Sunday, September 11, 2011

My Unemployed Experience - Part 6

Well it's a beautiful day today. The sun is out with a nice breeze, so sitting here on the porch I figured I'd throw a little more of my experience your way if it helps any.

You know I've tried many avenues and I've always made change when needed. You have to be ready to change at any given moment. The world has changed, but understand something. I know you need an income and you must pay taxes, but do know if you have any sort of income that you're paying taxes on all your unemployed techniques can be tax deductible. Meaning by claiming all the things you do like, buying paper for your resume, ink for your printer, minutes used on cell phones, trips to interviews, and many more you can claim this on your income tax reducing your total taxes you're required to pay. Sure it's percentages that you're allowed but it might just get you back a few needed dollars to get you through. Many people don't take this to heart and claim it. They simply just let it go and not worry about it. That's your dollars that you're not claiming and possible dollars you won't get back because you don't claim it. Claim everything you possibly can. You automatically get a standard deduction, so undoubtedly you have to claim more than your standard deduction or you'll just lose it. That has happened to me before. But knowing my standard deduction, I know what I have to work toward. Whichever is the most is what my accountant will use. But I give him everything just in case. Here's some ideas to help you along.

Office Supplies- Ink, paper, pencils, pens, staples. In some cases and yes I let the accountant know that I purchased my last laptop and accessories for the sole purpose of job searching. One might say yea but you're using it for blogging in this instance. Yes I am, but because I blog and I have evidence to show that people read my blogs listed under stats, can easily grab a potential employers interest in hiring me for a specific need based on what I might be blogging about.

Home Office - if you're using a home office, spare bedroom you might inquire how much of this are you allowed to claim, since it is your office area and you're using it for business, (ie, job searching). Percentages of electricity used, your long distance carrier, or your web provider bill that you pay to stay online on particular job sites searching. Ask about it.

Vehicle charges- gas, tires, oil, repairs. I let the accountant know about it all. He'll determine what can and cannot be claimed. As for as gas you have really one of two ways to claim it keeping each receipt showing each time you filled up or claim the standard deduction for fuel and wear and tear the IRS allows you to claim and I'm not quite sure the exact, but somewhere I believe around .71 cents per mile. Note though going this route includes tires, fuel, repairs, etc.

Interviews face to face and telephone. If you have to do the call-in, make sure you are tracking the time frame spent on the call, whom you're speaking to, the company name, etc. If using your cellular phone log the minutes and times talking. Even if they are calling you and you're using your minutes to answer you're using minutes toward job related affairs. Landlines the same way, but you can get this information off your monthly bill such as the number called, the amount in minutes you've spoke, the date, etc. Keep those bills. Face to face if you have to stop and eat, hotel expenses, etc. those items are used solely for job related affairs. However if the company you're interviewing with pays your interview expenses, you can't double claim unless you use your money and you are not reimbursed.

Check with your accountant you may also be able to claim such things like dry cleaning expenses to have suits and dresses cleaned to go to interviews.

Be proactive when it comes to listing items to claim. Look around,ask your tax preparer and you may be surprises what you're allowed to claim toward job relations.

Just a few areas of thought to help you possible get a few bucks back that might help you over the hump. Nothing here implies or suggest that I know anything about the tax codes or laws. Your accountant or tax preparer can assist you in the proper direction you might need to go, but it's worth talking with them.

OK not I've covered some of the IRS possibilities. One area I've focused on is questions and answers. Ever get hit with behavioral interviewing questions. Yes the old days of sitting down and just talking and getting to know someone is all but gone. Now you have to answer questions to be judged against. Here's several.

1- Tell me about yourself... the infamous question. This is not a question to take lightly. They are not saying tell me about your score from your golf game or how involved you are with your daughters dance class or son's baseball training or how much you enjoy fishing. Stick to the question on a professional job related experience. Whom have you worked for, what was your job or how long did you work for them. Include the roles you had and how you save the company $150,000 dollars on a project you were involved in.

2- Tell me a time when you had an unhappy client and what was the problem and what did you do to relinquish the problem.

3- How do you handle anger?

