time could be 10 years for an employee looking for stability as they grow their family for plan for early retirement.

    You are competent in your occupation, you have skills and experiences to offer and there are jobs for the taking. It is an employee's market. Where do you begin? At the beginning, of course, with you. What is most important to you? What are your non-negotiables?

    • Is it hours of work, scheduling flexibility or guaranteed hours? Is is cutting edge technology and innovation or the tried and true? Collaborative work teams or set reporting structures? 
    • Is the ideal organization profit or non-profit? Public or private? Large or small? Do you prefer manufacturing over retail? Local or global? What business cycle do you prefer: start-up, growth, stability, or decline?
    • What type of people do you prefer to work with?  What do you do exceptionally well? What skills do you want to develop? Is it more important to refine your skills or develop new?
    • Do you want to do the same in a different setting, do what you do from a different perspective or change what you do completely?
    • Is the salary and benefits package competitive? Does the package include what you need? How about what you want? Is salary the determining factor?
    • How far do you want to travel to work? Are you willing to relocate?
    • What is the company's mission? Do you believe in it? Do you need to?

    The employee-employer relationship is just that, a relationship, and each party brings something to the table. So, they have what you want, but do you have what they want? You do? Well, tell them! Tell them and show them why you are the very best fit for the job. Why you and not others? Now is the time to differentiate yourself from all others.

    What happens when it all comes together? You see both a personal and professioanl fit, blow them away in the interview and you live (work) happily ever after. Or at least until it is time to hunt with heart again.

    References (3)

    References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.

    Reader Comments (4)

    Lisa, I have thourougly enjoyed reading your post. Informative and very entertaining to read.

    May I make one suggestion. It would be nice if your feed was through feedbuner. It took me a while to add your feed into bloglines in your current format.

    Thank you.
    Wednesday, August 22, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterCarl Lingen
    Lisa,

    Great article. I have been doing research on ways of employing and keeping the Generation Y workforce. Have you seen these 'non-negotiables' change with the younger generations or are these itmes universal to every generation?

    Thank you.
    Wednesday, August 22, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterCarl Lingen
    Carl, I went to feedburner.com and added my feed. Hopefully this work better, let me know if you notice that it is not. Thanks for the feedback! Lisa
    Wednesday, August 22, 2007 | Registered CommenterLisa Rosendahl
    Young people don't understand that the eyes don't focus or work as well as we age. They want to make pretty or cool web pages. The type in web pages should have good contrast and should be able to be read by most.
    Friday, April 4, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterordinary person

    PostPost a New Comment

    Enter your information below to add a new comment.

    My response is on my own website »
    Author Email (optional):
    Author URL (optional):
    Post:
     
    All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.