Twitter Users “More Likely To Get Job Interviews”

By Martin Bryant on July 1st, 2010

If we had £1 for every press release we receive that’s based around a survey we’d be extremely rich indeed. That said, this one is actually of interest. Apparently, Twitter users write better CVs and are more likely to be shortlisted for job interviews than the average jobhunter.

A report out today indicates that using Twitter trains people to be succinct in their writing, leading to interesting, eyecatching and short CVs which appeal to recruiters.

Professor Cary Cooper CBE, Professor of Organisational Psychology and Health at Lancaster University Management School agrees with the study, which was carried out by analysing 500 UK CVs.  He said: “When reviewing CVs for the first time, employers may only ever see candidates’ short summaries, so a jobseeker with a standard, dull or uninteresting personal synopsis is less likely to be shortlisted.”

Is it Twitter use that trains people to write more succinctly, or does Twitter actually attract better writers in the first place? Professor Cooper seems to think the latter is true.

“Candidates who are innovative and novel in their use of language and identify themselves in a non-formulaic way are more likely to be people who use Twitter, or have their own blog. (Their) CV summary is more likely to be snappy, interesting and, ultimately, attention-grabbing.

“Twitter users more readily think about, and use, clever key words and they’re probably more expressive in an abridged style – the art of ‘getting to the point’ is not lost on people who Tweet.”

If you’re a jobhunter who uses Twitter, consider this story an ego boost. MyJobGroup.co.uk, the company that conducted the study is currently running a competition running to write your entire CV in the space of a tweet.

Posted via email from AndyWergedal

College Job or Stepping Stone? | CareerAlley

“A stepping-stone can be a stumbling block if we can’t see it until after we have tripped over it.” – Cullen Hightower

When we discuss the process of looking for your first job out of college, what we usually mean is looking for your first real job out of college. Most college grads have actually been in the working world for a while in one way or another, even if it’s just what many consider “unskilled” work in fast food, waitressing, bartending, working a register, lifeguarding or dog-walking.

It’s important that you view your current job—as well as your past college jobs—as stepping stones toward your future career. When filling out job applications, many people do not include some of their college jobs because they believe it might make them look bad (wearing a chicken costume for a fast food restaurant?) or that the job experience gained is not relevant to the job you are applying for (how does working a cash register relate to the entry-level accounting job you’re applying for?). But you may want to rethink these ideas.

Why? First of all, because employers like to see that you remained consistently employed for a long period of time. If you leave out that infamous chicken suit job from your resume, the person looking over your resume may wonder why you were not working during the blank time period. Secondly, there are ways you can make even the most embarrassing work look golden on a resume. Instead of writing “I wore a chicken suit for six hours a day,” you can write, “I creatively promoted and raised awareness for my company, helping to boost sales.” That doesn’t sound so bad now, does it?

While the chicken suit may be an extreme example, the important thing to remember is to look over every single college job you’ve had, scouring it for the job skills you acquired that a future employer would find valuable. For instance, the employer at the accounting job you’re applying for may not care that you worked a cash register, but they do care that you have experience handling money and that you helped train new cashiers (that shows leadership skills).

Your education and college job experience together is a powerful combo. In the education section of your resume, you can emphasize courses you took in communication and professional writing, for instance. In the job experience section, you can write that you “demonstrated excellent communication and conflict management skills” while waitressing or working with customers in another capacity. After all, didn’t you get quite adept back in the day at pacifying even the crankiest of customers?

The point to remember in all of this is that it is far better to list your college jobs than to strip your resume bare when applying for your first real job out of college. Sure, extracurricular activities, volunteering and GPA may look good on a college application, but they won’t do you too much good all by themselves on a job application.

Be creative in the way you include your college job experience, and think long and hard about the skills you’ve gained because of them. Good luck!

By-line:

This guest post is contributed by Kate Cunningham, who writes on the topics of online university rankings.  She welcomes your questions and comments at her email Id: cn.kate1@gmail.com

Good luck in your search.

Posted via email from AndyWergedal

How You Give Away Power - Part 2 | Career Rocketeer - Career Search and Personal Branding Blog

Last week, we looked at the concept of giving away power in the interviewing process, why and how that happens, and a few ways to retain it instead, If you haven't read it, check out How You Give Away Power - Part 1. Now let’s look at additional reasons and ways to counter them.

When you haven’t identified what you want in your next job, what you want is….a job. Each interview becomes a hurdle you feel you need to clear. Rejections become a reason to double your effort to win over every hiring authority. Combined, both of them result in your giving away more power, not less.

Candidates unconsciously fear that they’ll be judged and found wanting. It automatically puts them on the defensive, eager to please. From innocuous things such as getting a tickle in your throat to being fired, they often fear these situations will be seen as egregious faults worthy of not making the cut. As if interviewers don’t sneeze without tissues? Or get laid off? Or worse?


