|
Yesterday, I
was reading the book, "Make Success Measurable," by
Douglas K. Smith, and it reminded me of a management
mantra they have at FedEx (and other innovative
companies): You can't improve what you don't measure.
Which got me
thinking about job hunting ...
Here's the
thought: What parts of your job search do you measure?
If you're
thinking, "Huh?" or "I don't measure anything," you are
like a dieter who doesn't own a scale -- how can you
know if you're succeeding?
The answer
lies in questions. Specifically, if you ask the right
questions, you'll get the right answers needed to
measure -- and improve -- your job search.
So, to get
you started, here are three questions to ask yourself at
the end of each day ...
Question 1: How many networking phone calls did I make
today?
Write the
number down. Are you happy with it? Did you make 15
phone calls, for example? Good. Reward yourself
appropriately, write down what you did to achieve that
goal, then repeat it tomorrow.
Not happy
with the number of calls you made? Think back to a day
when you were happy, when you were "hot" on the phone,
and talked to a lot of people. How did you do it?
Whatever you did that worked before, repeat it
tomorrow.
What if
you've NEVER had a good day making networking calls? I
would suggest that this is impossible -- and I can prove
it to you.
Think
about a time when you made a lot of phone calls to ask
an important question. Maybe it was to confirm the guest
list for a party, or to find a babysitter, or to get a
sub at work. If you can do that -- pick up the phone and
ask a question of people you know -- you can make
networking calls about your job search. Because it's
pretty much the same thing.
In this
case, the question you are asking is not, Do you know
anyone who's hiring? Instead, first tell others what
kind of company and job you're looking for, then ask,
Who do you know that I should be talking to?
Regardless
of whom you call and what you ask, the goal of each
networking phone call is simple: To schedule an
in-person meeting.
Question 2: How many in-person meetings did I set up
today?
Ideally,
you'll schedule 1-2 meetings per day and meet 5-10
people every week.
You'll
likely set up meetings with two types of people:
a)
First-level connections -- people you know already.
These are
your friends, family, neighbours, co-workers, et al. In
my experience, however, most job leads will NOT come
from these people. Rather, you will get them from ...
b)
Second-level connections -- people you meet through
people you know.
These are
also known as "weak connections," and there is great
power here, because there are great numbers here.
Example: If you know 250 people and they know 250
people, you have access to 62,500 second-level
connections.
The goal
of each meeting is to get the name of someone who can
either hire you, or refer you to a hiring authority. And
the goal of meeting those hiring authorities is, of
course, to set up job interviews.
Which
brings us to ...
Question 3: How many job interviews did I set up today?
This is
the crucial question.
Never lose
sight of the fact that all your phone calls and
in-person meetings have the same ultimate goal: To get
you face to face with an employer, discussing why hiring
you would be the ideal solution to their problems.
Fact: In
many cases, your next job may be at a company you don't
know about yet. Which is why you must put the numbers in
your favor and talk to as many people as possible.
And ...
your next job may not even exist yet. Which is why you
must research the background of every employer you meet,
so you can propose solutions and ideas that prompt them
to hire you before the competition does -- even if they
have to create a new job to do it.
To recap,
here are the three vital questions:
- How
many networking phone calls did I make today?
- How
many in-person meetings did I set up today?
- How
many job interviews did I set up today?
Take a
moment tonight to answer them. When you do, you will
start measuring your success, one day at a time, and you
can't help but get hired faster as a result.
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. |