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Job Search Tips
By now, you should have determined what your restrictions
are, and what skills you are going to market. The following
nine tips will help you to take the next steps:
1. Decide what kind of job or jobs you will be looking for.
You may need to change course after you get a feel for the
job market and what employers in your area look for. Your
local State Job Service Office can help you to determine what
is happening in your local job market, and can offer guidance
and advice if you do not have a specific goal in mind.
2. If you are going to try work in a new field, you will
want to create a new resume. Focus your resume on the skills,
qualifications and experience that are most directly related
to the job you are applying for. Be sure to give special treatment
to your most valuable skills - from an employer's point of
view. You may want to write several versions of your resume
if you are applying for very different jobs. The job application
will be asking you for the history of the jobs you've held,
so you can be more creative in your resume. There are many
free, online resume formats available
for your use, and you can use these as samples if you are
not comfortable with your own format.
3. Create a network of friends, family members, and former
co-workers. Ask for their contacts in the job market, and contact
these people to stay in touch with new opportunities. The
best job opportunity may come from someone you know! Consider
searching in your neighborhood at places you frequent, for
example, where you shop, eat, bank, or do other business.
4. Search for jobs any way you can think of - be creative!
Some examples are; the Internet, local Job Service (public
employment office), the newspaper classified ads, the telephone
yellow pages, Organizations for the Disabled, Job Fairs, etc.
Always have several copies of your resume with you - you never
know when you might be in a situation or with someone who
can provide you with a lead.
5. Call local employers to ask about openings that fit your
own skills and experience. Ask about the kinds of positions
in the company, and the qualifications needed to get those
jobs. This information can only help you to learn more and
be more prepared in interviews. Tell them about your own background
and ask if there is a position available that would utilize
your skills and abilities. If nothing is available now, do
they expect any openings in the near future? Get the company
address so you can send your resume (and be sure there are
no typing or spelling errors!). Ask if they know of any other
employers in the area that may be looking for someone with
your experience (they usually know what is going on with the
local competition!).
6. Keep a record of all calls you've made, resumes you've
forwarded, and applications you've completed. Call back or
visit these employers about two weeks after you've given them
your resume. It's a good idea to speak to the person who is
actually hiring for the position. If you don't know that person's
name, ask the Human Resources or Recruiting office for it.
7. Searching for a new job can often be an exhausting experience,
even harder than a full-time job. Though it may seem a long
time before you receive a call from a potential employer,
do not get discouraged! Use your energy to make a daily, weekly,
and even monthly plan of what you need to accomplish. You
really will feel good when you see your plans on paper, especially
as the "things-to-do" list shrinks and changes every
day!
8. Make a specific plan of action. Determine a reasonable
number of in-person contacts that you can make daily, as well
as Internet and phone contacts. Try to get out of the house
at least once daily, preferable in the morning to help you
to get up and get moving. Make a daily schedule the day before
and plan it around an eight hour day. The more structured
you become, the more organized and positive you will feel
about the process. Finding a job is a job in itself! If you've
been out of work for an extended period of time, this will
help you to "get back into the swing of things".
You'll need to stick to a daily schedule, get dressed in "work"
or "interview" clothes, and will begin to socialize
again.
9. This is hard work so don't get discouraged!! You may want
to join a job club through your local Job Service, or through
a community agency, to help keep yourself motivated, share
ideas and frustrations with other job seekers, and to keep
yourself on track.

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