Burn Your Resume. Not Your Chances 

By Gordon Miller

Career Coach, Speaker, Author

If you're one of the 52 million people in the U.S. thinking about changing jobs or switching careers, know this. Less than one percent of all resumes sent to companies, recruiters, and Internet job boards actually results in the person getting a job. Yet, according to research I recently completed for a new book, 78 percent of all job seekers are relying on their resume to win them that next great position.

So why isn't the resume, the time-tested career tool we have all used successfully in the past, not working the way it once did? There are a number of reasons, but here are the two biggest:

1. The Internet. You can now electronically “zap” your resume to hundreds and thousands of destinations. As strong of an idea as that may seem to the job seeker, it's not such a great thing for the hiring manager. The problem is recruiters and companies are being deluged with so many resumes, to the tune of hundreds or thousands a day, they seldom even look at them.

2. The Market. Blame it on the economy, 9/11, and the late 90's, but companies are now a lot slower and more selective in their hiring processes. They can be. They have lots of candidates to choose from. Plus, given reports that show that close to 50 percent of workers “stretch the truth” on their resume, they want “proof” that you will be a good fit in their culture.

Here's the point. Today's job seekers must go above and beyond in differentiating themselves from the masses of people looking for a new position. Sending a resume, in my opinion, doesn't accomplish that goal. It doesn't mean you're not experienced, smart, and hard working. It may say that you're not particularly enterprising, that you're content to just throw out your info and see what happens. In our current business environment, it's not enough.

Is the resume going to go away? I doubt it. Most companies and recruiters still require one. But there is something you can do to get the attention of a decision-maker at a company. It's a job proposal. I can say that with authority because I used one to get my last two great positions in the Denver market. I never submitted a resume to either of the prospective employers, both of which never asked me for one after they had received my job proposal.

What is a job proposal? It's a one or two page “mini-business plan” that's intended to get you an interview with the decision-maker of a targeted prospective employer. Where a resume tells someone what you have done in the past, a job proposal tells in some detail what you are going to do for the company down the road. Specifically, how you will help them achieve their vision of success. It generally explains the vision you have for a new product or service, how to enhance an existing program, or why to implement a new process. It may also outline your plan to increase company sales or improve accounts receivable. You get the idea

The three primary components of the job proposal:

1. It's based on the in-depth research you did on that company to insure your ideas match perfectly with the company's ideas. There was a time when it was customary to ask the person you were interviewing with to tell you about the company. That's no longer the case. It's now a sure way of getting you removed from the short-list.

2. It communicates your passion for being part of their firm. That's different than your passion for finding a job. Hiring managers want people on their team who love the company's products and services, their culture, and their vision for the future

 





The Last Job Search Guide You'll Ever Need: How to Find and Get the Job or Internship of Your Dreams The above is an excerpt from The Last Job Search Guide You'll Ever Need: How to Find and Get the Job or Internship of Your Dreams, which is available for sale for $19.85 in our bookstore or $27.00 at Amazon.com but for free to those who subscriber to our free career newsletter. This hot new book contains job search secrets of the most experienced, most knowledgeable and most respected career experts. Learn career planning, job hunting tools and tactics, interviewing, cover letter and resume writing (lots of samples!), networking, and how to find an internship. Written by 149 career experts. To receive a free copy, subscribe to our free career newsletter.


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