Posts Tagged ‘career guidance’

How to use Job Search Networking to find a job!

Friday, November 27th, 2009

Networking is a crucial element of job hunting because many jobs are never advertised. Employers prefer to interview and hireNetworking people referred to them by friends, family, or current employees. In a job market where employers have limited budgets to advertise roles, they are more actively using their networks to identify potential recruits.

I came across this article on networking for jobsearching – think it’s well worth a read.

http://www.johnleescareers.com/Documents/Networking.pdf

Mairead Griffin
Career Coach & Outplacement Specialist
http://www.careermentors.ie

Tips on Salary Negotiation

Monday, November 9th, 2009

From the outset whether you are dealing with an agency or directly with an Euroorganisation, salary, benefits and where you pitch yourself can be the difference between getting to interview stage or not. Here are some tips

Where should I pitch myself?

Salary is a critical element of the whole job searching process. Firstly, there is little value in today’s market having high demands on salary as cost saving is key for any organisation. Many companies are managing to employ high qualified staff without battling over salary. Be sensible from the outset. Very few employers will give more than 10% of an increase on a current basic. If you are prepared to move for the same or a lower salary, then make sure your recruitment consultant is clear of this. Otherwise they will eliminate and not call you about certain roles as they search through their databases. Benefits also need to be taken into account and your consultant should always be submitting your salary & benefits to employers. EG Some organisations do not have a bonus system while your current employer may pay a bonus of 20%. This is a 5K difference at a 35k level. If you are looking for a 10% increase, will a new employer offer you a base of €43,500?? That level of an increase maybe difficult to get in todays market, so if salary is a key motivator in your transition, don’t waste your time, or any potential employer’s time.

I feel I am underpaid and as I have had to take a paycut recently, I would like to get back up to market rate.

Quite often employees feel undervalued by their current / previous employers and see a job change or career move as the opportunity to get them back to the level they feel they deserve. Most employers take your current salary and benchamarking into consideration and are unlikely to make decisions based on your current employer’s salary structures

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How Action Words Will Make Your CV More Enticing To Employers

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

How can I sell myself on paper??CV

When drafting a CV it’s important that every sentence starts with a stong, impactful action word. Descriptive verbs at the beginning of a sentence provide additional impact and a stronger impression on potential employers.

Thinking of these action words can be difficult and quite often jobseekers end up with CVs with bullet points that are repetitive and non-impactful

Example
Which looks better?

For my final year in college I surveyed a group of employers to find out their opinions of the job market. This involved interviewing employers both formally and informally. We used a database system and were awarded a 2:1 for the project

OR
Planned and devised a survey of employer’s attitudes to the current jobs market as part of my final year project. Interviewed 40 teachers and assembled, analysed and interpreted data over a period of 2 weeks using a SQL database system. Completed the project 4 weeks ahead of schedule and was awarded a 2:1 Grade

Below are some action words that should help in making your CV more impressive and enticing!!

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Join up to one of the fastest growing Career Advice Groups on Linkedin

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

“Jobseekers Ireland” is a new, Group here on LinkedIn that has 110 members in 48 Linkedinhours! It provides a platform for Jobseekers, Business Management, HR, Recruiters & Career Advisors to share experiences and informed advice in areas such as…….

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How to maximise the potential of Recruitment Agencies

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Recruitment Agencies – Do’s and Don’tsRecruitment LOGO

  • Find out who the best agencies are specifically for your discipline in Dublin. These arent always the biggest agencies
  • Registrar with the top 3-4 maximum and work to build a rapport with your recruiter
  • If possible, try and find out the specific names of recruiters that friends or colleagues have encountered. Otherwise you could go on forums and ask others who they would recommend
  • The main thing is getting a Recruitment Consultant with at least 2 years experience, and understanding of your discipline, who has forged good relationships with clients in your field. Recruitment is a high turnover industry, so this can be difficult, but it is doable if you do the right research
  • Always call in advance if you see a job that you are interested in. Clarify that the role is still open. When recruiters advertise roles, they generally put them up on the sites as soon as the job comes in, and then start working through their database. A lot of consultants can submit shortlists from their databases, so don’t end up considering people who apply. A good recruiter will only submit 5-6 CVs to a client.

