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survivalstrategy posted:With cover letter and resume, my submissions are 3-4 pages, depending on how much is asked for on the posting. I always submit covers, try my best to target specific people for attentions, mention as many points from the posting (reworded) in relation to my own experience, and stress that Those are good things to do, but 3-4 pages is too long. Cover letter one page (if even needed) and resume one page for the work you are targeting.
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# ? Feb 24, 2017 04:37 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 20:15 |
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survivalstrategy posted:I'm just at a complete loss. I've never experienced this kind of non-response before. If it will help, I'd be willing to share my cover / resume for critique. I'm trying to just tell myself that job hunting is just like that, you just keep trying until someone bites. But it's probably something that I'm not doing! pumped up for school posted:Those are good things to do, but 3-4 pages is too long. Cover letter one page (if even needed) and resume one page for the work you are targeting. Vulture Culture fucked around with this message at 15:16 on Feb 24, 2017 |
# ? Feb 24, 2017 15:13 |
survivalstrategy posted:Hi everyone! I recently moved to Calgary, AB from Winnipeg, MB (Canada), due to my husband's job (he got a promotion). I can't really give any advice about your input to your job hunt, but having recently left Calgary because I couldn't even get a call back anywhere, I got one rejection email and that was almost worth celebrating, is to keep your chin up. Its brutal. Talking with my friends back home, I only know one person who was hired in their field recently. Everyone else is either going back to school or settling for a job with lower pay or no growth capacity.
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# ? Feb 24, 2017 23:42 |
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A recruiter got in touch with my wife about a position at an office in our city. She has done a few interviews at their firm here as well as at least one (but I think two) interviews at their HQ a couple hours away. These were spread out over the first half of February and from what she told me it sounds like they went well. During Valentine's week, her recruiter asked her to provide references (seven ) to send over to the firm, which my wife did promptly. The recruiters claims to have sent them over the Friday after Valentine's, and told her to wait a week. "A week" was last Friday, and nothing new has come up. We can't seem to agree on what she should do: I'm of the opinion that she should contact the firm directly, and see if they need any more information and (more importantly) to reaffirm her interest and enthusiasm in the company and the position. My wife has also, on more than one occasion, called her recruiter an idiot and wondered how much she should rely on him, so why not skip the middleman if it's your career on the line? Her opinion is that she should be patient and wait it out, as she does not want to breach protocol and doesn't want to come off as desperate. Obviously they haven't begun salary negotiations with her, and her fear is that she will be seen as weak and command a lower starting pay. She also has a professional mentor/contact who we hung out with yesterday and who said she should approach it this way. How would you all handle this? She has an offer from another company, and while it's not the one either of us want (lower pay range and we'd have to move) it means that she doesn't need the local offer to come through; she'd rather take either of these than what she has now and both would pay way better for her. The only caveat is that she told this lesser offer that she'd have an answer to them by Friday, hence my feeling that she should take the initiative. What do you think?
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# ? Feb 28, 2017 03:52 |
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How verboten is it to take an interview after you've accepted a job offer? In a working community where everyone knows everyone, how likely would the discovery of this be to cause offense, and what would be the response of the company that extended the offer?
Natty Ninefingers fucked around with this message at 04:03 on Feb 28, 2017 |
# ? Feb 28, 2017 03:57 |
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Hey everyone, back with some great news: after posting my frustrations last week, I received three interview calls. I interviewed all day Friday and two of the three companies were very interested in me, setting up second interviews and moving forward with some aggressiveness, or at least that's how it seemed to me when I did a first interviews on Friday and was asked to do second interviews Monday. One of the companies ended up impressing me more than the other one and fit a lot of my criteria. What ended up happening was that instead of a second interview panel, the people who sat in ended up being introduced as "some key people you will be working with" and it took me a few minutes to process that this wasn't a second interview really, it was just a formal meeting that ended with them offering me the position! We are going through the paperwork / background checking process and I was given an official 24hrs courtesy to think things over, but as of tomorrow, I will formally accept the position. Thanks to everyone who offered advice or some pep! I'm so relieved!
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# ? Feb 28, 2017 07:27 |
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What do recruiters think about non-accredited online courses for relevant job skills? Are they worth doing and how should I present them on my CV?
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# ? Feb 28, 2017 13:24 |
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Today in job application hell: A question requiring a Vine video response. Vine closed in January. An application that closed 6 hours early.