4- Tell me a time where you had a dispute between two workers, how did you handle it?

These are just some questions. If you Google and ask for "interview questions" you can find many questions that are asked typically including the top 100 questions asked during an interview.

My point here is learn the type of questions by researching them and applying your answers to them and know your answers. Preparation is key here. You don't want to be caught with a bunch of "UM's" and "a's". If you're ever asked a question that you don't know the answer clearly state, "I'm sorry, but I have no answer for this question". Don't give a bunch of "UM's". I always had suspected questions and answers available next to my phone when doing a telephone interview

You have to put forth a lot of effort to get a little bit of success out from your job search. From printing business cards, some possible advertising and marketing, learning to sell yourself, sales pitches(elevator pitch), beating the streets, working the job boards, employer sites, mailing off resumes, following up etc.

One think I've learned, don't get lazy with the computer and do everything through it. It's a great source but again part of your arsenal of tools. When you are finished with an interview, do you simply email a thank you response when you get home, or do you still mail a hard copy saying thanks. I do both. An email captures the "in the now" and set's the stage for remembering you. When the hard copy thank you comes it's an added icing on the cake so to speak. Make sure you tell the potential employer how much you enjoyed the interview and reiterate what you have to offer, but never forget to again ASK for the job. You don't have to take it once you've been selected and you've gone through everything they're offering you if it doesn't sit well with you, but always ask for the job. You may never ever get a second chance to say, "I'm interested".

One last thing, you should always be making contacts and NETWORK, NETWORK, NETWORK. Take advantage of job fairs, networking events. Anything that will put you out in the forefront of potential buyers. Buyers being employers who will purchase your product.... YOU!!!

Well, I think I've come to a stopping point in my unemployed experience. If I happen to think of more avenues and areas I have left out and need to add, I'll just add them in a future response as a new segment. I hope many of the things I've brought to light that has helped me, helps you or someone who sometimes needs a different edge on things. I do wish everyone well with hopes of obtaining a job in the near future. If you ever want to bounce something off someone, drop me a line, I'll be happy to tell you what I've done and possibly give you some more ideas! Wishing my readers the best!!!!

Sunday, September 4, 2011

My Unemployed Experience - Part 5

WOW, thinking back over a year of everything I've done is a time consuming effort. I come across numerous things I hadn't realized I have done, but nevertheless it is what was part of my saga.

During my search I did speak to several people who has got all my respect and who has helped me with little things here and there. They do come from a discussion board that I've been part of for almost 2 years. They are well worth their weight in gold. Not to mention I gave up on family and friends support when people started acting like it wasn't their problem. These discussion boards are worthy of sticking to them if for anything the support these people give you. How amazing it becomes when you actually start finding out how truly your friends are that you've grown up all your life with. Family is the same way.

One thing I have to say is you need to put the negative people out of your life and hang with those that are positive. Yep, positive influence will get you through this. Majority of friends and family will tell you they don't understand and how they can't figure out why you won't go back to work. They really have no clue what you're going through unless they themselves has experienced it. I've had family that has mention everything to try since they were looking for their first job. BING... things have changed, nothing last forever in the realm of job searching. What use to be is far gone nowadays. The basics might be there but the technique and the arsenal one must use is clearly over the hill in trying to make anyone understand. So forget those people. They will bring you down. They figure you should be able to find something, anything for that matter. Many will tell you to take this or that minimum wage job, but has no clear understanding that you've applied you cannot make people hire you. Your experience is out of the ball park for what they want to pay anyone. The old tale of you will find something better when things get better is typical the way companies see those with experience and qualifications.

I have applied for retail jobs, wholesale jobs, oil and gas jobs, building products, construction, trash dump jobs; you really have to work the system and find your niche' to find people who want your skills. In the old days you could go sit in front of a hiring manager talk one on one, get to know each other and either walk out knowing you have a job or at the bare minimum know that this wasn't the one. Everything is a science nowadays.

Moving on, I have used the famous job boards. Some are worthwhile where some I wouldn't go to if they paid me to be on them. Here's a list of quite a few I have been on and in most cases my credentials still float amongst their system.

