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    How to Land a New Job

    Fantasy Finance

    Whether it's rewriting your cover letter, reviewing the way you approach interviews, or rethinking what kind of job will make you happy, here are some tips for landing a new job in the new year. You'll hear from authors, career experts, career coaches, and even entrepreneurs.

    Position yourself as a thought leader in your industry. Create a professional blog and write insightful posts about industry trends and advice. Comment on other top blogs to increase your visibility within those communities. Join and participate in niche communities, such as LinkedIn groups related to your expertise and skills. Share relevant articles (and your own content) on Twitter, Facebook, and Google+. Not only will this help to develop your online presence, but you'll inadvertently network with people who might lead you to your next job opportunity.

    Heather R. Huhman is a career expert, experienced hiring manager, and founder & president of Come Recommended, a content marketing consultancy for organizations with products that target job seekers and employers.

    Let a job find you. If you are a job seeker, you need to shift your focus. Instead of spending all of your time identifying jobs and applying, you should also think about how to help people who want to hire you, find you. Ramp up your networking efforts. A Jobvite study showed 89 percent of U.S. companies will use social networks for recruiting in 2012 and 73 percent of social hires are via LinkedIn. In its job-seeker survey, Jobvite found 78 percent of job seekers who credited their current job to social networking named Facebook as the key factor in landing their position and 42 percent mentioned Twitter. Ignore any of these key social networks at your own risk.

    Miriam Salpeter is a job search and social media consultant, career coach, author, speaker, resume writer, and owner of Keppie Careers.

    Write a new cover letter. If you're still using a generic cover letter that simply summarizes your resume, you're missing out on one of the most effective ways to get an employer's attention. In 2012, throw out that old letter and start writing new ones for each job for which you apply. In this job market, you can't afford to squander an entire application page repeating what's on your resume. Instead, use your cover letter to provide information about how you're fit for the job; information that isn't available on your resume, such as personal traits, work habits, and why you're excited about the position. For instance, if you're applying for an accounting job that requires top-notch organizational skills, and you're so neurotically organized that you color-code your bills every month, most hiring managers would love to know that about you. And that's not something you'd ever put in your resume, but the cover letter is a perfect place for it.

    Alison Green writes the popular Ask a Manager blog where she dispenses advice on career, job search, and management issues.

    Bring questions to a job interview. When an interviewer asks you if you have any questions, make sure you do. And make sure they're good ones. Having smart questions will show an interviewer that you are discerning about the company for which you work, that you have prepared for the interview, and that you're familiar with the company. Spend some time looking at company reviews online and reading the latest news about the company and about the industry overall. Possible question topics include: corporate culture, organizational structure, day-to-day responsibilities of the position, the company's standing in the industry, and the company's five-year plan.

    Luke Roney is content manager for CareerBliss, an online career community dedicated to helping people find happiness in the workplace.

    Follow up after an interview. If you are genuinely interested in the job after the interview, make a habit of sending a follow-up note of appreciation. While a thank-you note doesn't guarantee you'll get the job, it certainly won't hurt you. Not only is it a gesture of common courtesy, it's a perfect place for you to reiterate your interest and show the hiring manager why you are the right person for the job. It also gives you the chance to add a detail about your background that you may have not had the opportunity to explain in the interview or to just simply reinforce the connection. Sending a follow-up note via email is acceptable and quick, however, a hand-written note will set you apart from the competition.

    Lindsay Olson is a founding partner and public relations recruiter with Paradigm Staffing and Hoojobs, a niche job board for public relations, communications and social media jobs.

    Create your own business. When you look at the history of business over the last 100 years, you will find that many of today's most successful companies started in the 1930s--the same decade as the Great Depression. The fact is, innovation and business growth comes out of downed economies because entrepreneurs are problem solvers (and there are certainly enough problems to be solved in times such as these). We are in the age of the entrepreneur. The new economy has forever changed the social norms of yesteryear, so 2012 is as good a time as any to join the entrepreneurial revolution. So break free of the resume life, start something small that can grow organically with hard work and undying passion, and make it in this world on your own.

    Scott Gerber is the founder of the Young Entrepreneur Council and co-founder of Gen Y Capital Partners.


