So, where do you find the jobs NOW? Even if you had a successful job search 2 years ago, don't assume that what worked then will work now.
Spending your time polishing your resume and then applying for every job you find with that resume does NOT work today for most job seekers.
Technology is rapidly changing -- used a pay phone, a BlackBerry, or a paper map recently? Those changes have a very big impact on how recruiters recruit. And, changes in recruiting dramatically change effective job search strategies.
[MORE: 5 Ways to Land Your New Job Faster.]
Essential Success Tips
Today, it is very easy to get overwhelmed with options when you are searching online for a new job.
To avoid wasting your valuable time and energy searching for job postings, start here:
Focus Your Job Search
Choose a target job and target employers where you would like to work, and focus your efforts on that job and those employers. Without presenting a clear message of who you are, what you have accomplished, and how you can help an employer, your applications will be ignored.
Unfocused job seekers apply for anything and everything. Consequently, they train employers, resume databases, and applicant tracking systems to ignore them.
FACT: You are spinning your wheels and wasting your time until
you focus on a particular kind of job and a group of target employers.
If you don't know the job you want, you will have a much more challenging job search. The reason? Being unfocused means you won't be using the best keywords for you and your next job. No keywords today means limitied opportunities and greater invisibility.
Read 9 Steps to a Shorter Job Search and Successful Elevator Pitch in 7 Steps from WorkCoachCafe.com.
Unless You Are Qualified, Don't Waste Time Clicking the "Apply" Button
Fewer than 20% of jobs are filled by someone responding to a job posting, although many job seekers focus all of their efforts on applying for every job posting they find.
FACT: Recruiters use the term -- "resume spammers" --
to describe people who apply for every job they find.
Resume spammers are blocked and ignored. Don't be one!
Because of the very large number of applications usually submitted by unqualified applicants in response to most posted jobs, job postings are NOT employers favorite way to fill jobs now -- too many resume spammers.
Employers' favorite way to fill jobs today is next.
Read Job-Hunt's Why Resumes Don't Get Read (and What You Can Do About It) and New Requirements for Resume Success for more details.
Be "Find-able" Online
Being find-able online is essential today for two very important reasons:
1. Recruiters and sourcers will find you when they search online for qualified candidates.
Because of resume spammers, searching for qualified job candidates is an employer's favorite way to fill jobs. Called "sourcing" it is also often the quickest way to identify good candidates.
When you are appropriately visible online, employers searching for qualified job candidates will find you, particularly on LinkedIn.
When you know what you want to do next, preferably with a list of 10 to 100 target employers, you will be able to focus your online visibility on the right keywords in the right places.
Those right keywords include:
- The professional version of your name you use for your job search and career (on your business/networking cards, LinkedIn Profile, resumes, applications, name tags, email etc.).
- The qualifications you have for your current and future jobs.
- The job titles used by your target employers for the job you want next.
- Your current location -- or the location where you hope to be working next. This is NOT your address. It's the name of the city and state or region where you live or want to live.
- Your education, including degrees, certifications, and other training which is relevant to the job you want next.
Those right places include:
- Your LinkedIn Profile and other activities on LinkedIn (your LinkedIn Updates and LinkedIn Group activities).
- Your other social media visibility, like Twitter and Facebook.
- Your resume and job applications. If you spend time applying for jobs online, customize the application or resume you submit so it includes the keywords used in the job description that are appropriate for you.
Read Job-Hunt's Guide to Personal SEO (Search Engine Optimization) to learn what your best keywords are and where to use them.
2. Recruiters will be able to verify the facts on your resume or application and to get a sense of your "fit" with their organization.
Without appropriate online visibility, you are effectively invisible. And that makes your job search longer and more difficult because...
Recruiters and employers are generally suspicious of invisible people, assuming that the invisibility is because the person is out-of-date (no understanding of how to use the Internet for business) or has something to hide.Neither of those assumptions will help your job search succeed.
Research has shown that more than 80% of employers and recruiters search the Internet to learn more about you before seriously considering you for a job or inviting you in to an interview. If they can't find you, you are usually not considered for their jobs.
Read Get "Sourced" to Get Hired, and Job-Hunt's Guide to Personal Online Reputation Management for more details.
The Best Sources of Jobs
Assuming that you know what you want to do and where you want to do it, you'll find millions of jobs posted online. Start with 1, and go through the whole list. Some will work better for you than others, but don't spend more than 20% of your valuable time completing online job applications:
1. Networking
No one wants to read this advice, but networking is the quickest way to a new job.
Networking doesn't mean attending events in big rooms full of strangers! Networking means staying in touch with people you know, and meeting new people. I've seen people connect with new jobs at a funeral, and they also connect at football games or over coffee with friends.
You are five (5) times more likely to be hired if you have been referred by an employee than if you apply without knowing anyone.
Employers really prefer to hire someone known to a current employee than a complete stranger off the street.
