It seems that when people apply for jobs and don’t receive job interview requests, they are quick to blame anyone or
anything. I’ve heard job seekers tell me countless times that they applied for over 100 jobs online without receiving one
single interview request. They tell me it’s because of the current state of the economy or because the demand for jobs is far
greater than the supply. While both of these reasons are true to an extent, companies are still interviewing and hiring. If
you’re someone who has applied to a large number of jobs but you haven’t received a single interview request, it’s probably
time to start asking yourself those tough questions.
Are you qualified enough?
Are your job expectations realistic that you can actually get the jobs you are applying for? Too many times people waste their own time applying for jobs that they are not suitable for. I recently worked with a young professional with 2 years of work experience and no managerial experience. In terms of salary he was earning the market value for a person with his skills and experience. For an entire month he applied for different managerial roles – all paying salaries of double what he was currently earning – and he couldn’t understand why he wasn’t able to land an interview. While it is important to aim high, it is equally as important to be realistic about your skills and experience.
If you’re qualified for the job, is your resume letting you down?
You may have fantastic skills, experience and achievements. You may even be the best person for the job. If this is the case, why are you not getting interview requests?
When a hiring manager first picks up your resume, what they see and what they read will be the first impression they have about you. I recently worked with a candidate who just finished law school and was running into a similar problem. He was at the top of his class and as a recent graduate; he was now looking at beginning his career in one of the top law firms. Every job this candidate applied for was right for him. A recent law graduate seeking the best and brightest. The candidate sent his resume out to every law firm in the city and didn’t receive one interview request. Even the smaller firms were not even giving him a chance.
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Are your job expectations realistic that you can actually get the jobs you are applying for? Too many times people waste their own time applying for jobs that they are not suitable for. I recently worked with a young professional with 2 years of work experience and no managerial experience. In terms of salary he was earning the market value for a person with his skills and experience. For an entire month he applied for different managerial roles – all paying salaries of double what he was currently earning – and he couldn’t understand why he wasn’t able to land an interview. While it is important to aim high, it is equally as important to be realistic about your skills and experience.
If you’re qualified for the job, is your resume letting you down?
You may have fantastic skills, experience and achievements. You may even be the best person for the job. If this is the case, why are you not getting interview requests?
When a hiring manager first picks up your resume, what they see and what they read will be the first impression they have about you. I recently worked with a candidate who just finished law school and was running into a similar problem. He was at the top of his class and as a recent graduate; he was now looking at beginning his career in one of the top law firms. Every job this candidate applied for was right for him. A recent law graduate seeking the best and brightest. The candidate sent his resume out to every law firm in the city and didn’t receive one interview request. Even the smaller firms were not even giving him a chance.
Here’s what I saw when I took a brief look at his resume. The candidate had put his education and university roles on
page 3 of the resume and had devoted the first 2 pages of the resume to the part-time jobs he had during high school and
university. As such, by the time the hiring manager had read through page one of his high school work experience, the
resume was being deleted before the most important part of the resume (his education) was even read. In today’s society,
reports suggest that a job candidate has 15-20 seconds to catch the reader’s attention. By putting the most important
information on the back page of the resume, the reader’s attention was focused on aspects of the resume that were
completely irrelevant for the candidate in getting the job.
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