If you’re searching for a new job, you’re not
alone. Seventy-one percent of workers are workers are either actively
looking or interested in finding a new position, according to a survey by Jobvite. For many, the process of finding new work can be
tedious at best and soul-deadening at worst.Few people want to wait that long to find a new job. If your current position is unbearable (you hate your boss, your company is massively dysfunctional, your commute is killing you), feeling that you’re at the mercy of the job market can be incredibly frustrating. If you’re out of work, waiting months to find a job may not even be an option. In either case, you need a new job, and you needed it yesterday.
Fortunately, there are some steps you can take to accelerate your job search. Here are five things you can do that will help you get hired faster, so that you can get your career – and your life – back on the right track.
1. Time your search right
Some seasons are more favorable for job searchers
than others. Obviously, if you need work right away, you don’t have the
luxury of waiting to look for a job. But if you’re itching for a change,
you might want to start your search at a time of year when companies
are more likely to be looking for new employees.
“The big months for hiring are January and February, and late
September and October,” Scott Testa, chief operating officer of
Mindbridge Software, told Monster. “Job seekers who make contact right at the start of these cycles have the best chance of being hired.”Hiring often slows down in the summer, since many people are out of the office. If you’re thinking about looking for a new job now, consider spending the next month or two fine-tuning your resume, updating your LinkedIn profile, and building your network. Then, you can hit the ground running when hiring kicks into high gear around Labor Day.
2. Let people know you’re looking
If you’re only looking for jobs online, you’re missing out. Forty-one percent of people surveyed by staffing company Manpower reported that networking was the key to landing their latest job, as reported in Forbes. Many open positions are never posted online.Don’t hesitate to make your job search public. Personally reach out to former co-workers and others in your network (both online and in real life) and ask for a favor that might help move your job search along.
“[P]eople are much more likely to help if you give them something concrete they can do,” wrote Alison Green for U.S. News & World Report’s Ask A Manager blog. “For instance, you might ask your neighbor if she can connect you with a hiring manager at her former company, or you might ask your old manager if she’d advise you on the companies you’re considering.
3. Show employers what you’ve done
What social media behaviors turn off employers? Nearly half said they’d pass on an applicant who posted “provocative or inappropriate photographs or information.” Other social media no-no’s included:
- Sharing information about drinking or using drugs
- Bad-mouthing an employer or co-worker
- Making racist, sexist, or other discriminatory comments
- Sharing confidential information
- Having an unprofessional screen name
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