Career Advice for Job Seekers

7 Strategies for Overcoming the Resume Black Hole

William Frierson AvatarWilliam Frierson
December 28, 2011


We hear from job seekers every day who are sending out hundreds of resumes and job applications never to be heard from again. It’s hard to tell if it’s the resume that’s at fault or the company that’s not hiring, already hired, or just sitting in a stack of 500 others never to be found. So I’ve compiled a list of seven ways to overcome the resume black hole that so many resumes seem to go in to.

MANAGE YOUR JOB SEARCH DON’T LET IT MANAGE YOU

There are great tools and resources out there to track the applications you submit, responses you receive and more. For example jibberjobber.com is an excellent tool to keep your job search organized and it beats using an old fashioned spreadsheet. When you’re tracking who you’re applying to, what positions and more it gives you the big picture so you’re not guessing how many applications you’ve sent in you know. It also tells you who is responding and what the next steps are.

APPLY FOR POSITIONS THAT ARE MOST SUITED TO YOUR EXPERIENCE AND QUALIFICATIONS

In a normal job market I’d say go for it, apply to whatever you want for whatever reason you want. In fact, when I first graduated college I applied for positions that I wasn’t qualified for and knew it hoping they’d take a chance on me and train me. Well I didn’t get the exact position I applied to but I got a call from the company saying they had another position that I was perfectly qualified for would I come in and interview. Of course I did and that’s how my career in human resources and recruiting started. In this economy, it’s tough to advise you to apply for something you’re underqualified for when there are hundreds of other qualified candidates. The chance you’d hear back is so slim that you’re asking to have your resume disappear in a deluge of others and never be heard from again. Conversely, applying for positions you are overqualified for will get you about the same results. And I will tell you the God honest truth about it. Hiring managers are NERVOUS to hire overqualified people for one reason – they don’t want to risk that if they hire you now when something better comes along you will up and leave. Then they have to start all over training someone new and it costs them money. They’d rather hire someone who meets the requirements versus grossly exceeds them. It’s a safer bet right now and unfortunate for unemployed job seekers it’s an employer’s market they can be as picky as they want.

REACH OUT AND MAKE CONTACT

If you’ve spoken personally to a contact at the company send your resume to them. If you know someone at the company send it to them. An association with someone either over the phone or in person means you will be remembered you won’t be just a faceless piece of paper in a stack.

USE YOUR TIME WISELY

All the time you’re going to be saving from not applying for positions you are under- or overqualified for can be better redirected into optimizing your resume. Use the job descriptions of the positions you are applying to as a guide for what keywords to include in your resume and cover letter. You can usually tell which ones the company wants the most because these fall under position REQUIREMENTS. These should be in the TOP third of your resume, what I would call above the fold. It’s important the employer sees this in their initial 5 second review. This will gain you additional time from the employer to review the rest of the resume. Make sure to include the PREFERRED qualifications as well this makes you an even more desirable client. If you’re showing them in your resume you meet all their required and preferred qualifications why wouldn’t they call you? That would make you the ideal candidate. Then their search is over and you have the interview.

IT IS NOT ABOUT WHAT YOU WANT

Just as the housing market has moved from a seller to a buyers market so has the job market. It’s a buyers market they have choices and they can take as much time as they want and be as picky as they want. I assure you hiring managers are the same way. It’s an employers market and they can take the time they want and need to make the right choice. So don’t waste your time sending out resumes and cover letters that tell the employer a laundry list of what you want and need in a job. It won’t get you very far. Instead be specific about what you can offer the employer that aligns with their needs. This goes back to the required and preferred qualifications. So back away from the objective… better yet erase it from your resume altogether and replace it with a powerful personal branding statement.

DO NOT UNDERESTIMATE LOOKS

Let me tell you exactly what your resume format is saying to the employer – it’s either saying organized, professional, well put together, and detail-oriented or it’s saying “help, I’m a mess!”.

If you were a hiring manager would you rather hire someone that was professional and well put together or someone who was a mess? Point blank – your format speaks VOLUMES about you and if you want to get their attention it better make the right first impression otherwise it doesn’t matter how qualified you are you’ll never hear back from them.

BE YOUR OWN BEST SALESPERSON

Statistics prove again and again that accomplishment-based resumes are far more effective than ones that just list your job responsibilities. My take is this – responsibilities are for job descriptions and resumes are for selling yourself through previous wins! I hear job seekers say all the time I don’t have any accomplishments or my job wasn’t numbers based. Let me be direct – if you had no accomplishments at your past positions you would have been fired from all of them. If you haven’t been fired from every job you have ever had then you must have been doing something right! What was that something right you were doing? Put that on your resume!

This list is certainly not all inclusive but it is a running start towards ensuring your resume stops disappearing into the job application black hole that so many seem to fall into these days. Our clients are finding tremendous success with these strategies and others. We heard from one client this week who was called for an interview the first day she posted her new resume… and another client who is in the final stages of interviewing with a fortune 500 IT company within two weeks of using her new resume and cover letter. We’re so happy for their success and want you to know it can be your success too!

For additional tips and advice on resumes and cover letters, follow us on Twitter @GreatResume or visit our blog.

Author: An exceptional resume authority, Jessica Hernandez and her team of credentialed writers partner with professional- and executive-level candidates to open doors to jobs at prestigious corporations, achieving over a 99% interview-winning success rate.
Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates searching for entry level jobs and other career opportunities.

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