Careerbuilder, Monster, Bridget Bits, Employment connection, Resume Poster, Beyond, Jobfox, Jobboard.asme.org, CBC jobs, Execbuddy, my jobhunter, vault, wafbjobline, salesgravy, Rigzone, Perficient Openhire,Indeed, Hotjobs, HireDiversity, Batonrougebetterjobs, Geowebjobs, Hotmail, jobsonline, realmatch, resume360, thejobspider, Houstonhires,PCRecruiters,Jobsradar,Novotus, Preparetohire.me, TalentTrust, jigsaw, Jobinsider, sciencecareersite,Badon's Employment,inc., Business Workforce,

To give you an idea of working the company job boards I've used the following.

Fastenal, LehighHanson,Aramark,Owens Corning, Armstrong World Industries, Champion Technologies, Akzonobel, Johnson Controls,Aerotek, TransUnion,Vitrura, Shell, Robert Half, Dish Network, Owens Corning, Home Depot, Masco Home Services, Newell Rubbermaid, Bluelink, Georgia Pacific, MSC Industrial Supply,Sims solutions, Culligan, Waste management, wilsoncombat,Sabic Innovative Plastics,United Rentals, Dollar General, Wis International, Solar Turbines,British Petroleum, Love's Travel Store, HB Rentals,Haliburton, Fifth Gear. This is just part of the list.

Other areas I've become associated with is LinkedIn, Praxair,Facebook, Twitter, Yolasite.com, Brightfuse,Wix, MySpace,QuietAgent, Naymz(visible.me).

These are just some. Honestly, I was tracking every site I launched on and have a pocket book I keep everything in because I can't remember them all so I started writing them down. Some might not even exist any longer.But the reason I pointed all these sites out is simply to show it is a full time job keeping up with each, monitoring them and following up to stay at the forefront. My job search became quite serious over a long haul. I knew I had no one to depend on but me. I had many sleepless nights getting up and plugging away again. When I've told people I spent 14 hours a day behind my computer or beating the streets, that was not fictitious. My poor old mother who I tend to had no understanding why I stayed on all the time. Her most redundant question every time she came around was find anything else, you find anything to apply to. I'm typically a quiet person. She can't handle that. She wants conversation. It's hard to converse when you whole world is wrapped up into finding work.

The whole entire point to this message is you have to make you a plan, work the plan continuously changing the plan no different than you change a budget statement as time goes on, so you'll always be ahead of it. It's definitely not a lazy man's game. Each site I've been associated with whether it was a social site or a job board or a specific company's career site I have sat down and filled each and every profile out as they've wanted. Now don't take that wrong as I give everything away. I do not deal well with anyone asking me for personal information like my social security number or my references. Forgetaboutit. I respect my references to much to throw them to the wolves. I am cautious. But here's the thing. First I make sure if it's a social site I know what I placing on it. I never say anything that will draw a red flag. Even like on Facebook. It's personal but business oriented. I love many things that of interest, but you have to stop and think, "is it politically correct"?

You know we all been taught the ole adage of "don't put anything you wouldn't want your grandma to see", well that goes double dose for employers. You have no idea how and if they can get into your site. If someone wants you bad enough, they will go through hoops to find out all about you. Is your political standings in line with theirs? Is your religious thoughts in line with theirs? Hey no one said they had to be. I'm quiet but I tend to voice my opinion when riled, but I know certain things people will take out of context and won't give me the benefit of the doubt such as being my own person with my own thoughts. So, I don't put it on any posting. I watch each and every move I make on the internet. Now if I could ever get my kids to buy into that, which is another blog.

The thing is in my experience I had one goal and that was to be known and get known across the web. Have I succeeded. I think I have. When I Google myself, I pop up first in many agendas. It wasn't always that way, but I had to work many long hours to get there. Will it ever help me, maybe one day, who knows. In regards to recruiters who contact me and find out I'm on a job board. That doesn't bother me at all. They might have the stroke in the company to get me seen or get me an interview, but there's other ways of skinning a cat! It's called determination and persistence.