Getting fired without cause is no reason to lose sleep over how to handle it. When you worry so much about its effect on your interview that you over explain, it actually costs you the job. As Shakespeare said, “Methinks you doth protest too much.” Rather than clearing the air, you’re suffusing it with increased doubt.

Instead of creating a concern for the interviewer, find a way to turn the anticipated concern into a positive and then introduce it into the conversation. When you understand how to do this in a manner that impacts the company, rather than you, then you’ve planted a positive thought before any negative has time to develop.

When you don’t know what you want – except the job – you try too hard. It comes through in your tone of voice, your body language, and your choice of words, however subtle that may be. The interviewer may not consciously pick it up, but he’ll react to it nonetheless. Interviewers are inclined to ferret out problems, go with preconceptions and stick with cookie cutter patterns under the impression that will result in a better hiring decision. Sometimes they’re actually looking for ways to eliminate you, whether you, and they, know it or not. Why help them find a problem? In fact, why give it to them on a silver platter?

If you don’t have a degree and that’s a “concern,” your answer should be, “I understand why you feel that’s important. Some of my employers have initially felt that way too. But as you can see from my resume, I’ve been very successful in this field and in my roles, and the lack of degree hasn’t impeded my ability to impact my employer positively.”

Notice you didn’t argue, nor did you deflate with despair, causing the interview to spiral further downward and cementing every negative you feared might take place. Instead, you’ve supported his opinion, acknowledged that it’s not the first time you’ve encountered it, and shown him – with an objective piece of paper – that it hasn’t made any difference in your performance, and you’ve brought it back to benefiting his company.

He’s challenging you to tell him why he should hire you when you lack what he wants. And you need to tell him, subtly, why his view is inaccurate and, at the same time, present him with the solution. In this example, it’s that equating a degree with success is a fallacy.

Know what you want. Present yourself in a positive manner that provides a solution rather than succumbing to their attempts to keep things cookie cutter safe. Learn how to read the signals and understand what’s going on below the surface, so that you hear what is really being said. And know how to ask questions to find out if it’s a company worth pursuing. Interviewing involves selling. It also involves gathering information. And it has to be done concurrently. That’s the way you keep your power.


Guest Expert:

Judi Perkins, the How-To Career Coach, was a recruiter for 22 years, consulting with hundreds of hiring authorities throughout the hiring process. She’s seen over 500,000 resumes, knows how hiring authorities think and how they hire. As a result she understands and teaches what other coaches don’t: why the typical strategies in finding a job so often fail, what to do instead, and why. She’s been on PBS’s Frontline, will be in the May issue of Smart Money magazine, and has been quoted frequently in numerous articles for CareerBuilder, MSN Careers, Yahoo Hot Jobs, and the New York Times, among others. She’s also been featured as an expert in numerous career books. Sign up for her free newsletter at http://www.findtheperfectjob.com/

Posted via email from AndyWergedal

Unemployment: 5 Things You Should Know This Week (July 5) - Careers Articles

By Lisa Johnson Mandell

rate-unemploymentThere's a bit of good news this week involving the number of new people filing for unemployment benefits. Only 454,000 people made new claims last week, which may sound like a lot, but it's 21,000 fewer than the previous week's 475,000. The 4-week average was 466,000, a decrease of 1,250 from the previous week's revised average of 467,250.

Most experts agree that the weekly numbers must decline to below 400,000 new claims per week for any real progress to be made, but still, any decrease at all is good news. Here are five important unemployment facts derived from the most recently released numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics:


  1. Fewer total on unemployment: The number of people participating in insured unemployment programs during the week ending June 26 was 4,413,000, a decrease of 224,000 from the preceding week's 4,637,000.

  • Who gets extended benefits: Extended benefits were still available in Alaska, Connecticut, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington at the end of last week.

  • States with fewer claims: The largest decreases in initial claims for the week ending June 26 were in Pennsylvania (-2,841), Tennessee (-1,375), Illinois (-1,346), Iowa (-1,230), and Alabama (-869). Those numbers are attributed to fewer layoffs in the manufacturing, trade, service, transportation, and transportation equipment industries.

  • States with more claims: The states with the largest increases in initial claims last week were New Jersey (+7,951), Massachusetts (+4,681), New York (+3,473), Florida (+2,838), and Connecticut (+2,560). Those increases in unemployment were mostly caused by more school closings, as well as layoffs in the service, manufacturing, construction, transportation, warehousing, and public administration industries.