    More From US News & World Report

     
    • Maria  •  2 months ago
      Seasoned worker use wisdom from experience newbies can't have. Keep looking, you'll find something.
    • NANCY  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 months ago
      You won't get as far as an actual interview 99% of the time. You can't just walk in, fill out an application, and be interviewed. Not anymore. It's all online now which makes it easier and more cost-effective for companies not to bother to respond at all. They hold all the cards and want you to amuse them in addition to being superhuman.
      • redhead 3 months ago
        Nancy I agree with you. Just went through all this. And got several job offers this week. Problem is with the internet, you don't know how many of your resumes are even getting through the system. Secondly, if it makes it that far, you have to wonder if some 22 year old, fresh out of school is determining whether or not your lifelong experience "fits" what they are looking for. Key is to network...yes...and walk your resumes out. Talk to people that will talk to other people. Figure out what you want to do and hit those areas. I was fortunate to get several actual interviews which is more than half the battle. From what I am reading out here, I can give you some advice. Walk those resumes out and talk to people. Make sure you are dressed in a professional fashion. And for those of you with a negative attitude, "ditch it" because you will certainly convey it and will be unemployed for a long time.
      • Pike 3 months ago
        That's because HR has poor interpersonal relationships. They don't know what to do, if you ask a question, that is not in the repretoir of standard answers.
      • MrKmarx 3 months ago
        So true. Its pathetic.
    • Old Geezer  •  3 months ago
      What if you do everything that everybody tells you and you can't even get an interview because you're over 50 and lost your job through no fault of your own?
      • Mike 3 months ago
        50 years olds are getting hired evey day. An if you got laid off it was probley from something you said or did. Employers are looking for can do people.
      • Donna 3 months ago
        Mike you don't even know his situation. How can you be so presumptuous? OG~you just have to keep trying and not give up. Something will come along.
      • Catwoman 3 months ago
        Mike, you're an idiot for saying that. And probley is spelled "probably". Employers are looking for "can spell" people. Bet you live with your Mom.
    • nunya Biz  •  3 months ago
      seriously? employers are more interested in your social networking than in your experience and work ethic? wow.how things have gone downhill in the past 20 years!
      • k 3 months ago
        I read one article that said to be active in social networking, and this one says not to. The advice is laughable -- completely arbitrary, much like their choice of employees. To be honest, I don't think they want anyone too intelligent, and most importantly, people who DON'T ASK QUESTIONS! You're much more likely to get that "whatever" type of mentality from younger employees -- who can oftentimes turn out to be total deadbeats in terms of work ethic and attendance.
      • Pearl M 3 months ago
        Not really, but it does help to stand out. Also, if you are interested in a role that involves writing about the industry or being active in social, it helps to have a blog with posts about that stuff.
      • Lori 3 months ago
        If I were to hire someone I would like to know they are working all day and NOT social networking
    • Disappointed  •  3 months ago
      "Position yourself as a thought leader in your industry. Create a professional blog and write insightful posts about industry trends and advice. Comment on other top blogs to increase your visibility..." so, "thought leader" is one of those new buzz terms I've been noticing a lot lately. Who comes up with this crap and is this what employers are really looking for? Really, people who sit around on their free time and write blogs and respond to other "thought leader's" blogs? I'm just really not convinced that we need more worthless crap and minutiae being authored by people who are diluted enough to imagine that their blogging is worthwhile in any way. I'd like to actually see a poll of the hiring managers and organizations who would actually find this crap useful in making a hiring decision. A specific list would be great, I would then use this list to stay as far away from these companies as possible during my next job search, as I would never want to work for an organization that values this kind of time wasting activity in their prospective employees...I feel slightly sick to my stomach because of the time I took to write this rant, can't imagine how I would feel after spending hours writing and responding to useless blog posts. I just don't know what this world is coming to. I feel like an alien on a strange planet, far from home.
      • matter-of-time 3 months ago
        @ Disappointed: "deluded" is the word I think you meant - however, diluted works just fine in this sense if you ask me. Anyway, you are so right!
      • Kurtis 3 months ago
        @ Matter-Of-Time: If your response to a post like that is to point out a spelling error, you must be hell to live with.
      • Alrik 3 months ago
        In the software industry this is not actually bad advice. It can demonstrate that you have a genuine interest in software, and if your blog-posts are legitimately well-done (and aren't flat-out wrong or anything) then they can be a good indicator of ability
    • MissD  •  3 months ago
      What a stupid story. It would help if there actually WERE any jobs.
      • JOE 3 months ago
        I agree, articles like this make you feel your doing something wrong when you're job hunting. It is obvious that are no jobs and these stupid tips they are trying to provide are useless.
      • nunya Biz 3 months ago
