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Matching Your Skills to Find Appropriate Jobs
Skills refer to the things you do well. The key to finding the most
appropriate jobs in the industry is recognizing your own skills and
communicating the significance written and verbally to a probable
employer.
Majority of the most viable skills are those that are used in a variety
of work settings. What are these skills? Would matching your skills to
find the right job be successful?
* Determine your skills. This would help you in becoming the lead
candidate of landing the job. A skill does not necessarily mean it was
adapted in a work environment. If this would be your first job hunt and
you have no job experience to date, you still have a chance in the
industry.
Majority of skills, including knowledge-based and transferable, could
be absorbed and developed as a volunteer, a student, a homemaker, or in
your other personal activities. The skills you have used for these
activities can still be applied to your desired jobs. |
See Also:
Job Search - Employment and Job Search Guide
What if there's already an offer before even sending
the thank you
notes?
It's still better to send the thank you notes as this can be used to
accept or decline the offer. This could also be a
confirmation of your agreement and/or understanding of the offer they
have given (salary, benefits, other compensation, starting date,
vacations, etc.), this way any discrepancies can be straightened out
before even starting for the job.
Always find a way to make it as personalized as possible. Try
to think out of the box, you may even adapt what you have observed the
interviewer has in the office during the interview. Sending
an article that you think the interviewer could be interested in is
also another suggestion.
Whatever method you use, make it fast and professional.
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More articles:
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Need A Resume? Need to Improve Your Interviewing Skills?
JobHuntersBible.com:
:Fortunes Creator
CareerBank.com - Accounting Jobs, Finance Jobs, and Banking Jobs
Even
though the first applicant is more qualified, since he did not
follow up or even send a thank you note to the interviewer, in the end,
he does not get the job.
If you are still waiting for that job offer and you do not follow up on
your contacts, your chances of getting hired become slimmer. In
business, following up on all of your contacts is a sure-fire way to
spread the word about you, your business sense and expanding your
horizons.
If you are still looking for a job, here are some tips on how to follow
up on your contacts:
* Send a thank you note right after the interview, ideally after a
couple of days. This is a way of getting the prospective employer to
hear from you again. Should you not get hired for the current position
that they offer, someone from that company will likely keep your
information on file for future consideration.
* Make sure that you leave your mobile and landline number, e-mail
address and home address so that prospective employers will have no
excuse of not getting in touch with you.
* Be accurate in getting the contact information of perspective
employers. In return, when you place their information on any letter
that you send out (i.e. resumes, thank you notes) avoid typographical
errors and make sure that you have their names correct, to see to it
that everything is in order.
* Some companies do take a look at your character references so alert
the people on your list that they might receive a call from your
prospective employers.
* Always be on the positive side. Should you not get hired for a
particular position, you may ask the people from that company for
referrals to other companies or at least keep you in mind for future
hiring.
If you are currently in business, whether you are just starting out or
in the midst of expanding, you also need to make sure to follow up on
all important contacts. For example, you go to a corporate event and
you have distributed a lot of business cards. Do not stop there. These
people might eventually bring big business to your company so it is
important to build up a strong business relationship with them.
Related Topics: salary-negotiation,
skills-matching-jobs, how-to-make-cold-calls
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