7 Job Search Tips For 2015 From Top Career Experts

7 Job Search Tips for 2015 From Top Career Experts
January 8, 2015
By Jessica Holbrook Hernandez, Expert Resume Writer

Ever wish you had your own personal job search coach for free? We can all use some job search advice from time to time, and what better time than as we kick off the start of a New Year! I’ve asked some of my esteemed colleagues to provide some of their best tips for job searching in 2015, and listed below are their top tips!

2015 Job Search Tip #1
Flip the Switch: Flip the switch from reactive searching of job boards into proactive targeting of positions and companies you would really like to join. Include at least 25 companies on your list, and make five of them conservative, no-brainer choices; 15 of them should be possibilities that require a bit of legwork on your part; and the remaining five should be stretch, going-for-it dreams. Get to work on tapping your personal network, leveraging popular social networking sites, and attending professional gatherings to make sure you meet a minimum of one person from each of these 25 companies. — Maggie Graham, Career Coach

2015 Job Search Tip #2
Maximize Groups: Make sure you’re involved with the maximum of 50 groups on popular networkig sites. Post useful content in a different group every weekday. You can find articles to share by setting a Google News Alert (https://www.google.com/alerts) for keywords specific to your industry. (This process will also allow you to discuss current news and trends at networking events and during interviews.) If you’re active on social networking sites, by posting in your groups, you’ll elevate yourself in search results when recruiters and potential employers are looking for people with your skills. — Maggie Graham, Career Coach

2015 Job Search Tip #3
Email addresses leave an impression: Executive Resumes: Use your college.edu email address to show—early on in your executive resume—what an amazing school you graduated from.— Lisa Rangel, Executive Resume Writer and Official LinkedIn Moderator, Forbes Top 100 Career Website

2015 Job Search Tip #4
Become Locatable: LinkedIn Profiles: Make it easier for recruiters to find you by ensuring your social networking profile is properly optimized with your credentials (i.e. CPA), job title (i.e. Finance Director), and location (i.e. New York, NY) in order to be found in recruiter Google searches looking for LinkedIn profiles of candidates with this information. — Lisa Rangel, Executive Resume Writer and Official LinkedIn Moderator, Forbes Top 100 Career Website

2015 Job Search Tip #5
Diversify your search: The biggest complaint I hear from job seekers is that there are no jobs, or they never hear back from positions applied to on job boards. My number one tip for 2015 is to stop using job boards exclusively! Diversify your job search by using multiple job search methods such as informational interviews, cold calling, networking, targeting, direct mail campaigns, and social networking sites.

2015 Job Search Tip #6
Create a networking resume: I recommend creating a one-page resume that you give to your network (NOT a prospective employer). This resume is really a one-page snapshot of what you do—and you can give it to family, friends, or your network to help give them a visual of what type of work you do and are looking to do. This way, whenever they hear of an opening, they’ll already have a solid understanding of your background and can easily make a referral.

2015 Job Search Tip #7
Go back to snail mail! It sounds crazy in this age of “quick, fast, E-everything” … but scale it back. If the job boards aren’t opening any doors, then go the old-fashioned route. Choose 30 to 40 employers locally that you’re interested in, and that hire for the type of work you’re pursuing; hand-address an envelope containing your resume and cover letter and send it to the company. You’d be surprised at the response you’ll get. Searching at the executive level? Use InfoUSA or Dun and Bradstreet to obtain a targeted mailing list of executive decision makers or board members, and send your value proposition letter to them directly. The statistics are encouraging (85 percent employed in 90 days) and prove to have a much higher response rate than simply applying online.

Tips five to seven are my own, but they’re still great tips for job searching in 2015. I’d love to hear your best job search tips—or how you found a job in 2014. We can all use some encouragement when we are in the job search trenches.

About the Author
Jessica Hernandez, is a resume authority for the Job Talk America radio program and multi-published expert author for resume, career, and job search publications. She boasts more than ten years in human resources management and hiring for Fortune 500 companies and utilizes her extensive experience to support job seekers in their quest to move onward and upward in their careers. Find out more at Great Resumes Fast.

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