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# ? Feb 28, 2017 19:33 |
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8 Ball posted:What do recruiters think about non-accredited online courses for relevant job skills? Are they worth doing and how should I present them on my CV? Sometimes you have to work with what you've got. If you have a bunch of relevant experience, maybe mention it in an interview as a way to keep relevant rather than your actual accreditation on the subject. If you're me: I was hired on one phone interview alone for a job I had no direct prior experience in. The online job description was basically *generic company bullshit* + niche subject, electronics, software tools. The knowledge I gained from watching 40 hours of NASA-sponsored video lectures on niche subject and working through video tutorials for a software made me absolutely kill it in an interview. That said, I didn't represent what I learned as knowledge bestowed upon me by schooling, rather just things I knew because I liked to study and their needs were important to me.
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# ? Feb 28, 2017 22:49 |
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I wish interviews weren't so sparse. I started applying when I graduated last May. Had no interviews for months then had 6 between November and January. Now haven't had one since early January. Trying to keep my spirits up and keep applying but holy getting an entry level lab job seems impossible at this point. Plus the more time that passes between graduation and now just makes me think I'll get passed over even faster.
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# ? Mar 1, 2017 18:40 |
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My hospital lab is still hiring if you're interested in a medical lab for some experience. E: sorry thought this was the Boston thread
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# ? Mar 1, 2017 19:00 |
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BadSamaritan posted:My hospital lab is still hiring if you're interested in a medical lab for some experience. Sent you a PM
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# ? Mar 1, 2017 19:11 |
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survivalstrategy posted:Hey everyone, back with some great news: after posting my frustrations last week, I received three interview calls. I interviewed all day Friday and two of the three companies were very interested in me, setting up second interviews and moving forward with some aggressiveness, or at least that's how it seemed to me when I did a first interviews on Friday and was asked to do second interviews Monday. Glad to hear things worked out as I'n in almost the exact same situation with the same type of experience (office manager/admin assistant, just moved from San Jose to San Diego). Every job wants to pay way too little, even the ones that require a degree (I have one in business management). Almost right away I had an interview for my absolute dream job, and they brought me in for 3 interviews total... And then rejected me. To add insult to injury, a day later, I noticed the job ad posted again with reduced pay (although still within the range I wanted). So not only did I not get the job, someone else wasn't picked over me - they just didn't want me at all. That was crushing. I'm still getting interviews, but it's getting harder and harder to keep up the motivation to keep applying. Now it just seems like any job I'm excited about is an opportunity for disappointment. And I'm having trouble finding things I want to apply for - I feel overqualified for all the entry level jobs, but my lack of HR or bookkeeping experience (or any specialty) blocks me off from most better ones. That's what I get for working for a small business for so long - I became too much of a generalist.
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# ? Mar 5, 2017 23:35 |
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Does anyone have some nice-ish Indesign resume/CV templates they like? I've been looking for something just a bit nicer than Word to work off, and I've got a little bit of InDesign skill under my belt, so I figured there must be some nice go-to ones people in this thread would rate. A lot of the ones on google are explicitly targeted at creatives, and have a lot of those skill competency pie charts, which I find a little weird. I just want a nice looking page to put words on.
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# ? Mar 6, 2017 07:07 |
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I know that the OP has "don't call back" as a cardinal rule but man, it is frustrating. Companies in this area are bad about telling you anything. You can have a positive interview, lots of interest and they may say "We'll call you when we've made a decision" but what ALWAYS follows is silence. Seriously, Is it that hard to call and tell me I didn't get the job? I think the worse one was when a truck company asked me to make some sample graphics for their flyers. The didn't even acknowledge that they received them. No thank you, just nothing. Darth Brooks fucked around with this message at 17:53 on Mar 9, 2017 |
# ? Mar 9, 2017 17:47 |
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Brain In A Jar posted:Does anyone have some nice-ish Indesign resume/CV templates they like? Mine's InDesign, unfortunately my computer that has InDesign installed on it died and it was a student license which is now expired so I can't transfer it to my new computer. InDesign resumes are great assuming the jobs you're applying to accept PDF resumes. You're probably still going to need a backup Word version for those that do not accept PDFs.
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# ? Mar 9, 2017 17:54 |
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Darth Brooks posted:I know that the OP has "don't call back" as a cardinal rule but man, it is frustrating. Companies in this area are bad about telling you anything. You can have a positive interview, lots of interest and they may say "We'll call you when we've made a decision" but what ALWAYS follows is silence. Seriously, Is it that hard to call and tell me I didn't get the job? This has happened to me a lot. They lay out a timeline of when they will contact and then literal silence. I've even called and emailed and never hear anything. It's super degrading
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# ? Mar 9, 2017 18:37 |
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Anyone have any idea how much it would cost to have someone review my resume for grammar, sentence structure, all that. I think I have all the relevant information in there so I don't need a total resume writing service, just someone who better at words than me.
