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Ever want to slap your
forehead and say, "Why didn't I think of that?"
You might, after you
discover how one New York man found the right job,
largely as a result of blind luck ... or was it creative
smarts?
Read on to judge for
yourself and, more importantly, to find the two lessons
that can get you hired, too ...
"College prepares you for
the real world. That's what my guidance counselors told
me, anyway," says Robert Basso of Hicksville, NY. "I
thought a Bachelor of Arts degree was going to guarantee
me a job with great benefits and a pension after I
graduated from college in 1994. Wrong."
After finding it
impossible to get a position, Basso was reduced to
begging for his old college job back -- making
sandwiches at a deli on Long Island.
Fortunately, the owners
supported Basso's efforts to find a job related to his
degree, and gave him latitude to promote himself to
employers while at work.
One day, Basso hit upon
an idea.
"I decided to wrap every
sandwich I prepared with my resume and include it with
the order. I sent out about 75 resumes that way over
three days. Much to my surprise, I got customer
reactions -- some nice and some not so nice," says
Basso.
While this may seem like
a low-tech equivalent of email spam, Basso was targeting
potential employers in one respect -- geographically.
All the sandwich orders went out to office buildings
within a few blocks of the deli. And Basso knew that,
like a fax, his resume would likely be carried to a
manager who could give it their attention.
"I was aiming for any
entry-level job, but all the calls I got were for sales
and marketing positions. The resume itself was pretty
standard, but I guess the delivery method was
extraordinary and convinced employers that I knew
something about marketing," says Basso.
Within two weeks, Basso's
"sandwich" resumes had produced five job interviews and
four offers, one of which he happily accepted in the
marketing department of a health care firm.
Success, right?
Wrong.
"A week before my start
date, a human resources manager called to say their
company could not hire me because of budget cuts! Now I
had to beg for my old job back -- again," says Basso.
But, then, another twist
...
A few weeks later,
Basso's phone rang. It was the HR manager who couldn't
hire him.
"She had a new job lead
for me. It was for a sales position at a company run by
... her husband," says Basso.
Perhaps the HR manager
felt such remorse about not hiring Basso that she gave
him a break. In any case, because she had already vetted
him for a job, Basso had an edge when her husband's
company needed another employee.
This is how networking
works, by the way. The more people who know you, trust
you, and know what job you're suitable for, the shorter
your search will be.
Basso met and became
trusted by an HR manager who first hired him, then
reneged. But the trusted relationship remained intact --
and led to a new job.
Now. What can you learn
from Basso's unconventional job search?
Two things ...
1) Pick a Target
Market
While Basso didn't have a
specific job title or employer in mind, he did have a
location -- nearby office buildings.
Although I can't
recommend a blind "submarine sandwich" approach as your
first option, geographic targeting can get you hired.
Example: One of my
readers, Rod S., from Waterloo, Ontario, found a job
within 31 days after targeting 19 firms within a
5-minute drive of his home, then contacting each with a
customized resume and cover letter. You can do this,
too.
2) Reach Your Market
in a Compelling Way
Basso decided that
sandwiches were a vehicle he could latch onto for
getting his resume to employers. He was right. And his
delivery method was so compelling that it compensated
for the fact that, by his own admission, his resume was
rather bland.
Think about what and whom
your ideal employers interact with every day: pizza
boxes, flower deliveries, the cleaning lady, bicycle
messengers, billboards, elevators, etc.
What one unconventional
way could you deliver your resume and cover letter to
employers? It should be creative, compelling and, of
course, legal. List 10 possibilities then pick one to
test.
Now, go out and make your
own luck!
Kevin Donlin is
Creator of TheSimpleJobSearch.com. Since 1996, he has
provided job-search help to more than 20,000 people.
Author of 3 books, Kevin has been interviewed by The New
York Times, Fox News, CBS Radio and others. His free
report, The Simple Job Search Manifesto, is found at
www.TheSimpleJobSearch.com. |