You know I use to go with my wife to stores, now she was a tiny lady 5'1 and little. But she wasn't one to reckon with. When she felt she was getting screwed she let you know about it and it wasn't what one would consider happy times. How many times did I say, "baby, you don't need to do that, it's not the clerks fault, they just following policies". She felt if you worked for someone you represented them and since no one else was around guess who's going to hear her out? Well on numerous occasions a supervisor or even clerks would approach listen to the problem and here her and her voice getting louder attracting other customers to stare. I guess when you have a mission statement that says something like "we want everyone who shops here to have a pleasant experience", that pleasant experience is not exactly happening at this point. So they would simply give her what was required just to get her out of there. She was never nasty or threatening, just factual, and expected to be treated like a decent paying customer. Well I did that once myself thinking what the hell, the store I was in pulled something totally off the wall with my 13 year old daughter and followed her around and then when she got scared she looked at me and said daddy, those men are following me. Now I can take a lot, but don't ever do anything to mess with my kids, especially my girls. So after questioning the so called security and knowing that she didn't take anything, I came unglued and told them are we finished here after them speaking with me in front of her. They said yes, I had $300 dollars worth of goods in my hands holding 2 credit cards to pay, the child had money in her pocket and I gave them permission to search her purse as she said also she didn't do anything. Crying, I dropped all $300 worth of goods right there on the floor and told them if we are finished here do not try to stop me when I walk out the door or you will be hearing from my attorney. Amazing how people react when you become persistent.

The deal here is with any company, you show enough interest, you keep sending resumes, making calls, learning who the right people are to contact, eventually (not always) someone will take notice and say "let's talk to that person" if nothing else to get you to move on. There's your cue to a quick interview. It works, but you have to have things in order. You can not be a stalker, you cannot be ugly. But you can be professional, determined, learn who the right people are to contact.

Getting out and making your name known is key to any place you choose to want to work. Talking to current employees on your skills when something comes available you made a contact, they might even throw it out there that they know someone the company might want to talk to. Also, many company's have a referral policy where the employee might get a certain amount of bonus just for introducing someone who stays with the company 3 or 6 or even an year. If they stay you get the bonus. Many employees love that. Why wouldn't they want to know you as a prospect? And yes company's do do that. My last company I worked for gave out $1100 if the new hire stayed on for 6 months. The current company I was told that if you introduce an underling and they stay once hired you can get up to a couple hundred dollars and if it's a manager up to $2000. So it does help to get to know the current staff.

If you know people who has left the company, talk with them. You can learn lots. Not the begrudged or disgruntled, but the positive things. The disgruntled however will give you ideas on what was disheartening, why they weren't happy, why they moved on. This might help you in your interview skills about the company and what to stay away from or rather capitalize on. Positive attributes will help you when you do get an interview because you'll know what's important to the culture.

I'm doing it today working. Getting to know new people and listening to older people who has been there a while. Learn from them. They have a lot of information that will steer you in what to do and what to stay away from.

One thing I want to bring up for the interview process. We've all been told never to bring anything to an interview. I somewhat don't always agree with that. Yes I dress professional, but I usually have brought 2 things with me besides a pencil. My portfolio with a tablet inside along with several extra resumes and my brag book. What's a brag book one might ask.

A brag book is all my certificates and write-ups of things I publishes, created, designed, company newspaper articles, copies of evaluations, memos that capitalized on my successes, and certificates of things I've learned. It's about 2" thick in a nice black binder in clear sheets so they can be pulled in and out. My portfolio as I said has a tablet in it. I'm not bashful about taking notes. But you have to weigh out the interview when you get there. Based on whom you're interviewing with and the personalities involved you might just leave it closed, but on the other hand dependent who you're interviewing with, I have no problems asking if you mind if I take notes. Wait until they throw something at you like figures or need to know stuff. I politely ask do you mind if I take notes.

