Wednesday, May 13, 2020
To Find a Great Job, You Need to Know Where to Look
To Find a Great Job, You Need to Know Where to Look You Need to Know Where to Look To Find a Great Job This week, we are excited to have a guest post provided by Mac Prichard, of the highly-esteemed Macs List in Portland, OR. Macs passion is to help job seekers, and he offers this advice to find a great job: Most job seekers make the same simple mistakeone that makes their job search longer and more frustrating than it needs to be. Itâs not an ugly resume, a typo in their cover letter, or a faux-pas in an interview. Their fatal flaw is even more basic than that. So what is this huge, no-good, slap-yourself-in-the-forehead mistake? They rely, almost entirely, on job boards to find new work opportunities. I own one of the largest and most-successful regional job boards in the country. I know that sites like mine are helpful in finding workparticularly in niche industries and targeted markets. But job boards should only be part of your job searchand a relatively small part, at that. Why? Because jobs advertised online (or anywhere else) represent a very small fraction of the total work opportunities currently available. Upwards of 80 percent of all jobs are never publicly advertised. Instead, employers fill these plum positions through networking, professional referrals, and word-of-mouth. This is what experts call the âhidden job marketâ and itâs often where youâll find the best paying, most rewarding work opportunities. If youâre spending all of your time searching online, youâre missing out on the hidden job market and 8 out of 10 best jobs. How to Plug Into the Hidden Job Market Iâm sure youâve heard the saying âitâs not what you know, itâs who you know.â Yes, itâs a cliche. Itâs also 100 percent true. Ask any hiring manager or HR professional and theyâll tell you this simple truth: employers hire people they know and people who are referred by trusted professional contacts. This isnât a conspiracy. Itâs just basic human nature. Itâs easier to establish trust when you already have some connection with another person. Plus, there are far fewer question marks as to whether that person will fit into the company culture. Itâs also good business. Organizations take on huge risks when they bring on a new employee. Hiring a known and trusted contact lowers the perceived risk. When I tell people about the hidden job market, many job seekers have a similar reaction: they think itâs nepotism and unfair. And, in truth, I partially agree with this sentiment. But hereâs the good news: The hidden job market isnât a closed or exclusive network. Any job seeker can get connected into this system. You donât need to be a scion of industry, an heiress, or the bossâ son-in-law. You donât even need to have a particularly strong relationship with prospective hiring managers. Even second- or third-degree connections give you a huge leg-up in the hiring process. If you want to find and land the best jobs, you just need to start building relationships with professionals in your field of interest. Meet with people. Share your skills, experience, and passion. The more you do these things, the more you become a known and trusted professional within your community. This benefits you in two ways. First, youâll discover unique and rewarding work opportunities. As people learn about your professional abilities, you become a go-to referral for opportunities that most align with your interests. Second, youâll have an inside track when applying for jobswhether you find that position on a job board or through a referral. Youâll have an existing connection (either directly or through another contact) with the employer. Youâre no longer just another faceless applicant lost in a tall stack of resumes; youâre someone who has already been vouched for and vetted. Three Job Search Tactics that Work in the Hidden Job Market No one likes looking for work. Itâs often a frustrating and isolating experience, filled with more failures than successes. And we make the process so much harder on ourselves than it needs to be when we rely entirely on the least productive job search tactics. When youâre exclusively looking through job boards and applying to jobs âcold,â you have less than a two percent chance of getting an interview. This turns your job search into a numbers game, where you face rejection 98 percent of the time. Youâre setting yourself up for failure! When you look for work in the hidden job market, you dramatically improve your chances of finding meaningful work. Leveraging your professional network opens turns you on to jobs where there is less competition and where you already have strong internal referrals. Of course, building professional relationships takes time and effort. Here are three three best ways to get started: Attend networking events: Thereâs no easier way to connect with other professionals (and prospective employers) in your field. Meet a dozen or more quality contacts in an hour! Do informational interviews: Connect and learn from influencers in your field of interest. You can uncover huge opportunities in just a 20-30 minute meeting. Volunteer: Thereâs no better way to showcase your passion and skills. Find a volunteer opportunity that allows you to utilize your professional abilities. You shouldnât expect to get a job from the organization youâre volunteering with; but youâre value will be on full display to influencers in your community. Given that 80 percent of jobs are available only through professional networking, Iâd urge you focus 80 percent of your job search time and energy on the tactics listed above. You shouldnât wholly ignore online job listings, but this should only represent 20 percent of your total search. The upshot here is that the work you invest in networking yields benefits to your career that extend beyond your current job search. Rather than spending hours agonizing over a one-off cover letter that generate no response, youâre building a network that keeps you plugged into the latest and best job opportunities. Anyone Can Do This Accessing the hidden job market is all about networking. Unfortunately, ânetworkingâ is a word that terrifies many people. Iâve heard so many job seekers say things like âIâm an introvertâ or âIâm too shy to network.â These are emotional reactions based on a misconception of what networking is. Not all networking involves glad-handing in a ballroom of an airport hotel. There are many different ways and venues to connect with fellow professionals. The fear of networking also comes from a false belief that you have you have to be a natural extrovert to connect with others. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Networking is a learned skilljust like riding a bike or learning a new language. There are some basic rule and it takes practice, but anyone (ANYONE!) can become a good networker. In my upcoming online course, Hack the Hidden Job Market, I teach everything you need to know to build strong professional connections that kick start your job search and propel your career. Iâll take you, step-by-step through the process, from how to make the most of networking events, to conducting informational interviews, to closing the deal with employers. The course launches November 1. Macâs Bio: Mac Prichard is the founder and publisher of Macs List, an online community that teaches job seekers how to connect to meaningful employment opportunities. He is the host of Find Your Dream Job, a nationally ranked career podcast, as well as the author of Land Your Dream Job in Portland, a book on how to compete in one of the nationâs toughest job markets. Mac regularly speaks and blogs on topics related to job hunting and career development. Contact Mac at [emailprotected].
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