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# ? Mar 13, 2017 17:40 |
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life is a joke posted:Anyone have any idea how much it would cost to have someone review my resume for grammar, sentence structure, all that. I think I have all the relevant information in there so I don't need a total resume writing service, just someone who better at words than me.
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# ? Mar 13, 2017 18:08 |
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Oh ok, I thought that would be against the rules for some reason I'll edit out some stuff and post thtnks.
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# ? Mar 13, 2017 19:11 |
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I currently work for a wireless company and am applying for a district management position in another state. I am required to apply through our website which will go to HR and then to the Regional Manager. These are all sales positions. Should my resume be an average of my numbers for the past 3/6/12 months and any accomplishments I made in that time? Should I even include my previous jobs? Is this situation as complicated as I'm making it? I'm not a known quantity in the region I'm applying.
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# ? Mar 14, 2017 05:56 |
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dkj posted:I currently work for a wireless company and am applying for a district management position in another state. I am required to apply through our website which will go to HR and then to the Regional Manager. These are all sales positions.
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# ? Mar 14, 2017 06:04 |
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Vulture Culture posted:Yes, include your accomplishments. Yes, include your previous jobs. Treat it like you're applying for a job with any other company. Thank you.
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# ? Mar 14, 2017 06:05 |
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Does anyone have experience with this recruiting firm? http://revealglobal.com/ I was contacted by them via a colleague for a job in the states, and wonder how seriously I should take them.
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# ? Mar 15, 2017 17:57 |
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creatine posted:I wish interviews weren't so sparse. I started applying when I graduated last May. Had no interviews for months then had 6 between November and January. Now haven't had one since early January. I'd start changing up my resume if that is the case. I noticed a huge increase in interviews I was getting after going in and changing out some things. Also it rains when it pours, I went 6 months without anything and then I had three solid interviews come in at the same time at three different companies that are world leaders in my industry. Enigma89 fucked around with this message at 13:01 on Mar 16, 2017 |
# ? Mar 16, 2017 12:59 |
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Enigma89 posted:I'd start changing up my resume if that is the case. I noticed a huge increase in interviews I was getting after going in and changing out some things. Yeah I recently did this. Moved some stuff and reworded sections. It's also tough because I am looking for entry-level work in biology, and now the political climate is a little uneasy with regards to funding. Also that the science field takes anywhere from 4 days to 8 weeks to respond to applications doesn't really help.
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# ? Mar 16, 2017 13:02 |
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This isn't entirely related to interviews, but if you have contacts you can prevail on even for informational interviews - career tips and poo poo - use them. You never know how it'll turn out! Worst comes to worst you just get more advice to use or discard. At best, well. I went for lunch yesterday with a few old coworkers at a company I used to intern at looking for advice on breaking into tech as a career and walked out with, barring disaster, a full time permanent job offer in September as a SysAdmin.
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# ? Mar 17, 2017 10:15 |
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Dear company that called my wife to tell her they were preparing an offer letter: hurry up you fuckers No HR rep is scummy or incompetent enough to tell someone on the phone "we're writing up your offer right now" and then not actually write it up, are they? My wife got that call last Friday and the company has yet to get back to her.
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# ? Mar 17, 2017 17:47 |
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C-Euro posted:Dear company that called my wife to tell her they were preparing an offer letter: hurry up you fuckers No HR rep is scummy or incompetent enough to tell someone on the phone "we're writing up your offer right now" and then not actually write it up, are they? My wife got that call last Friday and the company has yet to get back to her. consider that perhaps the company's top priority isn't writing your wife's offer letter
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# ? Mar 20, 2017 15:41 |
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It's been less than a business day?
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# ? Mar 20, 2017 20:47 |
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It was a week ago as of that post, they said "we're working on your offer!" on the 10th which seems like enough time to plug a name a maybe a pre-determined salary into your offer letter template. Plus if they end up not actually sending her this offer she has to scramble accept the other one on the table (already a few weeks old), and we'd have to move by May 1 for that one. It's just annoying and it has her (and thus me) on edge.