I have also kept in my portfolio things like matrix (excel sheets) I've designed myself like monthly financials, budgets and process maps. Why would I carry that. You know how many times in the positions I have applied for someone ask the question can you do this, are you familiar with this. Now the one's I drum up all all fictitious. I would never use a past employers information since majority of the time those items are privy to the past employer not to be shared. I create my own and when the subject is brought up, I can show them without a doubt, yes I can here are some examples of what I can do. One thing though, if you're doing financials like a budget statement make sure all your calculations and formulas coincide with the information you have on paper. Last thing you want is them to think you can't do a formula in and Excel spreadsheet, or your adds and subtracts are wrong. It's embarrassing let alone after you're gone and if they choose to review it thy might be checking you out for accuracy.

One more thing I leave behind and I have given it earlier during the process so they can follow along in case something of sorts is asked is a black folder when you open it, it can have your business card in it, but in one pocket it has a packet of all my recommendations, and in the other pocket it will have a nice fresh copy of my resume. NO REFERENCES. Those signed recommendations doesn't give them the right to contact anyone, besides some of those people may not even work for the company anymore. Simply let them know this is for your review if you're interested in learning more about me.

One last thing on this post and I'll break. I use to be a hiring manager. I've seen everything one can imagine when it comes to hiring people. One thing that has always aggravated me and if it aggravated me, I can only imagine how it aggravates other hiring managers. Bring a pen and a pencil. You are a professional. A professional never ask for the utensils needed to comply unless it's something they want you to do and they'll supply what's needed. Don't get caught with the eye-roll from the receptionist or the HR or hiring authority when you ask for something to write with. It's embarrassing and very unprofessional.

Until next time.... more to come!


My Unemployed Experience - Part 4

OK as part of my plan I wrote about my resume summary rather than an Objective, I summarize using bullet points to attract whomever is reading. Make sure you capitalize on percentages and number factors as this gives the reader some kind of idea how much you were involved, how much you saved, etc. Numbers and percentages are gold mines to many people. They can actually tell how much your experience is worth based on this. But be truthful. Many will say, I have no idea. Sit back and think about what you have done in your position.

If you were an electronics tech and you worked on 10 boards a day on average, multiply that by the number of electronic techs in your department let's say for example you have 5 that would be on average 50 boards being worked on in any given day. Again multiply that by 5 days a week or the number of days you work. Using 5, that would be 250 boards on average a week. Multiply that by 4.2 weeks a month and you have on average 1050 boards a month. Now if you want to add dollars to that. Do you know how much the boards and components cost to work on? How much does it cost to repair, maintain? If you don't have this information a simply rule to follow is if you make $10.00 an hour and there are 5 techs in your department and you work on average 8 hours a day, again 5 days a week at 4.2 weeks a month. Your estimated dollars for working on these boards are $8400.00 a month to work on 1050 boards a month. You want to add a percentage of how much you work on? Do it based on an average of 1050 boards go through your department monthly and if 1050 is the norm figure you're using as 100%, you're working on 210 boards a month,that is 20% of all boards per month you're working on. Now if you want to make this more sustainable how many of these boards have you worked on that you saved in that one month that would have been otherwise scrapped? If you scrap out 50 that leaves you with 160 useable boards that you have refurbished. Roughly that is 76.2% you have saved the company per month. Get larger numbers and percentages by calculating things on an annual basis.

So here's a simple way of obtaining those numbers and adding them to your resume. You're not lying. You're simply using the information available based on what you do. Now you have percentages and numbers to add to those bullet points.

* Saved company 76.2% in product refurbishment per month.
* On average refurbished 210 electronic boards per month minimizing scrap outs.
* Reduced waste by $500.00 or 23.8% in scrap while maintaining required inventory of 160 units per month.

It's not lying, it's being creative. You can stand by your testimony because it's what you yourself did each and every day!

