Unless you’re a perfect match for an open job that needs to be filled
immediately, applying directly is the least effective way to get a call
from a recruiter. I’ve written a number of posts in this LinkedIn
series and a complete book
on what to do once you get the interview, so let me use this article to
help job-seekers improve their odds of getting the all-important first
call.
A short story will help set the stage. I just received an
email from an old acquaintance, a marketing professor at a major
university in southern California. I haven’t seen him for at least 10
years, so I was surprised to get the email. He attached a resume of one
of his students saying “he’s my best marketing student this year, and if
you’re looking for an intern, pick this guy up right away.” The resume
itself was underwhelming. The skill set was average, the format was
bland, and the writing was mediocre. But the endorsement was first
class. I’m now in contact with the student, even though I don’t need
another marketing intern, but you never know what can happen.
Endorsements
matter. Strong endorsements from influential people matter more. In
priority order from best to least best, here’s my I advice for
job-seekers on how to get noticed by recruiters if your skills and
experience are not a perfect match for the requirements stated in the
open job description. I’ve assigned a rough value score from 1-100 for
each technique in comparison to applying directly to a job posting.
1. Get referred by an influential person who can vouch for your performance (100X).
This is gold in the hands of a recruiter, particularly if the recruiter
knows the person. This is the best way for a strong candidate without
the prerequisites to obtain an instant interview. It's almost as
effective as being promoted internally.
2. Get referred by a less trusted source who can vouch for your performance (50X).
This is comparable to the email story above. I don’t really know the
referrer well, but his position and the wording of the email was enough
for me to review the resume. It’s hard to resist someone going out of
his or her way to vouch for another person.
3. Get recommended by an influential person even if they can’t vouch for your performance (20X).
I get these all of the time, but if the person I know is just passing
the resume forward, I don’t give it much credence. If I had an open spot
though, I’d definitely review the resume as a courtesy to the referrer,
and if it the candidate had a strong resume, I’d make contact.
4. Get recommended by anyone within the company even if they don’t know you too well (10X).
In this case the quality of the referrer becomes the differentiator and
the less credible, the less the referral is worth. Regardless, if the
recruiter has a need to fill the position, the person’s resume would at
least get to the top of the stack and be personally reviewed.
5. Bypass the gatekeepers (10X).
Unless your skill and experience set is a perfect match to what’s
required, your resume will not be reviewed by a live person. To get
around this you’ll need to go on LinkedIn and find the head of the
department for the job or the hiring manager and be bold, different and
creative. For example if the company is looking for a marketing analyst
send a cool Prezi competitive analysis presentation to the hiring
manager, or the white paper you presented as part of your KickStart
project. (Note: these are just ideas. The key is to be different in how
you present yourself. Key: think beyond the resume.)
6. By found more easily by reverse engineering your LinkedIn Profile and online resume (10X).
Recruiters are constantly searching their resume databases using the
skill terms listed on the job descriptions. So if you want to be found
make sure you include these same terms on your resume, then go to
Google, LinkedIn or Indeed.com and search for people with these terms.
If your resume or profile is not on the first page, look at those that
are listed, and do what they did to get there.
7. Perfect match on skills and apply (10X). As long as the job is still open and a high-priority for the recruiter, you’ll be contacted directly.
8. Not perfect match on skills and apply (1X). Good luck.
Getting
referred by an influential person is the ideal way to get a call from a
recruiter. Pushing the "Apply Now" button and filling in the
application and associated questionnaire is the least effective and most
frustrating way. Sending your resume directly to a recruiter isn’t even
on the list. But getting noticed is only the first of many steps in
getting the job you deserve. At this next stage presentation matters,
but performance matters more.
Original Article : http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20130217213656-15454-job-seekers-the-power-of-networking?trk=mp-details-rr-rmpost
Job-seekers: The Power of Networking
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