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It's strange but true: You
can't get hired by an employment web site. Or an HR
department. You
can't get hired by a business, a non-profit agency, or a
government, for that matter.
Rather, you can only get
hired by another person.
This is what every
successful job search boils down to -- people connecting
with and hiring other people.
You can put the odds in
your favor, and shorten your job search, simply by
meeting more hiring authorities in the flesh.
But you have to do it
right. You must dress and act the part you want to play
as an employee, if you want to impress an employer
enough to hire you.
That's the advice one man
gave his wife that helped her win a job at a local
college.
"She was going to mail
her resume to apply for the position, but I told her
that it was so close by, why not hand-deliver it
instead?" said Daniel Dallaire, a financial services
manager from Kamloops, British Columbia. "That way she
could check out the place where she might be working at
the same time."
Problem: As his wife was
heading out the door, Dallaire noticed she was dressed
in sweatpants and a T-shirt. Solution? "I told her to
change clothes and look professional before delivering
her resume."
Good thing. She ran into
the hiring manager at the office, and her presence --
her professional appearance and clothing -- had a
positive influence on the decision to hire her later,
according to Dallaire.
All kinds of good things
can happen when you visit an employer in person.
Example: Several years
ago, I wrote about Eugene, a software developer from
Savage, Minn., who hand-delivered a portfolio of
material to an employer after submitting his resume
earlier.
As he was leaving, Eugene
met several employees in the lobby. One question led to
another, and he ended up interviewing them about ways to
improve their work. Eugene submitted a white paper of
possible solutions to the employer, based on his unique
research -- and was hired only weeks later.
All because he decided to
visit the employer in person.
According to
Minneapolis-based recruiter Larry Harris, you should
always try to drop off your resume rather than email or
mail it.
When you learn of an
opening for a job, call and ask for the hiring manager.
Tell why you are calling, explain why you are perfect
for the job and ask for a meeting. Then expect them to
refuse -- they'll likely ask you to email your resume
instead.
Here's where you turn
opposition into opportunity.
According to Harris, an
excellent response is this: "I could send you my resume,
but I'm going to be near your office tomorrow around
11:00. If you don't mind, I'd like to stop by and drop
it off. If you're available, I can introduce myself and
hand you my resume. If you're not in, I'll just leave it
with the receptionist. Would that be OK?"
This tactic is
non-threatening -- the hiring manager can always duck
into a closet when you show up -- yet it shows you don't
shrink from rejection. And it can lead to more in-person
interviews than you'll likely get hiding behind the
anonymity of email.
If you've been surfing
the Web and furiously sending out resumes by email,
how's that working for you? How many job interviews has
the Internet produced by itself? If you're happy with
your results, great.
If not, try this
experiment: Make a plan to meet five employers in the
next five days, by hand-delivering your resume and a
customized, well-researched cover letter to their
office.
The worst they can say
when you call to ask for a meeting is no. No problem --
just email your resume as you would have done anyway.
But if just two employers
agree to let you drop off your resume, you've just
secured two job interviews! Because, whether they say so
or not, any in-person meeting with any employer is a job
interview. You will be judged by your appearance, the
questions you ask, and the knowledge (or ignorance) you
display, just as in a formal interview.
So arrange your "resume
drop-off" meetings this week and prepare accordingly.
Then, 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. |