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Last week, I
wrote about how to use three principles from the book, "Thinkpak:
A Brainstorming Card Deck," by Michael Michalko, to find
work faster.
To recap,
Michalko's book helps you brainstorm solutions by
forcing you to look at problems in nine different ways,
arranged around the mnemonic SCAMPER.
They are:
Substitute; Combine; Adapt; Modify or Magnify; Put to
other uses; Eliminate; Reverse or Rearrange.
This week,
I'll apply the last four SCAMPER principles to solve
problems you may be having in your job search ...
1)
Modify or Magnify: How could you alter something in
your job hunt or make it bigger?
Ideas:
What if you moved your job-search efforts to another
location for the day, say a coffee shop or the library
downtown? You might get new ideas and perspectives by
seeing and talking to new people.
What if
you made your networking phone calls one hour earlier or
later in the day? Four hours? Could you reach more
people and have better conversations?
To magnify
or think bigger, what if you blew your resume up and had
it printed on a t-shirt or a sandwich board? Or, let's
say you're currently targeting 20 companies where you'd
like to work -- what if you doubled that list, to 40?
What could
you do more often? If you average two networking
meetings every week, what if you could schedule four?
Eight? Other people have done it -- why not you?
2) Put
to other uses: What new functions can you find for
what you've been doing?
Ideas:
What if you used postage stamps as self-marketing tools?
You could put your picture, personal logo -- even a
photo of the hiring manager you want to meet -- on a
stamp and use it to mail your cover letter and resume.
What kind of impact do you think that would have? To
learn more, visit
www.photostamps.com in the U.S. or
www.picturepostage.ca in Canada.
What if
you re-purposed the best ideas from your cover letters
and turned them into blog postings? A cover letter is
typically read only once, but a blog posting can last
forever ... and get you found by recruiters and hiring
managers if Google picks it up. Don't have a blog? Start
one today at
www.blogger.com.
Ever get a
sales letter with a Post-It Note on it? Studies by 3M
and the U.S. Postal Service show that including one will
increase response. What could you write on a Post-It
Note, stuck to your cover letter, that would make more
employers call you? How about "Don't read this if you
don't need a Star Employee," or "Revealed -- 3 ways to
save $57,000 or more for your business"?
3)
Eliminate: What could you subtract from what you're
doing?
Ideas:
What if you left only the first part of tantalizing
voicemails for employers? Example: "Hi, this is Steve
Jones at 612-567-8901. I just spent the morning talking
to three of your competitors. They told me that ..."
Click. Do you think more employers might return your
calls? Test this on companies you don't want to work for
first. (Kudos to Jeffery Gitomer for the idea.)
What if
you split up the bullet points in your cover letter
into, say, three specific ways to build an employer's
business? Then mail each idea in a separate letter, to
arrive three days in a row. Do you think three mini-case
studies would have more impact than one cover letter?
What if
you defined your problem with the narrowest possible
"how" question. Example: How can I meet more hiring
authorities? Doing this can confirm the vital few tasks
that really produce job interviews, so you can do more
of them.
4)
Reverse or Rearrange: What can you do in the
opposite order or direction? How else can you arrange
your job-search tactics?
Ideas:
Most people send out resumes and hope for interviews
later. What if you set up interviews first, researched
the company and the industry ahead of time, met the
decision maker, demonstrated your value, then
sent a customized resume after the meeting?
What if
you rearranged your resume and drew it as a flowchart? A
mindmap? A recipe? A magazine cover?
What if
you changed verbs and subjects when thinking about your
job search. Example: "How can I convince employers to
hire me?" becomes "How can employers convince me to work
for them?" Does this give you a helpful new perspective
on your skills, experience and value?
For even
more ideas, I suggest you grab a copy of Michael
Michalko's "Thinkpak" for yourself.
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. |