#for a few months while starting grad school. unfortunately my lack of presence meant people moved on to creators who were active
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for folks who aren't aware, i have an adult twitter where i post some more ns/f/w art but everything is always posted first on my patreon ^-^ pls don't be weird and if you're an adult feel free to give my page a follow.
#trying to be more open about the adult art i do make and im trying to build more of a following on that twitter#i enjoy making adult art and its a major form of my income but my current income has been cut in half because i went on a patreon haitus#for a few months while starting grad school. unfortunately my lack of presence meant people moved on to creators who were active#so im just trying to rebuild what i had before that hiatus#especially because i still need to pay rent for another yr while being a full time student#anyway if u decide to give my twit a follow pls read the carrd on that page#thanks!#if anyone has any qs feel free to send em my way
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5 Ways To Land Your First Job When Your Resume Game Is Lacking
First comes high school, then comes college and then comes… unemployment?
Unfortunately, in today’s age of “We want an innovative thinkerin his or her 20s with 30 years of experience,” post-college unemployment and a hasty return back to the parental nestseems to be a popular trend.
Recent collegegrads lose the wind from their sails faster than they can say “student loans.”
They end upunnecessarily wasting years by serving ice cream tosnarky teensuntil they finally land a legit gig in their field of study.
It’s not howthey promised it would goif you got good grades, is it?
There are a few areas of the education system that have always seemed offto me.
Based on my own San Francisco State experience, a lack of initial freshman guidance and over-praise where none is due is to blamefor the subsequent failure to flap one’swings and fly safely from the nest with diploma in hand.
Some kids are told they’re great at something from birth in order to save themselves the grief of discovering the bittertruth that perhaps theirrendition of Elle King’s “Ex’s & Oh’s” sounds more like a seagull choking on a petrifiedchicken nugget.
But what about those who choose their majors based on passion and talent, but still end up gathering dust in a nameless pile of rejected resumes?
These soul-crushing trends are what got me thinking outside the box when I myself walked the plank pardon, the ceremonial stage into my future.
I didn’t want to spend days crafting the perfect resume, only for it to fall into the black hole of extinguished dreams on some guy’s messy desk.
Generally, leaving my fate up to chance isn’t something I practice, and for good reason.
Sending in resume after resume and waiting for a bite is kind of like fishing.
The lake might be teeming withfish, but they’re all happily full, thanks tothe endless stream of qualified candidates.
Unless you offer something a little extra, you won’t get their time of day.
Based on my own success with landing every “real” job I’ve held since graduating from college in 2013 without relying on the resume game, I came up with five idiot-proofsteps for how you, the recent grad, canstop serving ice cream andstart making some of those tuition dollars back.
In order of priority, here they are:
1. Check out your competition’s online presence.
Taking a gander at “the industry standard” is not a step to be missed under any circumstance.
Thisespecially applies to professions that requireportfolios, but it is not limited to those professions only.
If you’re trying to get a job at SpaceX as an engineer, for example, do some digging on LinkedIn and find some employees you can cyber-stalk for the day.
Now, hit up all of their social profiles and gather as much information as possible about who they are professionally.
It’s even better if you send them aLinkedIn message, explaining your post-grad status and eagerness to learn about the industry.
Connecting with potential future co-workers like this not only begins building your network, but it also provides you with contacts when you’ve completedall the stepsand are ready to brave the candidate pool high dive.
Think cyber-stalking is weird? Feel awkward messaging someone out of the blue?
Well, guess what? You’re going to need to put your big boy (or girl) pants on now.
Otherwise, you’ll lose position after position to people like me.
We don’t think it’s weird.
Seasoned professionals love feeling “seasoned.” They like being able to offer words of advice or guidance to budding saplings like yourself.
So don’t be shy, and do what you gotta do.
2. Based on what you’ve learned, figure out if you’re hitting the “industry standard” or not.
This is where you need to be honest with yourself because if you’re not, you’ll find yourself dead in the water.
Grads tend to rock rose-colored glasses when it comes to assessing their skill levels in their choices of trade.