  • States with most unemployment: The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending June 19 were in Puerto Rico (6.7 percent), Oregon (4.9), Alaska (4.8), Pennsylvania (4.7), Nevada (4.5), California (4.3), Wisconsin (4.2), Connecticut (4.0), North Carolina (3.9), and South Carolina (3.9).
  • A bit of disheartening news came from the number of newly discharged veterans filing for unemployment last week, up 305 to 2,286, from 2,381 the previous week. Still, with the unemployment rate dipping to 9.5 and the overall number of people filing for new unemployment benefits decreasing, all in all, the numbers for the last full week of June are encouraging.

    Posted via email from AndyWergedal

    Will Congress Extend Unemployment? - Careers Articles

    By Lauren A. Fairbanks

    extend-unemploymentThere was an outcry over the fact that Congress once again held up passing a vote to extend unemployment benefits for an estimated 2 million jobless Americans.

    According to new unemployment statistics that came out last Friday, there is an increase in the unemployment rate (to 9.5%) with 125,000 jobs lost. A bill to extend unemployment benefits to unemployed workers has stood stalled in Congress for a month as the GOP has so far blocked any attempts to extend unemployment benefits, even as unemployment rates still rise and there is no current major increase in hiring. The Republican move, stemming from a stance to stop government spending, has effectively cut off unemployment benefits for millions of unemployed workers who need those small stipends to cover their living expenses while looking for work.

    After a refusal on the Democrat's side to move previously earmarked stimulus funds over to cover the unemployment extension, the bill was once again stalled last week - right before Congress took their vacation for the July Fourth holiday.

    On top of the question of where the money to extend unemployment will come from, there's also a notion being thrown around that unemployed workers collecting unemployment are spending less time looking for a job, and instead treating their unemployment period as an extended vacation. "There is an economic argument that the longer you extend unemployment benefits, the longer people are unemployed. And after a while it adds to the problem rather than solves the problem," said Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga. And Senator Jon Kyl created a frenzy over his Senate floor speech last week stating that extending unemployment "doesn't create new jobs. In fact, if anything, continuing to pay people unemployment compensation is a disincentive for them to seek new work." However, with the majority of unemployed Americans receiving only $293 per week, that seems laughable.

    The bill to extend unemployment could not come at a more important time, as Maurice Emsellem, a National Employment Law policy co-director told CNN last week, "There's only one job available for every five unemployed workers." Even economist Paul Krugman stated that we may be headed straight for a third depression, the fault of which he believes will be shouldered on a government unwilling to take action. "And this third depression will be primarily a failure of policy. Around the world...governments are obsessing about inflation when the real threat is deflation, preaching the need for belt-tightening when the real problem is inadequate spending."

    Congress will reassemble next week to make a final decision on whether or not to extend unemployment benefits from the standard 26 weeks to 99 weeks for the millions of workers desperate to find jobs.

    Posted via email from AndyWergedal

    Transferring Skills from Motherhood back to the Workplace - Career blog - Position Ignition - taking you to the next step in your career

    You’ve taken a career break for children and now you’re returning to work. Whilst many mothers feel that time out automatically equals losing their career skills, in fact the very opposite can be true.

    Motherhood is, in fact, practically guaranteed to increase your skills set.

    The transferable skills you develop as a parent are no different in variety or value to the type of skills that can be acquired during other key stages of your life and career, such as marriage or your first full-time job. Being a stayhome parent is, after all, absolutely one of the greatest challenges there is.

    Like any form of care, childcare takes it out of you emotionally, physically and mentally-especially when the children are your own! Successfully looking after your children involves continuous multi-tasking, managing your energy levels and maintaining a laser focus, not to mention clear goal setting, calmness in the face of emergencies and the ability to think outside the box.

    It’s really not a stretch to see how all of these skills are vital in a busy, pressurised workplace.

    In an ideal world, you would be equally adept at all the above competencies. In reality, the skills that can be acquired through parenting are so innumerable that no one will have them all. Even if you did, not all of these aptitudes will be appropriate or necessary to your particular line of work. So how do you identify which skills you’ve picked up and whether or not they’ll be useful in your work life? Here are a few ways:

    • Get feedback from others around you as they will see how you’ve developed.
    • Self-reflection –take time to think about which new skills you’ve developed. Try making a list of actions you take during the week and then listing the skills they deploy. Consider the settings, pressures and essential outcomes. What did you do, why did you do it and what was the result? Where else could these actions be valued?
    • Think about which skills you’re using whilst you’re actually using them, then consider how they could be used elsewhere. For example, the next time you’re making up a bedtime story with your child, acknowledge the fact that this takes imagination and communication skills, which can be converted into workplace creativity and efficient teamwork.

