Job Hunting - How to write the perfect subject line

Business man on computer
Keep it short.
Example: Human Resources Assistant Application
Place the most important words at the beginning.
Example: Marketing Manager with 8 Years of Experience

Read the rest here - http://www.businessinsider.com.au/the-perfect-email-subject-line-for-job-hunting-2014-3

6-10 Words - The Best Opportunity To Get Your Email Opened

Subject lines with six to 10 words perform best, generating a 21 percent open rate, well above industry standard. Those with subject lines containing five or fewer words ranked second with a 16 percent open rate, and those with 11–15 words returned a minimal 14 percent open rate. Despite this, the majority of emails sent (52 percent) had subject lines in the 11-15 word range.

http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/231863

How To Actually Brainstorm Productively

1. Define the problem and solution space…Create boundaries in the idea-generation process.
2. Break the problem down. Use a visual technique, like diagramming.
3. Make the problem personal. How do you make a business problem personal? By getting down in the trenches and observing the individuals who are affected by the problem (and who would also be affected by your proposed solutions).
4. Seek the perspectives of outsiders. In other words, don’t solve the problem in a vacuum.

http://99u.com/workbook/21717/7-steps-to-make-your-brainstorming-more-actionable

Jobscan Helps Get Your Resume Through Computer Scans

Jobscan Analyzes Your Resume, Helps You Get Past Computer Screeners
Applicant screening software may be all that's standing in the way between you and a job interview. To get past it, need to make sure your resume has all the relevant keywords matching the job description. That's where Jobscan comes in.
Paste your resume into one text box and the job description in another, and the webapp will show you how well your resume matches. You'll also find how many times certain skills are mentioned—so you can prioritize those skills on your resume.
You could also use a tag cloud for this purpose, but Jobscan makes the comparison easy, especially when you're tailoring your resume to each specific job (as you should). While you're at it, don't forget to format your resume so it doesn't get trapped by the software.

5 Questions Interviewers REALLY Want Answered


The reason you struggle in preparing an answer for every interview question, is that the interviewers don't prepare and really want answers to the main 5 questions...

The five questions are:

* What brings you to this interview? (Why you're looking for a new job and why you're interested in this company)
* What value will you add to our company? (How your skills will be directly applicable to the job)
* Can you work well with the team?
* What is special about you?
* What's your salary and when you can start?

How Can I Make Linked More Useful in Your Job Search

1. Tweak Your LinkedIn Profile for SearchP

How Can I Make LinkedIn More Useful in Landing a Job?SEXPAND
You can make your LinkedIn profile much more effective if you tweak just three areas: Your photo, headline, and keywords you use in your profile. That’s because these are the only things that show up when an employer or recruiter searches for job candidates, and with over 225 million members on LinkedIn, it’s critical your profile gets to the top of search results for the types of jobs you’re looking for. 






How Can I Make LinkedIn More Useful in Landing a Job?:



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Six of the Most Common Resume Flaws (and How to Fix Them)



When job hunting, your résumé has a way of highlighting little career imperfections in black and white. Maybe you’ve job-hopped, had a long gap between gigs, or earned a degree that requires explaining (hello, art history majors!). Is there a way to smooth over these résumé imperfections—without being dishonest? You betcha.
You just have to get creative, be upfront, and do a little rebranding. We spoke with job coaches, recruiters, and candidates who have been in your shoes to find out how best to fix six of the most common résumé flaws.

Problem: You Want to Change Fields, but Don't Have Any Experience

What to Do: Play up your skills, not your positions. "What skills have you gathered in your previous positions that would be helpful in another job?" asks Lea McLeod, a career coach and the founder of Degrees of Transition, a job coaching firm.
That’s just what she did with her client, Todd Mauvais, 29. Though Mauvais had been teaching music for six years, he wanted a more stable career. He applied to government jobs for a full year before he intended to make his transition, but nothing panned out, and Mauvais wasn't sure why. Once he began working with McLeod, the problem was clear: He didn’t lack skills—he simply hadn’t identified the right field to apply them.
"Because Todd had a job where he commuted among multiple schools to teach arts classes, he was an exceptional self-manager," she says. "He also promoted summer arts programs to increase enrollment, was a great public speaker and presenter, and was comfortable in front of a room." She helped him recognize that this skill set translated perfectly to a career in sales.
Mauvais rewrote his résumé to focus on his relationship building, speaking and promotional skills, and reached out to a craft beer distributor he thought would be a good fit throughLinkedIn. In just over a month, the former music teacher was hired as a sales associate, and is still happy in his role there today.

