References are Not an Afterthought » Blog | Great Resumes Fast

If you’re asked about your references in the job interview, do you have a few names ready?

Do you know what those people would say about you if they were called?

You need to know how to choose the best references, how to make sure they say fantastic, glowing things about you, and why it’s so important to the success of your job search. Many candidates hem and haw when asked about references even if they have spectacular ones. And when they’re asked what the reference will say about them, they stumble even more-because they don’t know, they’re wishy-washy. That’s unacceptable. If you’re an outstanding employee, you should have an outstanding reference. And if you don’t know what your references will say, and if you aren’t sure that they will tell the interviewer what they need to know to hire you, you need to prep your reference.

Choosing a Great Reference

When you are asked for your references, the interviewer wants the name and title of the person as well as what they did in relation to you. Past managers are the best references of all. But any reference needs to have strong credibility that speaks to your work life. That means you can have no references who haven’t worked with you. If you have someone in a supervisory position you didn’t actually work for, but who you worked with in a relevant capacity, that could be acceptable, too.

Prepping Your Reference

No matter who your reference is, they need to give you a strong, glowing, and above all, specific reference. You don’t want someone who will just give the dates of your employment and say something vague about how you were a good worker. To get a great reference, call those past managers and remind them of the work that you did overall, or on a particularly relevant project or two, and remind them of your outstanding attitude and ability and ask if they will represent that to a particular company who’s considering hiring you. Get them to be solid in what they’ll say about you, and that will give you more confidence when the recruiter or interviewer asks you about your references.

The references question can knock you out of the hiring process if you don’t answer it well. Remember, the job search is like a sales process. That means that your resume acts as a marketing brochure, and your references become a testimonial for how you, the product, are fantastic and how they can’t afford not to hire you. They are a critical piece of your job search strategy.

Guest author: Peggy McKee has over 15 years of experience in sales, sales management, sales recruiting, and career coaching. Her website, Career Confidential (http://www.career-confidential.com) is packed with job-landing tips and advice as well as the practical, powerful, innovative tools every job seeker needs to be successful.

**We also recommend that you bring a reference sheet with you to the interview. This shows the interviewer that you are prepared, proactive, and very interested in working with them. It also avoids you having to go back and scare up some references later and the interviewer having to wait. When I was a hiring manager those candidates that were really a hit we would go ahead and call their references to decide if they were going to move forward in the hiring process. By providing references at the interview you’re assisting the hiring manager in actually hiring you – faster! Make sure your reference sheet is professional, polished, and concise.

Posted via email from AndyWergedal

Bad Career Coaches : CAREEREALISM

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Graduate degree or continuing education

Many executives have set themselves apart from the others by going back to school in order to obtain an MBA or some type of continuing education. Even if you don’t have a graduate degree, in all likelihood your company has sent you to conferences and management training seminars throughout the years; if any of that training was relevant to your career goals, it can certainly enhance your resume.

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Ignite your career like a lightsaber! - Career blog - Position Ignition - taking you to the next step in your career

This video is a compilation of every lightsaber ignition in the Star Wars series, but what does that have to do with us? As our name suggests, we at Position Ignition are devoted to helping you ignite your career-be it through learning new skills, re-assessing aspects of your role, finding a new job, moving internally within a company or changing careers altogether. The average person nowadays has several career transitions in the course of their life, including several career changes.

When you think about it, we're making little career shifts all the time-whether we're cutting down on hours, taking on new responsibilities or relocating to a different office. So the little career ignitions in a person's life are as a common as a lightsaber being ignited in a Star Wars film!

Posted via email from AndyWergedal

Should You Lower Your Salary Expectations? - Careers Articles

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