Friday, February 11, 2011

Happy Valentine's Day

Friday, February 11, 2011 3:43 PM


It’s All in a Name … or Is It?


By Louise Fletcher

I'm happy to be one of CareerRealism's Twitter career experts. We answer job seeker questions in 140 characters or less, but today's question seemed to call for a more detailed answer. Here it is:

"I am in job search mode, and have decided to take the opportunity to transition into another field. It is a role I have performed in the past but not titled. Advised by professionals/experts in the field, that it is feasible. However, although my targeted resume has gotten to the hiring managers, and even some interviews, I do not get offers because I lack experience. How do I find the right balance? I don't want to give up on this new dream!"

This is a situation many of my clients find themselves in. It's a common misperception to think you have to have held a title in order to have success. Actually, this isn't true. You just have to be smart about how you communicate your skills in your resume. Because a great resume will not only open doors - it will also remove the 'not enough experience' reservations people have about you.

If you are in a similar situation to the one outlined above, I'm going to give you a few of my favorite resume strategies to change perceptions. For the sake of illustration, let's say you have been employed for 10 years as an executive assistant within a small company. During that time, part of your responsibility has been marketing and this is the part of your work that you love. You've now decided to apply for marketing positions but you don't have any related titles on your resume. So what can you do? Here are just 3 ideas:

Find ways to demonstrate expertise and then link to these on your resume

Write an article, blog posting or Squidoo page about marketing. Make it really, really good! Write about something you know inside and out. Then place a link prominently in your resume and cover letter, saying something like "Check out my article on 10 ways to market a small business through social media."

Highlight your marketing experience right upfront

Head your resume: "EXPERIENCED MARKETING PROFESSIONAL" and write a sub-header like "10 years of marketing experience despite never holding a marketing title" or "I've been the untitled marketing manager at my current company for 10 years." If you can find a way to inject some light humor into this sub-header - even better!

Employers won't miss the fact that you don't have a marketing title, so you might as well address it right upfront and get it out of the way.

Focus mainly on Marketing

As you write your job descriptions and accomplishment bullet points for each position, focus on marketing. Don't write about accomplishments that have nothing to do with marketing, no matter how impressive they are. Reinforce your marketing expertise with every word you write.

Of course, if our fictional job seeker needs to apply for executive assistant positions, she'll need a completely different resume and that's OK. Your goal is to show your readers how you are the perfect person to meet their needs.

It's important to note that these tips only work if you actually do have enough experience but the experience just isn't clear to employers because of your job title. If you don't have that experience, you'll have to get it before you can convince anyone to hire you. The best way to do that is to step up and volunteer to help the marketing team in your current company. Take on as much as they can throw at you - it's all fodder for your eventual getaway.



Something New Called Focus 2!

Focus 2 is a new program here with Career Services! We are very excited about it.

It helps you decide what your major should be!

OR if you have a job you want it tells you what major would be best!

FOCUS-2 is a self-guided, online career and education planning tool for use by college students. It will enable you to assess your interests, values, skills, personality, and aspirations as they relate to careers and college majors. FOCUS-2 is designed to help you choose the best major for you and explore occupations that match your profile. Students who use FOCUS-2 make better decisions about their goals and plans and learn how to manage their careers.

Be sure to check it out today!



Etiquette Tip of the Week:

Dr. P.M. Forni, author of Choosing Civility and The Civility Solution and co-founder of the Johns Hopkins Civility Project said he is often asked about the saying, "Nice guys finish last."



His response is, "Smart and nice are the most powerful combination."

As you know, it’s polite to give credit where credit is due. Thus these tips are from www.cultureandmanners.com



Events for the Week:

2/14 Federal Reserve Open Info Session

Yates Dining Room

10-11

2/15 Public Service and Non-Profit Career Fair

221 YGCU

2:30-4:45

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