Problem: Your College Degree Isn't Directly Relevant to the Job or Field

What to Do: If this describes you, don't worry, you're hardly alone. "Only specific fields—like engineering, graphic design, health care/medicine, pharmaceutical and automotive, to name a few—require related degrees for entry-level work," explains corporate recruiter Dennis Tupper. "Otherwise, companies are seeking someone who is coachable and moldable, will work hard and has a vested interest and passion in the company or industry."
Taylor Brady, 23, faced this very challenge with his sociology degree. Having grown frustrated after three months of sending out résumés for jobs in social work and nonprofits without getting any response, he, too, reached out to McLeod. "I had friends graduating from business school who were Excel wizards and such, but I had to be creative in regards to selling myself," says Brady.
"To focus Taylor's experience," explains McLeod, "we called out his work with a grant-writing mentor as a ‘special academic project’ and included the types and values of the grants he had written, so it really popped when he was applying for the grant-writing jobs he really wanted.”
He also led his résumé with a "Special Skills" section, which highlighted the key points of his past internships (including grant writing, donor database management and volunteer coordination), then provided more information about each role in the “Work Experience” section. With McLeod's help, Brady found his current role as a grant writer at a nonprofit by rebranding his résumé to focus exactly on what he could do for his potential employer.

Problem: You Have a Big Gap Between Jobs

What to Do: According to Jill Knittel, C.O.O. of recruiting and staffing firm Employee Relations Associates, significant gaps between jobs are fairly common imperfections that can be handled with two different approaches.
"One solution is to list just the number of years or months you worked at your earlier positions, rather than the usual start and end dates," Knittel advises. The other approach? "You can also use a functional résumé, which elaborates on your skills, instead of a chronological résumé. This will take the focus away from time, and on to your abilities and what you can do for a company," she says. If asked in an interview about the time frame of your résumé, you will still need to be honest about the gaps, but either of these approaches can de-emphasize them on paper.

Problem: You've Job-Hopped Frequently

What to Do: Jessica Bedford, a recruiter at Artisan Creative, a staffing agency that specializes in finding jobs for creative talent, recommends thatjob-hoppers include a "Reason for Leaving" next to each position, with a succinct explanation like "company closed," "layoff due to downsizing" or "relocated to new city."
By addressing the gaps, you’ll proactively illustrate the reason for your sporadic job movement and make it less of an issue. "If you have multiple gaps or have filled the time with several temporary projects, you might also create a section called ‘Consulting Work’ or ‘Freelance Work,’ and list all of them under the one section. With this approach, job seekers can account for a number of years at once," recommends Bedford.
If you stayed at a job for only a matter of months, consider eliminating it from your résumé. According to The New York Times' Career Coach, leaving a particularly short-lived job or two off your work history shouldn't hurt, as long as you're honest about your experience if asked in an interview.

Problem: Your Résumé Is Three Pages Long, and You Don't Know What to Cut

What to Do: Tupper says that if you work in an industry unrelated to one you worked in ten years ago, you can omit the details of that past experience and include only the years and industries in which you worked (so you don't appear deceitful in the case of a background check).
For jobs you held several years ago that are in the same field, but don’t reflect your current "level," keep descriptions brief. And, as mentioned above, in the advice for job hoppers, jobs you held for only a few months can be eliminated, as long as you're upfront about the experience if the subject comes up.

Problem: You Haven't Snagged That First Real Job

What to Do: If little professional experience is the reason your résumé is lacking, executive recruiter Bruce A. Hurwitz of Hurwitz Strategic Staffing recommends adding a subhead called "Related Employment Activities," right under "Work Experience."
"You can fill it with volunteer work, online courses, short-term employment and consulting assignments—list everything from a part-time job to a webinar to an online course," says Hurwitz. This section allows you to explain why you’re the right candidate for the role—before a recruiter concludes you’re not. Don’t forget to include the valuable "soft skills" job candidates tend to underestimate, like the ability to resolve customer service issues, work with ambiguity, coordinate among different groups and negotiate with vendors.


Six of the Most Common Resume Flaws (and How to Fix Them):

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