Thursday, January 22, 2009

Bank intern busted by Facebook

I saw this article and had to laugh, this will follow him for sometime in his career. Not only are employers looking at their current employees the are looking before you get hired. They are searching on your name, and email address from your resume, to see what they can find.

What you have on your “social network” might effect your career.

Dennis

Your Privacy Is An Illusion By Owen Thomas

Kevin Colvin, busted by Facebook

Who says Facebook is the province of the young? Increasingly, the 30something bosses of naive recent college grads are proving adept at turning the social network against its earliest adopters. Kevin Colvin, an intern at Anglo Irish Bank's North American arm, was busted when he told his manager, Paul Davis, that he'd miss work due to what colleagues took to be a "family emergency". Davis turned up the photo above, freshly posted to Facebook from the Halloween party Colvin apparently missed work to attend, and attached it to his reply, copying the rest of the office as he did it. The email thread is now spreading around the net. After the jump, the entire exchange, and the incriminating photo.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

It's a Conspiracy - Stealing your time



"Companies are just out there trying to waste my time! It must be a conspiracy!" Now that's a common (and ludicrus) sentiment I hear from candidates I coach.

I'm not sure how this conspiracy started, perhaps in the backrooms of a big corporation one day. Maybe it started just as a joke, and then spread to other corporations.

I can see it now... managers sitting around with HR people, laughing, about how they post job ads, receive resumes, make phone calls, set up and conduct interviews, have applicants fill out paperwork, take notes and make applicant files, and in truth, It's all fake! There's no job opening. They're not wasting their time, they are wasting yours. Oh my! I can see how funny this must be. How productive it is for the company!

From a candidate's point of view

They took:

Ten maybe fifteen seconds to click on a job posting

Three to five minutes on a phone interview

Time for the commute both ways

Thirty minute interview

Then they get rejected and think to themselves, "What a waste of time. They brought me in just to reject me!" They "wasted" two hours of your time collectively, yet how much time did they "waste" writing job postings, screening applications, reading resumes, making phone calls, scheduling interviews, conducting interviews, deciding on who (one person out of many) to hire, and filing necessary paperwork?




Something tells me that for the ONE person that got the job, it wasn't such a waste.

Maybe you need to be the ONE or notice why your not, in lieu of thinking the company is out to waste your time.

Dennis
(Video snip is property of IBM corporation)

Thursday, January 15, 2009

American Idol

Yes, I watch American Idol. Why? I find it entertaining, funny, and it shows the psychology of the way people think, act, and how others respond to them.

It is great to watch the judges and their initial response to people auditioning. Let us look at the bikini girl, which is all over the news and internet. If you watch Simon, he already had her picked to be “in”. She didn’t have to even sing, and Simon seemed to like what he saw.

If you watch the judges, they respond to the contestants based on how the dress, how they walk in. Do they have the right attitude, confidence? How do they address and impress the judges all on the few seconds up to them saying hello.

Then they tell a short story. The judges ask “Tell me about yourself”, or “Why are you here”, and “Are you the next American Idol?”

That’s funny! These are very similar questions that are asked by hiring managers when they are judging you for a new position.

So at this point either you are winning them over, have lost them or are neutral.

Now comes to the singing, their skill, their craft, what they do. If they are winning a good to great performance might get them to move forward. If the are neutral chances are less. If they start off losing the judges, only a great performance might sway them to have the singer to move on.

When you watch the show, of course for TV entertainment, your only seeing the really good and the really bad.

What happens to the other ten’s of thousands? Well, they get prescreened, they never make it to the final judges, the never get the chance.

Taking out the entertainment value of seeing the bad performers. This is similar to the hiring process. We filter people, screen them, then the final few make it to see the hiring managers.

Just realize that your initial presentation is setting the tone and direction for the rest of the hiring process.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Total of 2.6 million jobs lost



Below is the latest results from the Labor Department.

I don’t believe it will be getting better anytime soon. So, the question I have for you is what are you going to do to make your self outstanding?

There are companies still hiring, and in the future they will hire again. Are you going to be prepared to stand out above the rest of the crowd? Realize it is a big crowd. Are you going to put in a full day effort, every day?