If you think you’re the next “big thing” because you’ve developed a strategy that completely counteracts everything that holds true in your industry today, chances are, you’re in denial.
This is not to say there aren’t some truly innovative thinkers out there, but let’s face it: Most of us are average thinkers, at best.
So, be honest with yourself from the get-go.
If you’re hitting the industry standard, great.Move on tothe third step.
If you’re feeling down in the dumps because you’ve fallen below it, don’t panic just yet.
Start asking yourself some important questions.
“How far below the industry standard is my skill level?”
“Can I invest the next few months and kick my own ass to the next level, or do I need more schooling if I’m ever going to make it in my industry of choice?”
Answer yourself honestly, and evaluate your answers.
It’s up to you to decide if a career is worth pursuing, or if you need to shift gears and discover your true calling.
Potentially flushing four years of college down the drain is a thought that sends chillsdown one’s spine.
But if you realize you’ve made a mistake and followed the wrong path, four years is a hell of a lot less than a lifetime of unhappiness doing what you don’t love and aren’t meant for.
3. Establish an online presence of your own (if you don’t already have one).
I don’t mean your Facebook page with your beer pong tournament pics.
If you don’t have aLinkedIn account, get one. Don’t get lazy about filling out your profile.
You don’t need to purchase any premium accounts to benefit fromLinkedIn’s network-building tools, so relax and loosen that grip on your empty wallet.
Let’s be real for a second now: Your profile picture does make a difference onLinkedIn, so don’t post a half-assed selfie taken with your crappy phone.
If you look like a dungeon-dwelling drug dealer in your photo, you’ll be treated as such and ignored.
Fair or not, that’s just the way it is.
Fluff up the resume portion of your page to a reasonable extent.
No one cares about your Coldstone Creamery scooping skills, so don’t add junk to your resume just to fill up space.
It’s better to have nothing than to have “qualifications” that make you look like a child.
If you’re like me, you’re going into a career that calls for a portfolio, so make sure you have one before applying anywhere.
Make sure your portfolio website corresponds to the industry standard, and don’t freak out because you don’t have enough work to “fill it up.”
It’s quality over quantity, people.
4. Now for the fun part: rubbing elbows with the big fish.
Not literally, of course.
But for those of you who were uncomfortable with the first step,now you’ll really get to crawl out of your shell andface your fears.
When I was fresh out of college and had set out to conquer the city with my graphic design savvy, I had no real-world experience to speak of, aside from the freelance graphic design work I had done while I was in school.
Furthermore, I had come to the painful realization that graphic designers don’treally make all that much.
But, perhaps my standards were just a bit high compared to the most junior talent of my caliber.
I started exploring viable alternatives to graphic design that would still utilize my skills in some way, and I realized that UI and UX design was where it was at.
I had only one little problem: My portfolio was packed with graphic design work, but I had zero UI work to show potential employers.
Rather than waste valuable time getting a worthless grad school degree in something vaguely resembling UI design, I decided to try this very technique out.
Guess what?
I was employed within three weeks as a UI designer ata gaming company in downtown San Francisco.
Bam.
Now, it’s your turn to rub elbows with the big fish.
Make a list of companies you would love to work for, and prioritize them.
Then, hit up yourLinkedIn profile and begin searching for high-level executives working in the same field.
(If you’re a designer, search for the creative directors of your chosen companies, etc.)
Be brave now, little fish, because you’re going to have to reach out to these intimidating (for now) people.
Explain that you recently graduated from college, and how you’re super interested in working for their companies.
Make sure you sound genuine and personal. Don’t copy and paste a lame sales pitchto every person you find.
Remember: These are all just people.
You’re not contacting aliens from planet Zorg. They will not eat your brain through the Internet if they don’t like your message.
The worst that will happen to you is nothing.
If you can’t contact your individual of choice directly and need aLinkedIn introduction, send a couple more messages to relevant parties and get it hooked up.
I literally have had high-level execs who don’t know me at all recommend me for positions at other companies just due to my corresponding with them out of the blue.