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Ireland’s Top 6 Growth Industries

Sunday, September 20th, 2009

 What sector is a good one to target when job searching or upskilling?Enterprise Ireland

  • IT Services/Computer Software/Hardware
  • Accounting and Auditing
  •  Innovation and Intellectual Property Related Enterprises
  • Green Sector Jobs
  • Business Services
  • Medical/Health

Most of the job search engines, career sites and economists agree that the top growth industries include:

1. IT Services/Computer Software/Hardware
ICT is a key growth sector for Ireland and the availability of highly skilled IT professionals here has attracted many high profile companies that continue to reinvest. In addition, the IT outsourcing market could boom as employers increasingly look to third-party providers in order to cut costs.

2. Accounting and Auditing
There is still some demand for qualified and part qualified accountants when all eyes are on the books at the moment. There is steady demand for compliance and risk professionals. Qualified and newly qualified accountants are required within the pharmaceutical, manufacturing and energy industries, as are candidates with insolvency and forensics experience.

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Selecting the right career based on the job market!

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Tips for new job seekers:

Reading the job market
Whatever you do for a living, all industries go through cycles of growth and shrinkage. There are flat periods and booms. There are recessions, too, and their usual result is a drastic reduction in job vacancies. That leaves most job seekers with a pretty lame set of options: apply for the two jobs in the sector, or do something else, however vaguely defined.

It depends how you read the job market. Looking for jobs that aren’t there isn’t too productive. The usual problem is breaking the mold, getting out of the single stream of employment. The mistake here is to assume you’re stuck in the same industry. Most people’s skills transfer across to other areas in other industries, some quite unrelated.

The fact is that most people don’t know how to read the job market. They see a demand for accountants, but don’t notice it’s all in finance, not basic accountancy. The accounting analogy holds good for reading the job market. How many different kinds of accountant are there? Hundreds. Does the word “accountant” mean very much if it’s not qualified? It’s almost meaningless, because of the very different skill sets.

It’s not a matter of jobs in demand, it’s a matter of skills in demand.

To read the job market properly, in your own area, you need to focus almost exclusively on skills. Qualifications do matter, but you’re usually in the bandwidth for jobs with the right skills. So your basic accountant will go looking for areas where they can demonstrate skills as the primary asset to getting the job.

Career paths are also built on skills and achievements, not job titles. To read the job market in career terms, you need to go looking for meaningful skill sets in your career path. If you want to develop your career, you have a general idea what’s required, but you have to match that to the skills required in a position. Some jobs don’t deliver that. If you want to become a research scientist, a series of steps in that career are required. You don’t just look for “research,” you look for opportunities to do the work that gets the results.

How to read the job market:

Check skills as your primary reference to the suitability of any job. This covers most of the real issues about whether it’s worth applying for.

Stay objective about what you want out of a job. Use this as the basic yes/ no criteria for job applications.

Ask yourself: Does this job go anywhere? If so, where and when? Be realistic about what a job can deliver.

How does the job compare to what you want? Sometimes you have to settle for what you can get, but there’s a cutoff point. Stay in the general zone of what you want, as much as possible.

One thing about this type of reading: It never gets dull. Just stay focused.

www.cvtips.com

Dont forget the free CIPD conference May 11th 2009

Monday, May 4th, 2009

For the first year ever, the CIPD are providing a free conference and expo to its members. It will be taking place at the Burlington Hotel on Upper Lesson Street. The subject is Corporate & HR Strategy. HR has a key role to play in the current economic climate, so this should be an opportunity to network and share experiences amongst other HR professionals.

How are companies reacting to the recession

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Given the economic climate, most companies out there have to react and make cutbacks. In a recent article, below were the findings of a survey of organisations

- Cutting back on recruitment – 69%
- Cutting back on company events – 55%
- Cutting back on bonuses – 45%
- Layoffs – 34%
- Cutting back on training – 33%
- Hiring high performing employees from competitors – 9%

I thought the final point was interesting in that there are opportunities out there. The first port of call should be competitors in the sector your experience is in!