There is an overwhelming amount of info out there and people are swamped. However, short pointers may be absorbed better. Each week, once or twice weekly, I will zero in on a specific area of job search, so my tips will encompass everything. A comprehensive offering will include one aspect of categories including cover letters, resumes, interviewing; effective networking and other issues that arise (references, thank you letters, Internet applications, and anything else pertinent).
Good luck job hunters!
-The Job Enthusiast, Professional Training & Career Coach

Partner of The 405 Club: New York's Official (Un)Employment Network. $405/week, but rich in talent. Join the club now here!
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  1. YOUR RESUME IS YOUR BRAND. IT MUST SELL YOU WHEN YOU ARE NOT THERE.

    Your resume goes before you, heralding your professional worth. If it is not a grocery list of rote duties, it will open doors. Match your profile and previous/current success with the wants and needs of the desired employer, as told to you by personal contacts, business publications, or when researching and targeting particular companies. Concentrate on writing a masterpiece so that your document lives, breathes, evolves—and soars. What’s more, after the practice you get from composing and reworking it, you will have every detail and sub detail of your accomplishments, talents, strengths, goals and outcomes of your experience—right on the tip of your tongue in the interview—where they belong. Your resume will have done its job so you can do yours.

    2 years ago  /  Notes  /  Comments

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