There is not one person on this planet you can’t get in contact with if you’re determined enough and have persistence.
We’re all just people playing the same game.
If you want to win, you’re going to have to get clever.
5. Go the extra mile.
You’re never going to be younger or more energetic than you are now.
Direct this energy into offering up something extra to the potential employers you’ve contacted in the previous step.
Offer to complete a test project free of charge if that’s possible in your field.
If not, get creative and figure out what you can leverage to sell yourself.
As shiny as you think you are, there are shinier toys packing the shelves.
They have years of experience on you, so compensate accordingly.
Don’t beg for a job.
Show potential employers how you can benefit their teams, and how willing you are to learn and grow with the company.
I haveinterviewed talent at my current job, and I can tell you personality and growth potential far outweigh skill level every time.
This is not to say you can prance in with zero skills and get the gig, but you don’t need to be agenius prodigy to do so.
Once you land that entry-level job, you’ll get the hang of the ropes.
A skill boost will follow, guaranteed.
Finding that first post-college jobdoesn’t have to berocket science.
Yes, the job markets are saturated.
Yes,it’s competitive as hell out there.
Yes, it won’t take you five seconds tobecome a bonafide member ofthe daily grind you’ll be wishing to escape three weeks later.
But if you follow my advice and get over your phobia of cold-messaging the people who might end up being your first managers, you’ll see results extremely quickly.
Stop sending hundreds of stuffy resumes intoblack holes, and step out of the goddamn box.
These are the words of my eighth grade math teacher:
There’s more than one way to McDonald’s.
PerhapsMcDonald’s is a bad example to use here. But hopefully by this point, you’ve figure outwhat I mean.
from All Of Beer http://allofbeer.com/5-ways-to-land-your-first-job-when-your-resume-game-is-lacking/ from All of Beer https://allofbeercom.tumblr.com/post/172323016862
0 notes
Text
5 Ways To Land Your First Job When Your Resume Game Is Lacking
First comes high school, then comes college and then comes… unemployment?
Unfortunately, in today’s age of “We want an innovative thinkerin his or her 20s with 30 years of experience,” post-college unemployment and a hasty return back to the parental nestseems to be a popular trend.
Recent collegegrads lose the wind from their sails faster than they can say “student loans.”
They end upunnecessarily wasting years by serving ice cream tosnarky teensuntil they finally land a legit gig in their field of study.
It’s not howthey promised it would goif you got good grades, is it?
There are a few areas of the education system that have always seemed offto me.
Based on my own San Francisco State experience, a lack of initial freshman guidance and over-praise where none is due is to blamefor the subsequent failure to flap one’swings and fly safely from the nest with diploma in hand.
Some kids are told they’re great at something from birth in order to save themselves the grief of discovering the bittertruth that perhaps theirrendition of Elle King’s “Ex’s & Oh’s” sounds more like a seagull choking on a petrifiedchicken nugget.
But what about those who choose their majors based on passion and talent, but still end up gathering dust in a nameless pile of rejected resumes?
These soul-crushing trends are what got me thinking outside the box when I myself walked the plank pardon, the ceremonial stage into my future.
I didn’t want to spend days crafting the perfect resume, only for it to fall into the black hole of extinguished dreams on some guy’s messy desk.
Generally, leaving my fate up to chance isn’t something I practice, and for good reason.
Sending in resume after resume and waiting for a bite is kind of like fishing.
The lake might be teeming withfish, but they’re all happily full, thanks tothe endless stream of qualified candidates.
Unless you offer something a little extra, you won’t get their time of day.
Based on my own success with landing every “real” job I’ve held since graduating from college in 2013 without relying on the resume game, I came up with five idiot-proofsteps for how you, the recent grad, canstop serving ice cream andstart making some of those tuition dollars back.
In order of priority, here they are:
1. Check out your competition’s online presence.
Taking a gander at “the industry standard” is not a step to be missed under any circumstance.
Thisespecially applies to professions that requireportfolios, but it is not limited to those professions only.
