Thursday, May 21, 2020
Top 5 Reasons You Never Hear Back After Applying for a Job - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Top 5 Reasons You Never Hear Back After Applying for a Job - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career People often wonder why they never hear anything back after they hit âsendâ on the email with a resume attached or on the on-line job application. If youâre very lucky, you might have a preliminary email exchange with a recruiter and then never hear from them again. Itâs a depressing experience, and one which also casts a shadow on the hiring companyâs reputation. So why does it happen? Is it you, is it them, or is it just something every candidate must prepare for in the hiring process? Thereâs no question job seekers face an uphill climb. High unemployment nationally means more competition for every position; according to a January 2012 article in the Wall Street Journal,Starbucks â⦠attracted 7.6 million job applicants over the past 12 months for about 65,000 corporate and retail job openingsâ¦â An oft-cited recruiterâs complaint is that as many as 50 percent of people applying for a given job simply arenât qualified. Adding to the challenge, most large companies â" and many smaller ones â" use talent-management software to screen resumes, weeding out up to 50 percent of applicants before a human even looks at a resume or cover letter. The deck is definitely stacked against the job seeker. So how do you break through? Here are my top 5 reasons youâre not hearing back after applying for a job, with five suggestions for ways to avoid the Resume Black Hole. Why You Never Hear Back You really arenât qualified. If a job description specifies a software developer with 3-5 years of experience and youâre a recent graduate with one internship, itâs unlikely youâll get a call. Avoid disappointment â" donât apply for jobs for which you lack qualifications. Most job descriptions are written with very specific requirements. Yes, the company is trying to find the most qualified candidate; yes, they are trying to weed people out. Itâs not personal, itâs business. You havenât keyword-optimized your resume or application. Job descriptions are salted with keywords specific to the skills or attributes the company seeks in applicants. A close read of the job description is a necessity, as is keyword-optimizing your resume and cover letter, if youâre using one, or email. If the job description lists words in a certain order, e.g. a list of programming languages required, use the same order in your resume. Your resume isnât formatted properly. You might think distinctive formatting will set your resume apart, but automated programs donât care if a document is pretty. Help a machine out. Be consistent in formatting â" consider using separate lines for former employer, job title, and years worked. Your resume is substantially different from your online profile. LinkedIn, Dice and other online profile sites can be useful tools, so itâs important to make sure they match whatâs on your resume. This may seem to be a contradiction â" in #1 I advised keyword optimization â" but itâs really common sense. Jobs worked, employers, years on the job and other details should match. The subtext here is always tell the truth. The company received 500 resumes for one job posting, and yours was 499th in. Looking for a job is a job. Do your research â" know which companies you want to work for, organizations where you sense culture fit. Every morning scour the job postings and jump on anything for which youâre qualified (and in which youâre interested.) Being early with your resume or application does matter. Check back often in the first few days to make sure the listing hasnât changed. Often a company will post a job and halfway through the process change the description. Itâs hard to game the system. Your best bet is still a personal referral, and even that may not be enough to get a call. A guy I know gave his resume to a woman who worked at a company where a good job had been posted. He received an automated email noting his resume had been received but never heard another word. After a month he asked his friend to check with the recruiter. It turned out the job description had changed, but the recruiter never bothered to let the referring employee â" or the applicant â" know. This isnât unusual, unfortunately. So what can you do? How You Can Get Noticed Research interesting companies on social media. Find out who the recruiters are and follow them. Many will tweet new postings, so watch their streams and jump on anything for which you are qualified. And if they tweet news saying the companyâs had a great quarter, retweet the news with a positive comment. Consider starting a blog in your area of interest or expertise. Itâs a social world; time to build a trail of breadcrumbs leading to you. Include the blog, and links to any especially relevant posts, in your emails to recruiters with whom youâre working. Get professional help with your resume. Either a resume writer or an SEO expert can help you increase your odds of getting through the talent management software. If you canât afford this step, read the top career blogs for advice. If at all possible, donât wait until youâre out of work to find your next job. I realize for many people this isnât possible or might even be offensive, but your chances of finding the next job are best when youâre still employed. Network. Old advice, but still true. Be visible, be upbeat, be informed about industry trends and news in your area of expertise. Finding a job is tough, no question. Iâve talked to other recruiters who say they only respond to 30 percent of applicants. The odds are good youâll be in the 60+ percent who hears nothing a lot of the time. Donât take it personally â" itâs not a rejection of you, itâs a reflection of the times. If you donât hear back, know youâre not alone. Author: Meghan M. Biro is a globally recognized leader in talent strategy and a pioneer in building the business case for brand humanization. Founder of TalentCulture and a serial entrepreneur, Meghan creates successful ventures by navigating the complexities of career and workplace branding. In her practice as a social recruiter and strategist, Meghan has placed hundreds of individuals with clients ranging from Fortune 500s to the most innovative software start-up companies in the world, including Google, Microsoft and emerging companies in the social technology and media marketplace.Meghan is an accomplished consultant who has helped hundreds of individuals in all levels in the organization (V,C level executives, mid-career, mid-level managers, software architects and recent college graduates) and across generations (Gen Y to baby boomers), develop effective career strategies that propel them to achieve personal and professional success. Meghan is a speaker, practitioner, author, blogger a nd mentor who is passionate about the subjects of leadership, recruiting, workplace culture, social community, branding, and social media in HR. She is Founder and co-host of two Twitter Chats: #TChat, The World of Work, a long-standing weekly chat and radio show and #HRTechChat, both communities dedicated to addressing the business needs of the rapidly evolving people-technology landscape. Meghan is an avid social community builder who is inspired by connecting the people and talent dots.Meghan is a regular columnist at Forbes and Glassdoor and her ideas are often quoted, featured on top publications such as CBS Moneywatch, Monster, Dice and various other HR, Social Media and Leadership hubs.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.