    Of course, it’s all very well thinking about using your new skills once you’re back at your old role, but what if you’re not actually going back there? What if you’re instead looking for a new position, or even career? The lessons you’ve learnt will be just as valuable. Creatively use your parenting experiences to sell yourself to prospective employers. Consider seeking out voluntary opportunities where you can use your newfound skills in the wider world as well as build up experience relevant to your desired career path. Get involved with a charity or offer yourself pro bono work to those you know. Training and professional development are also options which must be seriously considered; it’s worth investing in yourself.

    If you don’t know even which career direction you want to go in then making a career plan by yourself might seem like an overwhelming challenge.

    This is where an external opinion can be vital. High quality career guidance from an experienced professional (see Position  Ignition) will give you the benefit of an objective and informed viewpoint, allowing you to make decisions from a much stronger platform.

    • A key element of self discovery is to review past achievements and the especial skills demonstrated in effecting those successes.
    • Ask yourself what your passion is, then consider how to get paid for what you love!
    • Gather more information about your specific career interests by networking and making contacts. Don’t be afraid to ask plenty of questions. If you decide to set up your own business, take huge confidence from the fact that motherhood has definitely taught you how to juggle tasks and seize opportunities!
    • To brush up on specific skills before returning to work, there are plenty of ways to do this.
    • Take advantage of the many adult learning opportunities there are at local further education colleges. A directory such as Hotcourses gives you an idea of the variety of classes, subjects, timeframes and price ranges.
    • Get a friend to train you in a specific skill in exchange for you doing something to help them. Practice at home and go to the library to get the relevant books out if necessary. The Dummies series covers almost everything.
    • Still not confident that your parenting skills are going to help you back at work? Don’t expect too much of yourself-take everything one step at a time, in bite-sized chunks.
    • Recognise that some goals need to be worked towards and will not be arrived at with one leap. It doesn’t matter how slowly you go as long as you don’t stop. In the words of the late American football coach Vincent Lombardi, “Winners never quit, quitters never win”.
    • Reflect on those other key stages of your life where testing circumstances demanded reasoned confidence in one’s own ability and where success was achieved.
    • Focus on networking to find people who’ve done what you want to do and then talk to them about how they did it. Ask intelligent questions.

    Yes, identifying and transferring your parenting skills to the workplace is not an automatic process, but with enough thought, preparation, patience and action it is possible. And the real prize? Absolute recognition that taking a career break to parent children can truly be one of the best career moves you will ever make!

    About the Author:

    Mary Cope is a Position Ignition Career Guide who is passionate about helping individuals move to the next step in their careers.  She has had a highly successful career as HR Director for several top firms all at the same time as being a proud mother of three.

    Position Ignition is a modern day careers advisory firm helping individuals take control of their careers.

    For more information about Mary or to get some help with your career visit: www.positionignition.com

    For similar free articles and blogs: Position Ignition Career Blog

    Posted via email from AndyWergedal

    Reminding Your Network That You’re Looking » Blog | Great Resumes Fast

    Recently I spoke with a woman who has been looking for work for some time.  She devotes a significant amount of time each week to networking activities.  She said something that stood out to me: “I wake up every day and think about being unemployed, but my contacts don’t think about me until I remind them”.

    Remind your contacts that you’re looking

    All too often, those who are looking for work feel embarrassed to repeatedly go to their contacts and mention that they aren’t working.  Because of this, one of the key components of networking with people you already know is talking with them about subjects outside of work.  Invite them to coffee and talk to them about their kids.  Have people who are well connected over for a cookout; this allows your contacts an opportunity to help you out but keeps your relationship on the equal footing upon which it was founded.

    Be prepared when people ask about your job search

    If you think about it, there are a lot of people in your life who may not really understand what you do.  My own parents are a perfect example!  Because you want your contacts to think strategically about how their network can help you, it’s really important to have a quick summary of your career goals (aka your elevator pitch) ready to go when they ask.  Keeping it short and sweet not only keeps their attention but helps them to remember what you said two weeks later when they run into a perfect contact for you.

    Keep yourself busy in the meantime

    It’s truly difficult to feel equal to your peers who are working when you are not.  After all, your daily lives are substantially different—they get dressed and go to work every day.  One way to mitigate feeling like the odd man out is to keep yourself as busy as possible.  Whether you fill your time with volunteer work, continuing education, networking, or all of the above, staying busy keeps you emotionally fulfilled and interesting—which makes your contacts want to be around you and help you out.

    As long as you have a clear career goal and keep yourself busy working toward it, there’s no reason to be embarrassed about reminding your network that you’re still job searching.  As my colleague said, they’re not thinking about you unless you remind them!

    For more resources and career related articles for jobseekers visit http://www.greatresumesfast.com. You can also request a free resume analysis by submitting your resume via e-mail to info@greatresumesfast.com.

    Posted via email from AndyWergedal