If you’re trying to get a job at SpaceX as an engineer, for example, do some digging on LinkedIn and find some employees you can cyber-stalk for the day.
Now, hit up all of their social profiles and gather as much information as possible about who they are professionally.
It’s even better if you send them aLinkedIn message, explaining your post-grad status and eagerness to learn about the industry.
Connecting with potential future co-workers like this not only begins building your network, but it also provides you with contacts when you’ve completedall the stepsand are ready to brave the candidate pool high dive.
Think cyber-stalking is weird? Feel awkward messaging someone out of the blue?
Well, guess what? You’re going to need to put your big boy (or girl) pants on now.
Otherwise, you’ll lose position after position to people like me.
We don’t think it’s weird.
Seasoned professionals love feeling “seasoned.” They like being able to offer words of advice or guidance to budding saplings like yourself.
So don’t be shy, and do what you gotta do.
2. Based on what you’ve learned, figure out if you’re hitting the “industry standard” or not.
This is where you need to be honest with yourself because if you’re not, you’ll find yourself dead in the water.
Grads tend to rock rose-colored glasses when it comes to assessing their skill levels in their choices of trade.
If you think you’re the next “big thing” because you’ve developed a strategy that completely counteracts everything that holds true in your industry today, chances are, you’re in denial.
This is not to say there aren’t some truly innovative thinkers out there, but let’s face it: Most of us are average thinkers, at best.
So, be honest with yourself from the get-go.
If you’re hitting the industry standard, great.Move on tothe third step.
If you’re feeling down in the dumps because you’ve fallen below it, don’t panic just yet.
Start asking yourself some important questions.
“How far below the industry standard is my skill level?”
“Can I invest the next few months and kick my own ass to the next level, or do I need more schooling if I’m ever going to make it in my industry of choice?”
Answer yourself honestly, and evaluate your answers.
It’s up to you to decide if a career is worth pursuing, or if you need to shift gears and discover your true calling.
Potentially flushing four years of college down the drain is a thought that sends chillsdown one’s spine.
But if you realize you’ve made a mistake and followed the wrong path, four years is a hell of a lot less than a lifetime of unhappiness doing what you don’t love and aren’t meant for.
3. Establish an online presence of your own (if you don’t already have one).
I don’t mean your Facebook page with your beer pong tournament pics.
If you don’t have aLinkedIn account, get one. Don’t get lazy about filling out your profile.
You don’t need to purchase any premium accounts to benefit fromLinkedIn’s network-building tools, so relax and loosen that grip on your empty wallet.
Let’s be real for a second now: Your profile picture does make a difference onLinkedIn, so don’t post a half-assed selfie taken with your crappy phone.
If you look like a dungeon-dwelling drug dealer in your photo, you’ll be treated as such and ignored.
Fair or not, that’s just the way it is.
Fluff up the resume portion of your page to a reasonable extent.
No one cares about your Coldstone Creamery scooping skills, so don’t add junk to your resume just to fill up space.
It’s better to have nothing than to have “qualifications” that make you look like a child.
If you’re like me, you’re going into a career that calls for a portfolio, so make sure you have one before applying anywhere.
Make sure your portfolio website corresponds to the industry standard, and don’t freak out because you don’t have enough work to “fill it up.”
It’s quality over quantity, people.
4. Now for the fun part: rubbing elbows with the big fish.
Not literally, of course.
But for those of you who were uncomfortable with the first step,now you’ll really get to crawl out of your shell andface your fears.
When I was fresh out of college and had set out to conquer the city with my graphic design savvy, I had no real-world experience to speak of, aside from the freelance graphic design work I had done while I was in school.
Furthermore, I had come to the painful realization that graphic designers don’treally make all that much.
But, perhaps my standards were just a bit high compared to the most junior talent of my caliber.
I started exploring viable alternatives to graphic design that would still utilize my skills in some way, and I realized that UI and UX design was where it was at.
I had only one little problem: My portfolio was packed with graphic design work, but I had zero UI work to show potential employers.
Rather than waste valuable time getting a worthless grad school degree in something vaguely resembling UI design, I decided to try this very technique out.