I read a statisic that less then 10% of people find jobs on the classified ads, this includes Monster, Careerbuilder, and the internet postings. Let us say the statisic is wrong and 15% of people find jobs online. That still leaves 85% of the job openings being filled in other ways.

Do you how those other 85% of others are getting noticed? Do you know other ways of being hired besides internet? If you are getting calls on your resume or even interviewing, are you getting hired? Why not?

As a career coach I will ask you, when would now be a good time to get yourself some help? Do you buy a book, join a club, get advice, or hire a coach? I have had people tell me I can’t afford it. Well, you can’t afford not to have it.

I hope you have found my blog useful, and maybe I can help you one on one in the near future.

Dennis



BREAKING NEWS
updated 1 hour, 13 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - The U.S. unemployment rate bolted to 7.2 percent in December, the highest level in 16 years, as nervous employers slashed 524,000 jobs. The labor market is expected to remain weak as mass layoffs continue.

The Labor Department's report, released Friday, underscored the terrible toll the deepening recession is having on workers and companies, and highlights the hard task President-elect Barack Obama faces in resuscitating the flat-lined economy.

For all of 2008, the economy lost a net total of 2.6 million jobs. That was the most since 1945, when nearly 2.8 million jobs were lost. Although the number of jobs in the U.S. has more than tripled since then, losses of this magnitude are still being painfully felt.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Hello, My Name is



Hi Dennis! How are you???

If I only interviewed one or two people a year, I might recognize your voice. Otherwise when you call, I probably don’t know who you are. I know you might think you are the only one applying for the position, but I hate to break the news to you, your not.

We are not your career psychologist; we are not mind readers, we don’t know you before you call. Help us, and stop asking questions I can’t answer without twenty more questions like:

  • Did you get my resume I emailed it 2 minutes ago (again I don’t know your name)
  • Are you hiring?
  • Can I work from home (when I list a location)
  • Is this part time (when I list it is full time)
  • Telling me I’m un-American because I want bilingual speaking people
  • What kind job is this (its on the posting)
  • Where is it (again on the posting)
  • Your life story and your full work history (breathe, pause let us ask you questions

Here are some things to use to make your communication clearer if you are responding to a job posting or inquiring about a job.

First READ the ad. Now I know that takes a minute of your life but trust me it will help you with understanding what kind of candidate they need and if you qualify.

When calling, let us know this;

  • Who you are, not just first name, for I know a lot of Bobs
  • What you are calling for.
  • Hello, My name is ….. “I am calling in regard to…….” I feel I would be a great fit because I have …… skills”

Be clear, direct and to the point.

Why do I write this article? Because we have received over 200 resumes and almost as many calls from a local craigslist ad we placed. The phone was ringing non stop. I understand you want work, and I want to hire someone. To be that someone , please help me out, by letting me know how you fit the job.

Dennis

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Do we recognize the talent in an unexpected context?

A man sat at a metro station in Washington DC and started to play the violin; it was a cold January morning. He played six Bach pieces for about 45 minutes. During that time, since it was rush hour, it was calculated that thousands of people went through the station, most of them on their way to work.

Three minutes went by and a middle aged man noticed there was musician playing. He slowed his pace and stopped for a few seconds and then hurried up to meet his schedule.

A minute later, the violinist received his first dollar tip: a woman threw the money in the till and without stopping continued to walk.

A few minutes later, someone leaned against the wall to listen to him, but the man looked at his watch and started to walk again. Clearly he was late for work.

The one who paid the most attention was a 3 year old boy. His mother tagged him along, hurried but the kid stopped to look at the violinist. Finally the mother pushed hard and the child continued to walk turning his head all the time This action was repeated by several other children. All the parents, without exception, forced them to move on.

In the 45 minutes the musician played, only 6 people stopped and stayed for a while. About 20 gave him money but continued to walk their normal pace. He collected $32. When he finished playing and silence took over, no one noticed it. No one applauded, nor was there any recognition.

No one knew this but the violinist was Joshua Bell, one of the best musicians in the world. He played one of the most intricate pieces ever written with a violin worth 3.5 million dollars.

Two days before his playing in the subway, Joshua Bell sold out at a theater in Boston and the seats averaged $100.

Joshua Bell playing incognito in the metro station was organized by the Washington Post as part of an social experiment about perception, taste and priorities of people. The outlines were: in a commonplace environment at an inappropriate hour: Do we perceive beauty? Do we stop to appreciate it? Do we recognize the talent in an unexpected context?

