1. READ THE AD.
Don’t just send out a resume because you are
desperate. No one will hire you for a job you can’t do because you are hungry.
Sorry.
2. Get the details right.
Sending resumes to the
wrong person, with the wrong details, or calling someone on the phone if they
ask for emails will not get you anywhere.
In the US, I would get 3-4 messages
a week on my business answering machine from people applying to a placement
agency, something that I was not. If I did call them back after a while, most
people were actually mean to me, acting as if I had stolen their phone call from
the people it should have gone to.
3. Make sure you can actually do
the job.
Sounds obvious but it is not.
Just because you think
it’s a job anyone can do, don’t insult the person looking to fill the job with
that attitude. For example, not all women are maternal so don’t take a daycare
job if you are not, and vice-versa with men.
4. Do some
research.
Check the company website to be certain you can work in
that field, in that location and at the times the job is open i.e. the work
hours.
5. Make sure you understand what they want.
For
example if you are a religious Jewish chef, don’t apply for a Saturday afternoon
dishwashing job at Joe’s Pork Palace.
6. Understand the language
requirements.
A PhD from the US or Russia won’t help if the job
requires you to speak a language you can’t.
7. Don’t expect them to
be flexible for you.
Unless you are the top person in a rare field,
no one is going to go out of their way e.g. to rearrange their schedule for
you.
If a job requires you to work on Friday mornings, don’t expect them to
give you the day off. Or, in many cases I saw, religious Jews who wanted
non-Jews to give them Shabbat off. A now-defunct call center tried that and
ended up losing the contracts to the company that got the Friday night and
Saturday contract.
This also applies to telecommuters. Friday is a work day
in the US, and it’s Shabbat here in Israel in the evening when it’s still
morning there. If your employer wants you to be available, it may not work out
(to be polite). I had a job here where I was on call on Shabbat. Not for
something basic like a computer crash, but a few times an alarm went off and I
was called. If you are not going to take the call, don’t even apply for the
job.
8) Make sure they can read your resume.
If your
resume comes in some obscure document format from software that no one has, it
will be deleted without being opened. Do not rely on format over content.
In
terms of being legible to begin with, someone I met in the technical writing
business used to stick a resume up on the wall and see what it looked like from
afar. Everyone else I’ve known read the content. If it was difficult to read, it
wasn’t read.
9) Don’t expect an answer.
If you had so
little consideration to apply for a job for which you were not really a viable
candidate, don’t expect anything in return.
If you wasted someone’s time,
sent your resume for a job you had no business applying for, then don’t feel bad
if they make you spend an entire day traveling to an interview so that they
could show you to their boss as a bad example and then hire their cousin.
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