Guess what?
I was employed within three weeks as a UI designer ata gaming company in downtown San Francisco.
Bam.
Now, it’s your turn to rub elbows with the big fish.
Make a list of companies you would love to work for, and prioritize them.
Then, hit up yourLinkedIn profile and begin searching for high-level executives working in the same field.
(If you’re a designer, search for the creative directors of your chosen companies, etc.)
Be brave now, little fish, because you’re going to have to reach out to these intimidating (for now) people.
Explain that you recently graduated from college, and how you’re super interested in working for their companies.
Make sure you sound genuine and personal. Don’t copy and paste a lame sales pitchto every person you find.
Remember: These are all just people.
You’re not contacting aliens from planet Zorg. They will not eat your brain through the Internet if they don’t like your message.
The worst that will happen to you is nothing.
If you can’t contact your individual of choice directly and need aLinkedIn introduction, send a couple more messages to relevant parties and get it hooked up.
I literally have had high-level execs who don’t know me at all recommend me for positions at other companies just due to my corresponding with them out of the blue.
There is not one person on this planet you can’t get in contact with if you’re determined enough and have persistence.
We’re all just people playing the same game.
If you want to win, you’re going to have to get clever.
5. Go the extra mile.
You’re never going to be younger or more energetic than you are now.
Direct this energy into offering up something extra to the potential employers you’ve contacted in the previous step.
Offer to complete a test project free of charge if that’s possible in your field.
If not, get creative and figure out what you can leverage to sell yourself.
As shiny as you think you are, there are shinier toys packing the shelves.
They have years of experience on you, so compensate accordingly.
Don’t beg for a job.
Show potential employers how you can benefit their teams, and how willing you are to learn and grow with the company.
I haveinterviewed talent at my current job, and I can tell you personality and growth potential far outweigh skill level every time.
This is not to say you can prance in with zero skills and get the gig, but you don’t need to be agenius prodigy to do so.
Once you land that entry-level job, you’ll get the hang of the ropes.
A skill boost will follow, guaranteed.
Finding that first post-college jobdoesn’t have to berocket science.
Yes, the job markets are saturated.
Yes,it’s competitive as hell out there.
Yes, it won’t take you five seconds tobecome a bonafide member ofthe daily grind you’ll be wishing to escape three weeks later.
But if you follow my advice and get over your phobia of cold-messaging the people who might end up being your first managers, you’ll see results extremely quickly.
Stop sending hundreds of stuffy resumes intoblack holes, and step out of the goddamn box.
These are the words of my eighth grade math teacher:
There’s more than one way to McDonald’s.
PerhapsMcDonald’s is a bad example to use here. But hopefully by this point, you’ve figure outwhat I mean.
Source: http://allofbeer.com/5-ways-to-land-your-first-job-when-your-resume-game-is-lacking/
from All of Beer https://allofbeer.wordpress.com/2018/03/27/5-ways-to-land-your-first-job-when-your-resume-game-is-lacking/
0 notes
Text
5 Ways To Land Your First Job When Your Resume Game Is Lacking
First comes high school, then comes college and then comes… unemployment?
Unfortunately, in today’s age of “We want an innovative thinkerin his or her 20s with 30 years of experience,” post-college unemployment and a hasty return back to the parental nestseems to be a popular trend.
Recent collegegrads lose the wind from their sails faster than they can say “student loans.”
They end upunnecessarily wasting years by serving ice cream tosnarky teensuntil they finally land a legit gig in their field of study.
It’s not howthey promised it would goif you got good grades, is it?
There are a few areas of the education system that have always seemed offto me.
Based on my own San Francisco State experience, a lack of initial freshman guidance and over-praise where none is due is to blamefor the subsequent failure to flap one’swings and fly safely from the nest with diploma in hand.
Some kids are told they’re great at something from birth in order to save themselves the grief of discovering the bittertruth that perhaps theirrendition of Elle King’s “Ex’s & Oh’s” sounds more like a seagull choking on a petrifiedchicken nugget.