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# ? Mar 20, 2017 21:45 |
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Hey goons, I'm just getting out of college, graduated for fine arts, and wanted to do a skill trade job in painting. I get it's not a glorious high entry thing, but I still want to make sure I play my cards right and make a personal impression that gets me in the right direction. I don't have much experience writing resumes.... ECT. Here's what the ad says:| Custom Spray Painter - *Great for Auto Body Art School Grads, Creative and Dependable Individuals Looking for Full-Time Work – We Want You! DCL is a custom builder of architectural products (signage, light fixtures, other specialty elements) located at the Design Center building in South Boston, and we're looking for motivated and like-minded spray painters to join our 2nd Shift Paint department (2pm-10/12pm). ----- In my initial email this is what's written: Hi, I’m a graduate of (insert my local art school). Having worked with spray cans, paints and various other materials I feel qualified based on my past experience and ease of using art products. I live locally, have an eye for color theory, color mixing, various paint methods and drying techniques. During college I volunteered at the Franklin Park Zoo, gaining experience working as a mural painter there, and have a studio I work in currently. There ‘s a lot I know about painting, and a lot I’m still willing to learn. I work physically, messy, and don’t mind the grime. I’m Looking for full-time work, can work holidays, over-time, and any days currently. The resume isn't anything special typical nice format, intro paragraph. Is this an applicable direction to go in for this position? What do I add, take away for professionalism?
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# ? Mar 20, 2017 22:50 |
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C-Euro posted:It was a week ago as of that post, they said "we're working on your offer!" on the 10th which seems like enough time to plug a name a maybe a pre-determined salary into your offer letter template. Plus if they end up not actually sending her this offer she has to scramble accept the other one on the table (already a few weeks old), and we'd have to move by May 1 for that one. It's just annoying and it has her (and thus me) on edge.
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# ? Mar 21, 2017 02:06 |
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C-Euro posted:Dear company that called my wife to tell her they were preparing an offer letter: hurry up you fuckers No HR rep is scummy or incompetent enough to tell someone on the phone "we're writing up your offer right now" and then not actually write it up, are they? My wife got that call last Friday and the company has yet to get back to her. It sounds like both parties have done a poor job of managing each other's expectations. On there end, if they say they are writing up an offer and for whatever reason it gets delayed, then there is no good reason for them to not follow up. On the flip side, your wife should have set the expectation when the verbal offer was received that she has other interviews and possibly offers on the table and needs to make an informed decisions by x date or something to that effect. From the recruiter's side, I've had offers get delayed up to a week by red tape BS, but it was my job to keep the candidate warm while management got whatever sign off it needed. Side note: I took a few months off from responding as I've been adjusting to (and getting my rear end kicked by) recruiting at a "large financial institution". Can now offer corporate recruiter advice as well as agency. It's a whole different ballgame here... Learning that like agency, there are good corp recruiters and bad ones, luckily a lot of good ones where I am.
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# ? Mar 21, 2017 15:55 |
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Her recruiter has been checking in with her at least once a week throughout the whole process, which is nice. And I have told her to reach out to the company directly once or twice but she's convinced that she'll sound desperate if she goes to the company and says "hey where's that letter?", and that it'll hurt her during salary negotiations. I've told her that there is no salary to negotiate until they've put ink to paper At any rate they had her complete a form for a background check yesterday (again, why wait this long?) so things are moving again, and my employer took like a day or two to do mine so hopefully this gets done soon.
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# ? Mar 21, 2017 17:19 |
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I've been using a resume that could potentially have sensitive numbers in my qualifications sections such as how much money I've saved my department, total money spent on projects etc. Numbers that my previous employer may find inappropriate to include in my resume. I've since taken those numbers out but with that same resume I've received interviews with some of the top companies in the US. However, I've also received a lot of rejections.... what are your thoughts on this?
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 18:46 |
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Busy Bee posted:I've been using a resume that could potentially have sensitive numbers in my qualifications sections such as how much money I've saved my department, total money spent on projects etc. Numbers that my previous employer may find inappropriate to include in my resume. I've since taken those numbers out but with that same resume I've received interviews with some of the top companies in the US. However, I've also received a lot of rejections.... what are your thoughts on this? Can you use percentages instead?
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 19:09 |
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Yeah talking about a project that saved X percent or Y percent or had a payback time of Z months or whatever is pretty kosher.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 19:42 |
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Oh boy, just got an email for phone interview. It states that I will be phoned at some point next week and I cannot ask for any specific day/ time.
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# ? Mar 24, 2017 17:14 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 20:15 |
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Dugong posted:Oh boy, just got an email for phone interview. It states that I will be phoned at some point next week and I cannot ask for any specific day/ time. Cool. To Voicemail it is.
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# ? Mar 24, 2017 18:34 |