Sunday, April 12, 2020
How To Use The Job Description To Your Best Advantage - Work It Daily
How To Use The Job Description To Your Best Advantage - Work It Daily Gone are the days of applying for seemingly every job under the sun in the same manner of throwing spaghetti onto the wall and just seeing what sticks. Job search today is all about targeting: the exact type of job you want, and the exact type of employer for whom youâd like to work. Related: 3 Tips For Landing A 'Perfect Fit' Job Thereâs a strategy to using the job description properly in order to land that ideal role. Hereâs how: Use the description as the foundation for further company research. Interviewers like nothing more than a proactive candidate whoâs done his homework. The job description is a window into the company â" take in as much of the view as you can. Google the business to find out current news about what the organization, particularly the department you would be in, is working on right now. Doing so is essential to positioning yourself as something much more than the filler of that job. Beyond that, youâre demonstrating that you understand whatâs required to hit the ground running and contribute to the company as a whole. Speak the job descriptionâs language in your resume. Targeting your ideal role requires devoting some time to customizing your resume on a case-by-case basis. This customization need not amount to a resume overhaul. However, it behooves you to ensure youâre speaking the language that the specific employer wants to hear. For example, the company is looking for a Vice President of Marketing to drive âlead generation,â but your resume currently says you increase âpipeline growth.â These terms mean the same thing. However, massage your language so it reflects exactly what the company says is required. Find out who currently holds the job, or previously did. Take a moment to reach out and touch someone on LinkedIn. However, do so artfully. If the company is looking for a COO, youâd likely be stepping on some toes if you reached out to the current or prior COO. But if a company is hiring for a sales role, itâs likely youâll be on a team thatâs growing. In that scenario, reaching out to a sales professional who currently works there wonât seem like youâre after someoneâs job. Send the person a message saying you know the organizationâs expanding, youâre interested in coming on board, and are eager to glean any insights theyâre willing to share. Transform the description into a roadmap for your interview. This strategy works best for a senior role at the C-level, because this is where youâd be expected to demonstrate leadership. Treat the description as a starting point. Once youâve established how your prior career successes meet the needs stated for the position, take the interview a step further by recommending another manner in which you envision adding value to the business. Weave your company research into the interview conversation at this juncture in order to deliver maximum impact. In nearly all cases, when you use the job description as a springboard: for company research, resume customization, dialogue with relevant people, or the interview conversation, youâre showing your ability to think innovatively and creatively. Doing so goes a long way to separating you from the masses who just hit the âapplyâ or âsubmitâ buttons on the online job boards. These are the strategies that increase the likelihood of the employer choosing you! Related Posts 4 Ways To Stand Out To Employers 4 Ways To Avoid Looking Like A Job Hopper On Your Resume 5 Skills Employers Want Their Employees To Have About the author Jewel Bracy DeMaio finds out who you are, what you do, and the value you bring, and articulates that in a way that invites the employers and recruiters to call you. Ms. DeMaio is a triple-certified, nationally-recognized executive resume writer and job search coach. Learn more at www.APerfectResume.com or call 855-JOB-FOUND. Disclosure: This post is sponsored by a CAREEREALISM-approved expert. You can learn more about expert posts here. Photo Credit: Shutterstock Have you joined our career growth club?Join Us Today!
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