But what about those who choose their majors based on passion and talent, but still end up gathering dust in a nameless pile of rejected resumes?
These soul-crushing trends are what got me thinking outside the box when I myself walked the plank pardon, the ceremonial stage into my future.
I didn’t want to spend days crafting the perfect resume, only for it to fall into the black hole of extinguished dreams on some guy’s messy desk.
Generally, leaving my fate up to chance isn’t something I practice, and for good reason.
Sending in resume after resume and waiting for a bite is kind of like fishing.
The lake might be teeming withfish, but they’re all happily full, thanks tothe endless stream of qualified candidates.
Unless you offer something a little extra, you won’t get their time of day.
Based on my own success with landing every “real” job I’ve held since graduating from college in 2013 without relying on the resume game, I came up with five idiot-proofsteps for how you, the recent grad, canstop serving ice cream andstart making some of those tuition dollars back.
In order of priority, here they are:
1. Check out your competition’s online presence.
Taking a gander at “the industry standard” is not a step to be missed under any circumstance.
Thisespecially applies to professions that requireportfolios, but it is not limited to those professions only.
If you’re trying to get a job at SpaceX as an engineer, for example, do some digging on LinkedIn and find some employees you can cyber-stalk for the day.
Now, hit up all of their social profiles and gather as much information as possible about who they are professionally.
It’s even better if you send them aLinkedIn message, explaining your post-grad status and eagerness to learn about the industry.
Connecting with potential future co-workers like this not only begins building your network, but it also provides you with contacts when you’ve completedall the stepsand are ready to brave the candidate pool high dive.
Think cyber-stalking is weird? Feel awkward messaging someone out of the blue?
Well, guess what? You’re going to need to put your big boy (or girl) pants on now.
Otherwise, you’ll lose position after position to people like me.
We don’t think it’s weird.
Seasoned professionals love feeling “seasoned.” They like being able to offer words of advice or guidance to budding saplings like yourself.
So don’t be shy, and do what you gotta do.
2. Based on what you’ve learned, figure out if you’re hitting the “industry standard” or not.
This is where you need to be honest with yourself because if you’re not, you’ll find yourself dead in the water.
Grads tend to rock rose-colored glasses when it comes to assessing their skill levels in their choices of trade.
If you think you’re the next “big thing” because you’ve developed a strategy that completely counteracts everything that holds true in your industry today, chances are, you’re in denial.
This is not to say there aren’t some truly innovative thinkers out there, but let’s face it: Most of us are average thinkers, at best.
So, be honest with yourself from the get-go.
If you’re hitting the industry standard, great.Move on tothe third step.
If you’re feeling down in the dumps because you’ve fallen below it, don’t panic just yet.
Start asking yourself some important questions.
“How far below the industry standard is my skill level?”
“Can I invest the next few months and kick my own ass to the next level, or do I need more schooling if I’m ever going to make it in my industry of choice?”
Answer yourself honestly, and evaluate your answers.
It’s up to you to decide if a career is worth pursuing, or if you need to shift gears and discover your true calling.
Potentially flushing four years of college down the drain is a thought that sends chillsdown one’s spine.
But if you realize you’ve made a mistake and followed the wrong path, four years is a hell of a lot less than a lifetime of unhappiness doing what you don’t love and aren’t meant for.
3. Establish an online presence of your own (if you don’t already have one).
I don’t mean your Facebook page with your beer pong tournament pics.
If you don’t have aLinkedIn account, get one. Don’t get lazy about filling out your profile.
You don’t need to purchase any premium accounts to benefit fromLinkedIn’s network-building tools, so relax and loosen that grip on your empty wallet.
Let’s be real for a second now: Your profile picture does make a difference onLinkedIn, so don’t post a half-assed selfie taken with your crappy phone.
If you look like a dungeon-dwelling drug dealer in your photo, you’ll be treated as such and ignored.
Fair or not, that’s just the way it is.
Fluff up the resume portion of your page to a reasonable extent.
