Tuesday, November 11, 2014

7 TIPS FOR JOB SEEKERS THAT HIRING MANAGERS SECRETLY WANT YOU TO KNOW


REMEMBER THAT HIRING IS A CONVERSATION AND A MUTUAL DECISION BETWEEN CANDIDATE AND EMPLOYER TO GET SOME PERSPECTIVE IN YOUR INTERVIEW.
As a job candidate, you’ve heard all the insider tips about how to impress hiring managers. Firm handshake? Check. Good eye contact? Check. Cut the “likes” and “ums” from your speech? Check.
Yet you might still be struggling to gain an edge in the job market and find the position that suits your needs. From responsibilities to salary, location, work environment, company culture, mission, and client base, there are a lot of elements to get right.
After interviewing some 5,000 candidates throughout my career, one of the biggest lessons I’ve learned is that hiring is a two-way street. Companies are making a decision just as much as candidates are. The more transparency and openness we have during the recruiting and hiring process, the greater chance both parties will find the right match.
With that in mind, here are seven under-the-radar tips to help candidates find the right job—and even, dare I say, enjoy the experience.

1. YOUR RESUME ISN’T AS IMPORTANT AS YOU PERCEIVE

Hiring managers get a much more accurate picture of who you are by evaluating your online persona—including your social handles, work portfolio, published articles, etc.—which are typically more up-to-date and honest than resumes. Ensure all these digital handles are strong and reflect on you well.

2. HIRING MANAGERS DON’T WANT TO INTERVIEW YOU

They want to have a conversation with you to mutually decide if you should work together. Talk about each other’s goals, toss around ideas for growing the company, share your work philosophies, and see if you click.

3. FUTURE GROWTH IS FAR MORE IMPORTANT THAN PAST ACCOMPLISHMENTS

Work history can provide helpful background, but the past is in the past. What’s at stake is the company’s future. What can you do today and tomorrow to advance organizational goals? Spend more time talking about the potential future work relationship rather than past positions.

4. PUT ALL YOUR NEEDS FOR SUCCESS ON THE TABLE

Finding common ground with a hiring manager requires you to be upfront about your needs for success and happiness. By the same token, ask about the hiring manager’s needs. Do you jive?

5. YOUR QUESTIONS INFLUENCE HOW HIRING MANAGERS EVALUATE YOU

Ask questions of every hiring manager you meet, even if it seems repetitive. Your questions provide insight that every hiring manager wants—your interests, concerns, and passions. By the same token, you’ll get nuanced responses from different people, which give you deeper perspective into whether the position is the right fit.

6. YOU SHOULD COME VERIFIED

Hiring managers tend to favor candidates with whom they share mutual connections. That’s because these candidates have already been vouched for by their trusted network. Maintain a robust professional network to create one degree of separation from as many hiring managers as possible.

7. HIRING MANAGERS WANT TO ENJOY THE PROCESS

Recruiting has a reputation for being a painful process. But it doesn’t have to be. Hiring managers appreciate the energy and enthusiasm you can bring to your conversations. You’re getting to know each other before embarking on a potentially new and exciting relationship, and there’s no reason why this shouldn’t be fun.
Recruiting and job seeking is a vulnerable and exciting time for everyone involved. We need to work together to make it a straightforward experience, not a cat and mouse game, so both sides can make the right decision.
Candidates, remain honest to yourself and to hiring managers, and hiring managers, meet candidates in the middle by bringing transparency and openness to the table. Use these tips to get on the same page and have job conversations about whether you should work together.
Jerome Ternynck is the founder and CEO of SmartRecruiters, the company that is empowering the new way of hiring. Jerome's mission is to make it easy for companies to find the talent they need to succeed, and for people to find jobs they love.
[Photo: Flickr user Rawpixel]

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1 COMMENTS

  • JESÚS SEGURA JEROME TERNYNCK 
    Some of the problem about knowing where you want to head is assuming you have a world where you are surrounded by those in the same field. This is not the case for someone like myself where I am Hispanic and grew up in a poor area and many of the people I know, who actually work have very blue collar jobs and barely know how to use a computer let alone understand anything I can do. I guess these are great tips for people with little to no barriers when trying to entertain something in the job market.

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