Regarding dumb-ing down resumes. I've had many people tell me based on my experiences that I need to dumb-ie down my resume. No way will you get hired with all that experience. That's just it, I have experience and my education stems from what the employers have given me to learn whether college courses, in house training etc. But, I can support everything I have done. I tried dumb-ing down my resume one time. I have to say if you have a lifetime of achievements and experience it becomes rather hard picking and choosing what to leave off and leave on. However, I always read the job description and applied my resume to that job. That's a chore in itself. Yes it takes discipline, but remember this is currently your job. You are the CEO of your job seeking business. No different than if your boss in a job said do it for me. Discipline and time is the cost you pay. I quit dumb-ing down. It makes no sense. One resume depicts the last 11 years which was in the building products industry. The second resume I have created and used includes the last 27 years, building industry and oil and gas service industry. One depicts much experience over time in many avenues including progressive responsibilities and my growth whereas one depicts my experience in management, materials and distribution. They somewhat go hand in hand. But based on reading the JD I usually figure out what's important and which one to send. Yea it doesn't make much sense to send my 27 years of O&G experience to a job that is in the building industry, but I might rob a few lines from my management part and add it to the bottom line of my building experience since I realize the JD requires some time of a particular experience. Again, I'm not lying that I did not do it, I can explain it when I get in an interview if I'm asked.

The adage listed by many recruiters and headhunters is don't stay on job boards because if one recruiter calls you for a job someone else might have cherry picked your resume for their system and the recruiter doesn't know about it so when the company tells the recruiter they already have you on file they lose or you might have applied to a company and the recruiter says let me know so I don't submit it in case they have it. Well my take is this. I have submitted over 1700 resumes to companies in 2010. Am I suppose to remember everyone I have applied to, to satisfy the recruiter. I realize they have a job, but if you found me and wanted me, then do what you have to do. If that means, you cannot submit me, well then I won't get submitted. In my experiences, I don't depend on recruiters. I use them as added arsenal to my job search, nothing more. I will talk with them. I will be professional with them and treat them as the person they are, but I do not depend on them. If I have any opportunity at all, I will go directly to the company or at least work with the corporate recruiter. Just as recruiters say it is not their job to give me advice on what I did wrong or how to get better, it is not my job to help a recruiter get a paycheck and it is not my job to do their job.

I know that sort of statement will cost me on many recruiters list. Oh well, I'm not worried. I've had this discussion with many recruiters who I'm friends with and understand my professionalism.

Continuing on with my search, yes I used many job boards and applied to many jobs from sending resumes and cover letters. As I've stated before I do have a standard cover letter that can be utilized for standard jobs, but for my career oriented submits, I personalized each cover letter to depict my interest, what they are looking for and letting them know I meet their requirements. I've included a couple of cover letters for examples.

Cover Letter #1

Dear Hiring Authorities,

Thank you for considering me as a candidate for the above referenced opportunity as (Position)for your (City), (State) office. Our concurrent goal is for you to fill this important position and for me to demonstrate that I am best qualified to assume its responsibilities. After living in City for the last 10 years, I look forward to relocating myself back to the geographical region and feel my qualifications would be a good fit to meet (Company name).

Although my career has prospered in the adhesives, building products, and oil industries, I am not restricting myself to those exclusively. I am confident, as an experienced professional the knowledge, skills and abilities I have developed are universally applicable and effective. My proven work ethic will allow me to gain the necessary knowledge required to become a contributing and valuable member of your company’s team.

I am eager to meet with you in person to discuss your objectives and to explain how my ability will meet those needs and more. I look forward to hearing from you. I can be contacted at the numbers listed above or my email address (email address @). Thank you for your time and consideration.

Sincerely yours,

(name)


Cover letter #2

Dear Hiring Authority,

I see you are seeking a (position title) position for your (town), (state) office that was published on (company's)career site. My work history extends over 17 years working in the oil service industry with a technical background for (the company I worked for); whereas I have held numerous positions with progressive responsibilities. Throughout my career my experience also reflects in quality, inventory, and management.

With this experience, progressive growth and responsibilities I feel my skills working in this environment meets your requirements for understanding of processes, ISO quality systems, and analytical skills, verbal and writing skills including years working in the quality department of (company name). I feel I would be a great addition to your team. I can offer computer skills, strict attention to every facet of details required, great communication and exceptional organizational skills along with my extensive experience working with certainty and having the ability to work independently without supervision.