No one cares about your Coldstone Creamery scooping skills, so don’t add junk to your resume just to fill up space.
It’s better to have nothing than to have “qualifications” that make you look like a child.
If you’re like me, you’re going into a career that calls for a portfolio, so make sure you have one before applying anywhere.
Make sure your portfolio website corresponds to the industry standard, and don’t freak out because you don’t have enough work to “fill it up.”
It’s quality over quantity, people.
4. Now for the fun part: rubbing elbows with the big fish.
Not literally, of course.
But for those of you who were uncomfortable with the first step,now you’ll really get to crawl out of your shell andface your fears.
When I was fresh out of college and had set out to conquer the city with my graphic design savvy, I had no real-world experience to speak of, aside from the freelance graphic design work I had done while I was in school.
Furthermore, I had come to the painful realization that graphic designers don’treally make all that much.
But, perhaps my standards were just a bit high compared to the most junior talent of my caliber.
I started exploring viable alternatives to graphic design that would still utilize my skills in some way, and I realized that UI and UX design was where it was at.
I had only one little problem: My portfolio was packed with graphic design work, but I had zero UI work to show potential employers.
Rather than waste valuable time getting a worthless grad school degree in something vaguely resembling UI design, I decided to try this very technique out.
Guess what?
I was employed within three weeks as a UI designer ata gaming company in downtown San Francisco.
Bam.
Now, it’s your turn to rub elbows with the big fish.
Make a list of companies you would love to work for, and prioritize them.
Then, hit up yourLinkedIn profile and begin searching for high-level executives working in the same field.
(If you’re a designer, search for the creative directors of your chosen companies, etc.)
Be brave now, little fish, because you’re going to have to reach out to these intimidating (for now) people.
Explain that you recently graduated from college, and how you’re super interested in working for their companies.
Make sure you sound genuine and personal. Don’t copy and paste a lame sales pitchto every person you find.
Remember: These are all just people.
You’re not contacting aliens from planet Zorg. They will not eat your brain through the Internet if they don’t like your message.
The worst that will happen to you is nothing.
If you can’t contact your individual of choice directly and need aLinkedIn introduction, send a couple more messages to relevant parties and get it hooked up.
I literally have had high-level execs who don’t know me at all recommend me for positions at other companies just due to my corresponding with them out of the blue.
There is not one person on this planet you can’t get in contact with if you’re determined enough and have persistence.
We’re all just people playing the same game.
If you want to win, you’re going to have to get clever.
5. Go the extra mile.
You’re never going to be younger or more energetic than you are now.
Direct this energy into offering up something extra to the potential employers you’ve contacted in the previous step.
Offer to complete a test project free of charge if that’s possible in your field.
If not, get creative and figure out what you can leverage to sell yourself.
As shiny as you think you are, there are shinier toys packing the shelves.
They have years of experience on you, so compensate accordingly.
Don’t beg for a job.
Show potential employers how you can benefit their teams, and how willing you are to learn and grow with the company.
I haveinterviewed talent at my current job, and I can tell you personality and growth potential far outweigh skill level every time.
This is not to say you can prance in with zero skills and get the gig, but you don’t need to be agenius prodigy to do so.
Once you land that entry-level job, you’ll get the hang of the ropes.
A skill boost will follow, guaranteed.
Finding that first post-college jobdoesn’t have to berocket science.
Yes, the job markets are saturated.
Yes,it’s competitive as hell out there.
Yes, it won’t take you five seconds tobecome a bonafide member ofthe daily grind you’ll be wishing to escape three weeks later.
But if you follow my advice and get over your phobia of cold-messaging the people who might end up being your first managers, you’ll see results extremely quickly.
Stop sending hundreds of stuffy resumes intoblack holes, and step out of the goddamn box.
These are the words of my eighth grade math teacher:
There’s more than one way to McDonald’s.
PerhapsMcDonald’s is a bad example to use here. But hopefully by this point, you’ve figure outwhat I mean.
from All Of Beer http://allofbeer.com/5-ways-to-land-your-first-job-when-your-resume-game-is-lacking/
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