A legendary marketing genius once said that, if he had to write a killer
sales letter, he would imagine he had a gun pointed at his head and that he
would be shot if his advertising didn't deliver.
This motivated him to create some of the world's most-profitable ads.
Example: one of his sales letters was mailed more than 300 million times in
the 1970s and produced up to $300,000 a day in sales. Not bad.
So I got to thinking, if I had a gun to MY head and had to get a job fast,
or risk execution, what would I do?
I quickly came up with a list of three things ...
- Meet more hiring authorities.
It's been said by at least one employment expert (OK, me) that nobody in
human history was ever hired by a computer. Sure, you can use a computer to
find job openings, and employers can use computers to find you. But
ultimately, you'll have to go belly-to-belly with a live human to get a job
offer.
So why not stack the odds in your favor and start meeting more people who
can hire you, starting today?
It boggles my mind to see how many folks can find 20-30 hours a week to
answer Internet job postings, yet can't find another two hours to meet with
networking contacts over coffee.
I think it's a fear of rejection -- or plain old sloth -- that keeps most
job seekers chained to their keyboards, furiously firing off electronic
resumes, when they could be pressing the flesh and building their network
until they meet a hiring manager with a job offer.
Whatever the reason, if I had a gun to MY head, I'd spend about an hour a
day on the computer and the remaining 7 hours calling, talking to and
meeting people. Because they're the ones who can hire you.
- Do only what works. Dump the rest.
Last week I got an email from an irate New York man who's been unemployed
for nearly a year. He wrote: "I've sent out 430 resumes and received only
one interview since last September!" To which I could have replied, "Why
did you wait nearly one year and 430 resumes to bring this to my attention?"
Doing anything more than 400 times and expecting your results to suddenly
improve qualifies, I think, as mild insanity. It's what can happen when you
lose sight of what you're really trying to accomplish in your job search.
Do you want to send out as many resumes as possible, or do you want to get
hired as quickly as possible?
If the latter is your goal, then it behooves you to analyze what you're
doing at least once a week. Have an actual meeting with yourself. Sit down
with a pad of paper and ask yourself these three questions:
- What am I doing that's producing job leads? Do more of that.
- What am I doing that's NOT producing leads? Change it or stop
doing it.
- What am I going to do next? Plan your week so you can do more
of what's working.
Note: when you analyze what you're doing, assume nothing and look at
EVERYTHING: your resume, cover letters, how you answer the phone, your
voicemail message, how you follow up with employers, etc.
- Ace the interview.
There's absolutely no excuse for writing the perfect resume, applying for
the perfect job, getting called for the interview ... and then blowing it
by showing up unprepared.
Two points here.
First, you should never, ever have trouble answering common interview
questions like, "Why did you leave your last job?" or "How much salary are
you looking for?" The answers are out there. See the CollegeRecruiter.com article search page.
Also, it takes all of five minutes to visit Amazon.com and check out the
reader feedback on top-selling interview books. If a book has multiple
four- and five-star reviews, buy it or check it out of your local library.
Cost to you: a few minutes and a few bucks (no charge if you use the
library). Potential payback: thousands of dollars in new salary.
Second, you should never, ever walk into an interview not knowing the
company, its products, its problems, its opportunities and its competitors.
Again, the answers are out there. Use Google or your favorite search engine
and spend an hour digging up enough facts to help you talk intelligently to
your potential employer. Failure to do so will mark you as a half-hearted
candidate ... and you will lose out to other, better-prepared job seekers.
Every time.
So there you have it. Three things I would do to get hired if I had a gun
to my head.
I hope your situation is never so desperate. But imaging a worst-case
scenario like imminent execution can concentrate the mind wonderfully --
and turbocharge your job search.