The (position name) position sounds exciting and given the opportunity to contribute to your success would be an exciting career move. Because a single correspondence is limited in fully representing my range of abilities, I would like to request an interview to better determine my contribution for the (position title) position. If there is any other information I can supply you with please do not hesitate to contact me at my email address (email address @) or I can be contacted at (phone number). You are welcomed to view my profile on Linked In at http://www.linkedin.com/in/denmorgan. Thank you for your time and consideration. I look forward to hearing from you.

Sincerely,

(name)


These are just 2 examples of my customizing my cover letters for positions I have applied to. At times I have received numerous calls, whereas other times I might not have received any. But I am confident in saying you have to indicate things that will allow you to stand out.

I'll break for now and move on to Part 5 shortly. More to come.

Saturday, September 3, 2011

My Unemployed Experience - Part 3

Today's a wet day. We have a tropical storm "Lee" hovering over us and dumping all kinds of rain. Tad bit wet without a doubt. I have much to do this weekend and one is to continue my focus on my unemployed experiences hoping that maybe one thing stated might be the one thing that helps someone reach their successes.

Last I spoke about thinking like a salesperson and a marketing director. I can not over emphasize that thought. Think about it. Even if you obtained the job today and received that professional response "We want you", what will you do when you have the job? What does your position entail? Truthfully, you will be in a sales job and considered an internal customer by people who require your services and an internal salesperson by those you will require service from. Typically speaking if you work in IT people are going to want your services in making sure their systems are top notch, so they will be contacting you or your department. On the opposite spectrum you are salesperson who has to get your ideas across to other departments, other managers, your boss. So what do you do? Do you take the attitude "forgetaboutit"?

No you have your job to do in order for your company(you) to profit from your deals(selling your ideas and fixes)

Think of a production worker on the floor assembling product who has a boss who tells him what to do. The boss is merely the client telling you the salesperson here is my problem (I need to get this product assembled) and there you are saying, "I'm the person for the job, utilizing my solutions(assembling the product) will help get you toward the bottom-line results"(results that stem into getting the assembled product to the next phase)being the shipping department. You drive a hard bargain that you can do the job in a given amount of time. This is key to delivering on your promises as a salesperson. If you miss the deadline, your client(your boss), may scratch his head and wonder if he made the right choice in giving you the business. But you have to ensure you have your ducks in a row. You have to foresee the problems before you have them and have the ability to have the answers to make the deal work (your resume is the business plan, the ducks in a row that you've implied will get you the business, assembling the product). The customer(your boss) does not want to hear "but I had this problem". Nope you asked for the business and stated you had a solution. It's up to you to deliver. Once you have met the so called answer to the problem the client had, your client will probably give you more business because he now knows you have delivered on the promise and put forth the solution, making you the right vendor to achieve what he was looking for. The better you do, the more you get. It's a trickle down effect. See everything you're doing is for the most part dealing with sales or a sale.

So this is where I state and continue to emphasize your job search is no more than you being a salesperson trying to sell your product(YOU) to a client(a company, hiring manger, HR person). You can not lie or throw stuff out there that your product cannot do. Get into a position of saying what you can do but if you throw something out there you cannot deliver on, your client will catch on and kick you out the door. Know your product like the back of your hand. Know what your past experiences have been, how you dealt with them and how you remedied them when needed.

Now you need to focus all this knowledge of your past experiences into what can you do for the client today. What can I offer this client that no one else can offer. One thing you can bet on is if you know your product inside and out, your competition will not know theirs nearly as well. Secondly they don't know what your experience levels and what you are bringing to the table. That's an advantage to you. Talk it up when you're asked what can you do for me.

Well now you've learned all about your product and realize that you'll need to become a salesperson to do your job effectively and that's winning over the hiring authorities. Don't stop there, you're not finished.