One of the possible conclusions from this experience could be:

If we do not have a moment to stop and listen to one of the best musicians in the world playing the best music ever written, on one of the finest instruments in the world - how many other things are we missing?


Readers, I find this to be an amazing example of perception and what we do and don’t pay attention to. Here is a person that was worth $100 a seat two days earlier and no one will pay him, in his subway presentation. What is different?

This is a great example of what Apvantage is based on, the fact that the way you are perceived by people that want to hire you, that want to pay you, is based on your presentation.

It isn’t your talents, Joshua Bell is very talented, but he received little attention that day in the subway. And only received a little money all based on how people perceived him at that moment. Make sure your presentation is always worthy, so people can recognize your true talent.

Dennis

Friday, January 2, 2009

FREE CAREER ADVICE FORUM

If you are in the Chicagoland area.

Greetings! After 10 years of providing recruiting and staffing services, we are expanding our services.

It's a new year. For some of you it might be a new year for a new career. As someone that has applied for or has worked for Jobco Staffing Professionals we would like to offer you this opportunity to attend our FREE CAREER ADVICE FORUM.

With unemployment being so high and open positions becoming more scarce, getting great career advice will be critical for you to WIN the next position.

After a decade of running Jobco, Dennis has expanded his efforts to help jobseekers find employment. His new company, Apvantage, the Applicant Advantage, is performing seminars and forum to help you understand and learn what it will take to succeed in this current employment market. After years of observing hiring managers' unspoken expectations and witnessing surprisingly common applicant mistakes, he discovered his mission is to educate, coach, and motivate job seekers to find work quickly and efficiently.

It may have been a few months or a few years since we've worked together. We'd like to catch up to see how you're doing. If you are currently unemployed or know someone who is, you are invited to attend our :

FREE CAREER ADVICE FORUM

Join us every Monday from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

1000 Jorie Blvd. Oak Brook, Il 60532

At our conference room in the 1000 building is down the hallway from our office.


  • Get answers to your questions about resume writing, jobsearch techniques, interviewing etiquette, communicating effectively, andmore.
  • Meet and talk to other people looking for work, discussing best practices.
  • Learn about future Apvantage group coaching events and individual coaching sessions.


SPACE IS LIMITED & REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED.

PLEASE RSVP BY PHONE OR THROUGH OUR WEBSITE!


630.571.6025 or www.apvantage.com

If you are currently in the job market, we invite you to resubmit an updated resume. Our new and improved software will allow us to quickly and accurately match your skills to our available job openings at www.jobcostaffing.com

Sincerely,

Dennis Scherer

Thursday, January 1, 2009

A great time to set those career goals



I set goals often, and have utilized a variety of goal setting means taught to me by some of the best motivators out there. I am going to give you a list of goal setting exercises you can try. I believe that you will find doing any of these will get your mind set in the right direction.

So here is some bases for setting goals:

Stated in the positives

I believe what you focus on you will get, you set your mind into action and you start to bring information into your awareness. This is so true when you see a new dress or looking at a new car, That all of a sudden you start to see it everywhere.

The downside is true as well. If you if your focus on what you don’t want you will get that as well. The mind does not calculate don’t. It has to make a picture of what it is that you “do” not want

If I ask you don’t think of the color blue. What happens? You have to think of the color blue to not think of it.

If your not wanting to be unemployed, you need to change that into being employed.

We are in control of only ourselves, our own behavior and our own feelings;initiated and maintained by you, the individual. You maintain the quality of all rapport systems.

Set your goal and the state you desire so it is something you can see happening, something you can hear happening, and something that you will feel happening.

Here is one exercise if find valuable at the beginning of a new year.

Write down what you want quickly of what you want. What you want to accomplish, what you want to have financially, spiritually, physically, and relationship.

Just let the pen flow take about 5 minutes. Then pick out 5 goals you are committed to having happen in then next year. Write those goals out clearly why you will accomplish these goals. And then take the paper and with the 5 goals and the list of why you want each goal. Now take that list and seal it in an envelope to open next year, it will amaze you that you have either accomplished or are on your way to getting these goals.

Happy New Year,
Dennis