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Being the Candidate
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Increase your odds of being selected by a recruiter by taking steps to
increase the chances your resume will be found when recruiters search
the job sites
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Career Resources - January 29, 2005 - Jobwerx News - Finding
people through job sites can seem like a daunting task for many recruiters.
If you reply to a recruiter's job listing on one of the popular job sites
like Monster, HotJobs or CareerBuilder, chances are you'll be one of 200
or more people responding. Most recruiters will only look through the
first 20 or so resumes. As we've mentioned in previous articles, one way
to distinguish yourself when replying to a job ad is to use a unique and
catchy subject for the email message.
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HOW RECRUITERS SEARCH FOR CANDIDATES
Another way to increase your odds of being selected by a recruiter, which
can be even more powerful, is by taking steps to increase the chances
your resume will be found when recruiters search the job sites. The best
way to do this is to optimize your resume for keywords recruiters might
be searching for. Because there are so many resumes on the job sites,
many recruiters use complex boolean search strings to try to find someone
who matches the job description they're trying to fill. Just as an example,
let's say the job the recruiter is trying to fill calls for an administrative
assistant who can write letters, edit spreadsheets and handle email and
scheduling. The recruiter might search for "Word and Excel and Outlook
and administrative assistant." The resume that will come up first will
probably be the one that mentions those 4 things the most. Guess what
happens to an administrative assistant who knows Outlook but didn't mention
it on his/her resume? They wouldn't even come up in the search.
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Especially during an economic downturn, many companies ask recruiters
to find people who can essentially handle the tasks of what might have
previously been more than one position. So the recruiter may be looking
for someone who primarily has one set of skills, but who also has another
set of skills that most people with the first skillset don't have. Many
recruiters and HR people are not familiar enough with the positions they
recruit for to know that the skill combination the company's seeking is
unlikely to exist in a single person. So they take on the task of searching
for someone with the wide range of skills the hiring manager is seeking.
When they find someone who mentions all the skills on their resume and
whose current and prior job titles fit with the job they're trying to
fill, they're excited and eager to recruit that person! This puts you,
the job candidate, in a much better position than being one of several
hundred people replying to a job listing.
BEING THE CANDIDATE THE RECRUITER CAN'T WAIT TO TALK TO
When your resume is one of the few that come up in a recruiter's search
for resumes, you become the prize the recruiter wants to win. This is
the reverse of the scenario you find yourself in when you reply to a job
ad - in that case, the job is the prize. You gain significant power by
being the customer the recruiter wants to sell the job to. Here are some
tips for structuring your resume so recruiters will find you in searches
and then want to offer you the job:
1. Your primary skills should be mentioned several times in your
resume, and in different ways. For example, if you're an attorney, you
should use that word several times in your resume as well as the word
"lawyer."
2. Even if you only used a particular skill briefly (like for only
3-6 months), mention it on your resume. If you learned about a certain
technique in a continuing education course, that can be mentioned on your
resume. Of course you should make clear in the text of your resume what
specific, albeit limited, experience you have with the skill. A company
would rather hire someone who has some exposure to a skill than none at
all, and by mentioning the skill you increase the chances you'll be found
in the recruiter's search for resumes.
3. Your previous job titles need to be congruent with the type
of job you're seeking. If you're looking for a job as an Administrative
Assistant, it would probably be better to have "Administrative Assistant"
listed as your current job title than "Office Manager." There are fewer
office manager jobs than admin assistant jobs available, and you don't
want the recruiter to think you're overqualified when they look at your
current and previous job titles.
4. Make sure your resume has been checked for spelling and grammar
errors. Use the spell check in Microsoft Word. Have someone who's a good
writer review your resume for grammatical errors.
5. Make it easy for someone to skim your resume quickly. If you
have a lot of different skills, having a section where your skills are
listed with bullet points can make it easy for the recruiter to see at
a glance that you have the skills they're looking for.
Once you have optimized your resume, making sure it is available on all
the sites recruiters search for resumes is the next step in increasing
your exposure. We recommend using a service like ExecReg.com to get your
resume posted on all the job sites at once. Their site will let you enter
your resume once and have it posted instantly on over 90 job sites including
Monster, HotJobs, CareerBuilder, etc. You can also post your resume confidentially
in case you don't want your current employer to know you're looking. To
find out about that service, visit this web address: Go
Here
For information on other helpful job searching resources, please feel
free to visit our Career Services
Information Area and also to locate other resources - use our Search
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