Connecting with people at your target employers or choosing to work for an employer because you already have friends or family who work there is the most effective method of landing a new job.
[Related: Shortcut to a New Job: Tap an Insider.]
2. Employers
Developing a list of target employers is the foundation of a successful job search today. This section helps you find employers that meet your criteria and then leverage the information on their websites, social media (like LinkedIn), and search engines to connect with their jobs.
Check out the employers' sites so you are familiar with what they do (products, services, senior management, locations, etc.), and use that information you collect in your interactions with the employer. You will be more effective in social media, your applications, and your job interviews when you have researched your target employers thoroughly.
3. LinkedIn
LinkedIn is currently the most powerful and effective professional social network. LinkedIn also has job postings (see the "jobs" link below the search bar at the top of every page). Also check out the Jobs tab in LinkedIn Groups (you can join up to 100), and the company profile pages for your target employers.
LinkedIn is one of the best online venues for connecting with people who work at your target employers (and who worked there in the past). Use it to vet the employer, too. You can also find job postings and employer/company pages which provide you with information about the company as well as how you might be connected to current employees.
Use LinkedIn to connect with people who attended the same schools you have attended, even if you didn't attend the schools at the same time. Alumni networks can be very powerful. Search for people working at your target employers who attended the same school you attended -- that's a starting point for expanding your network.
[MORE: How to Be Found by Recruiters on LinkedIn written by recruiter Jeff Lipschultz and Job-Hunt's free Guide to Using LinkedIn for Job Search.]
4. Social Media
Social media is a powerful way to connect with a job. Unfortunately, not done well or done without concern for your online repuation, social media can ruin opportunities for you, too. But, ignoring social media, particularly LinkedIn, is not optional for most professions and locations.
In addition to LinkedIn, job postings are available through both Facebook and Twitter. Many employers have Facebook pages for both marketing and, often, also for recruiting. Employers are increasingly posting jobs on Facebook.
In Twitter, follow your target employers' Twitter accounts for news and look for a Twitter account for jobs, too.
See Job-Hunt's Guide to Using Facebook for Job Search and Guide to Using Twitter for Job Search for more information.
5. Recruiters, Staffing Firms, & Head Hunters
Recruiters are the traffic cops in the process of hiring people. They can help or hurt you, and several different kinds of recruiters exist. The important thing to remember is that recruiters work for employers, not for job seekers. [Related:Working with Recruiters]
6. Job Boards
Job boards are still very popular, but, as employers have increased their recruiting on their own websites and as the aggregators have made those jobs more visible, the general job boards are perhaps not as effective as they once were. Look for niche boards like Dice.com (for IT) and Idealist.org (for nonprofits).
Be careful to avoid the imitation/scam job boards that exist to collect your personal information but offer you no benefit. [Related: Guide to Avoiding Online Job Scams]
7. Classified Ads
Online classified ads, particularly on sites like Craigslist.org, can be very effective for job search because they are very low cost to use, and free in many locations. That low cost attracts small employers who can't easily post jobs on their own websites. But, do be cautious! Because the price of posting is very low or nonexistent, scams are posted. [Related: Using Craigslist to Find a Job]
8. Associations and Alumni Groups
Associations and school alumni groups are very effective for networking, and often their websites have job postings for members. If you have worked for an employer in the past, look for an "alumni group" for that employer.
You'll find many ways to connect with other alumni -- both school and corporate -- in LinkedIn Groups. [Related: How to Engage More Recruiters and Employers with LinkedIn Groups.]
9. Google
Google has many hidden talents plus excellent tools for finding job postings as well as helping you with your job search in many other ways.
[More: Guide to Company Research, and how to be found online >> Guide to Personal SEO (Search Engine Optimization).]
This is a list of the top sources of job postings online, roughly in order of the number of job postings available. Do remember the job postings may not be your quickest way to a new job.
Direct/Offline Can Work Well for Local Small Businesses
If you want to work at the local mall or in the local McDonald's restaurant, go to that business and ask for an employment application to complete. Dress nicely, be polite, and complete the form neatly and legibly, and you'll probably end up with at least an interview the next time there is a job opening.
Lastly, Be Careful Out There!
When you are looking at job postings, be sure to keep in mind that many scams are published on all job posting sources. So, you need to be relatively cautious and skeptical about applying for jobs you find online. Read 9 Characteristics of a Job Scam for more information.
If you currently have a job, be sure to keep a low profile for your job search so you don't get fired (YES, they can fire you for job hunting in the USA!). Check Job-Hunt's Guide to Stealth Job Search.
Remember - no matter what Website you are visiting, even one listed in Job-Hunt, be sure to protect your privacy, watch out for scams, and avoid the Dirty Dozen Online Job Search Mistakes as well as the Dirty Dozen Dangerous Assumptions!
source : https://www.job-hunt.org/findingjobs.shtml