        actually,there ARE jobs,but most people think they are beneath them to take them..they make you do menial work,they only pay minimum wage...and other excuses.hey...minimum wage in your pocket beats being broke! if it's legal and pays,you are better off than not having any job.
      • NaturesSuperPride 3 months ago
        It would help if you had gone to school to obtain a degree for which jobs are readily available.
    • BAJANRAS  •  3 months ago
      I totally agree with you Mr philip there don't hire older folks because there don't want to pay us a living wage and there cant cheat us. but the up side to hiring older workers is that we come with lots of experience and strong work habits and not to mention responsibility.I know that the over 40 & 50 unemployed are having a very difficult time landing a good paying job. its a sad day in America when prospective employers are more interested in your credit and who you work for in the pass than what you can bring to there company. I am tired with the resume crap. just give us the dam job!
    • wordz  •  3 months ago
      Networking is another form of nepotism and we all have seen the results of that.....people doing jobs they are not qualified for, hate and do poorly. If one uses Twitter, FB, etc, to find a job, then what's to stop them from using them on company time for their own personal use. Sorry....if I have to find another job I will go the 'normal' route.
    • Cutlass Crusier Owner  •  Warren, Oregon  •  3 months ago
      Gee, "Create your own business" Now what an idea!! I'd never have thought of that! I'm sure I can get $50-$200K from my friends for a start up venture and be an IBM by the middle of next year!
    • Ray J  •  Englewood, Colorado  •  3 months ago
      the latest news is unemployment is down . It is down because all the people who have exhausted their unemployment are no longer counted . It is getting worse by the day and no hope in sight and all the candidates are a joke .
    • LF  •  3 months ago
      As businesses and corporations continue to send jobs overseas, businesses and corporations will fail. Who do the owners of these businesses think is going to buy from them...when all the people who 'use' to have paychecks no longer do....the short-sighted can't look past their own greed.
    • Don  •  3 months ago
      Thanks Washington, you managed to destroy the middle class in the last half century.
    • PHILLIP  •  3 months ago
      One important factor item was left out. Be sure to be less than 50 years old. Younger than 40 is even better.
    • earthling  •  3 months ago
      all these advices on how to land a job.. It doesn't work for most people.. i got a job because i kept bugging the manager by walking in and making follow up.. I didn't bother calling because they have these tendencies to be unavailable all the time... ( all right, got the message).i walked in and got the job... if you look at these on line applications, they don't even want to talk to the applicants anymore.. no phone numbers listed in their site. this kind of set up is not really fair... congressmen should do something about this...
    • MichaelJ  •  3 months ago
      For a few of you posting on here saying that people won't apply to jobs that are "beneath" them, this is just a myth. I, as well as my husband, have applied to tens of hundreds of jobs ... applying on-line and customizing every resume and cover letter. The bottom line is there are more folks looking for jobs than what is available. Additionally, many of the folks doing the hiring and interviewing just don't know what they are doing ... I have literally gone on interviews whereby NO questions were asked, and these were for high level administrative positions. On other interviews for jobs requiring minimal skill was asked so many questions only to learn that they (more than one interviewer) had conflicting answers as to why the person in the position is leaving or has left. Most of the interviewing is subjective and many of the interviewers aren't very smart.
    • Margaret  •  Hong Kong, Hong Kong  •  3 months ago
      Wow, these tips are amazing! I would NEVER have thought to personalize the cover letter for the specific job or post my credentials on LinkedIn! And from now on I will surely ask questions at an interview instead of sitting silently. And the follow-up- sheer brilliance! No wonder I can't find a job in the US! I've been doing it all wrong. Clearly this is why unemployment is so high. (sarcasm over).
    • Uiuuioppoii  •  3 months ago
      "Let the job find you."

      Hey, I'm over...........................................................here.
      No wait. I'm over..........................................................................................................here.
      I'm now over.........................here.
      Fooled ya! I'm over...............................................................................here.
    • FoxxyLady01  •  Troutdale, Oregon  •  3 months ago
      Blogging? Using FB and Twitter? Is this what the world has become? You have to be sucked into social networking sites just to find a dam job! What about all the great people who deserve a great paying job but happens to be against all that egotism? And nowadays, you post a resume and CL online, and if you give them a call to let them know you're interested you're shunned down because everything is done online. Getting employed now is like winning the lottery.
    • Irene  •  Az Zahran, Saudi Arabia  •  3 months ago
      This is a poorly-researched article, and not a reflection of today's job-hunting realities. recycled hogss**t that we see & read almost everyday, making us feel guilty that we are doing it wrong!
    • 0ng  •  Singapore, Singapore  •  3 months ago
      in singapore.our government will welcome u if u are foreign talent or those cheap foreigner.it veri easy to get jobs in singapore.

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