I had a CEO who always coined the term, "we are all in sales", meaning everyone you come in contact with is a potential client(employer). One thing I've learned is you need to learn how to talk to people away from the interview process. Ever been in a situation where you standing next to someone and they ask you, "what do you do"? Try rattling that off when least expected. That's almost like saying, "tell me about yourself". We hate talking about ourselves right? But, you can ease the blow if you learn a quick as it's called, "elevator pitch". No more than about 30 seconds to give a quick synopsis of what what you do. Here's mine;

"I’ve worked in the oil service industry for over 10 years while working with Baker Hughes in numerous positions with progressive responsibilities, electromechanical for MWD, Production Supervisor, Production Manager, Technical Analyst, Quality Engineer. My passion in life is management and business. I love everything about managing, whether General Management or Operations. It combines your thought process with technical, analytical, and theory. It’s high energy, successes, and drives ambition with the hard knocks. And in today’s economic standstill it’s more than ever important to have people that have high energy and willing to go the extra mile to accomplish what every organization expects to see, bottom-line results. I’ve been in General and Operations Management for over a decade and find I’m always learning something new making everyday successful. And I love it".

You're welcomed to utilize mine as a template for you to come up with one for yourself. Learn it, practice it, memorize it and use it. We walk, talk, mingle and associate with all kinds of people everyday. This elevator pitch is no different than standing in front of a retail representative who you have asked to tell you something about the product you want to purchase. No I can't say I was successful in landing anything using it myself, but it is another tool to add to your search. I have used it and it does if anything starts a conversation. Who knows if you happen to be standing next to a hiring manager one day riding an elevator(no pun intended) and you're asked and it strikes up a conversation and they ask you to drop by or give them a call. Again, it cost you nothing but a little time to create and implement into your arsenal of tools!

I heard a good example of determination in a discussion a while back. A man who was determined to get a job with a television station. He took his broom and went stand in front of the station one day and began sweeping the sidewalk in front of the door. He continued doing this everyday until one day the VP walked up as he was going in and asked him, "Sir, I've noticed everyday you are out here sweeping in front of the door. You're not an employee so why are you doing this"? The gentleman looked up and said, "Well, Mr.VP, I figured one day, you would walk by and ask me that very question. I then figured that when you did it would be my chance to talk to you and tell you how much I want to work for your company"! As the story went, the VP hired him on the spot.

So you see as determined as this gentleman was in obtaining employment he came up with a plan, worked it until he got noticed. A great marketing scheme if you ask me. I definitely have added that to my arsenal of tools. Creativity is the next thing to working the job beat. How creative are you? Do you do the same thing as every other John or Jane Doe? Do you simply send out resumes hoping to get noticed and falling into that pit of never hearing from anyone? As I said earlier from a very respected contact of mine that stated, "If somethings not working, change it, if you can't change it, change yourself"! Heck pick up a book, research the internet, look at other advertisements on television, on billboards, in magazines. Look at how they market and advertise their products. Pick something that you can work with and start brainstorming ideas how you can work something like that into your search.

There's lot's of ideas that's been tried over time. A billboard with your resume summary and your photograph. OK that might be a bit expensive, but you get the idea don't you? A full page newspaper advertisement, a sign on the back of your vehicle, magnetic signs on the side of the vehicle. I was told once when I was thinking about doing the signs on my vehicle by a headhunter, who stated "don't do that, companies might think you're desperate". Well my thoughts on that is, people are desperate. In today's economy with 20% unemployment and over 13 million people that are unemployed, if you're sitting in an interview whether you are unemployed or not, times are desperate. When you fight a war do you go with empty guns to make your enemy believe you're not worried, they better be? That's some awesome confidence if you do, but that's not gonna keep them from shooting at you. Business cards, flyers, a packet of handout information. Yep, easy to hand out at a church function, a networking event. How about those little tear sheets with your phone number on it with a flyer posted at your market store. I notice many people reading those boards all the time looking for something. Here's a chance to create a standout, grab your attention flyer. You never know who could call you. Mr. VP standing at the door reading the board while his wife is at the check out counter. You just never know.

I have come to believe as we have always been told job searching is a job in itself. A full time job for many. Believing that I started and still truly believe if it is a full time job, I need to treat it like my job. Market the product, sell the product, know the product and talk the product up. Who knows you may become a household name like McDonald's, or Cheerios one day, just out of pure determination.

Hang in there my friends, we're not done yet!