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What does it all mean?. Addressing Selection Criteria. Communication Skills. Communication is the transfer of a message from one person to another. Maybe spoken, written, non-verbal or graphic. Communication Skills. The purpose of communication may be to Pass on information
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What does it all mean? Addressing Selection Criteria
Communication Skills • Communication • is the transfer of a message from one person to another. • Maybe spoken, written, non-verbal or graphic
Communication Skills • The purpose of communication may be to • Pass on information • Give instructions • Explain a process, situation • Greet a customer, colleague • Ask for help • Order materials • Organise work for the day
Communication Skills • Oral: • answer public enquiries • Run and or participate in meetings • Make a presentation/run an activity or event • Written • Write instructions, procedures, reports, newsletter • Send emails to colleagues, customers, suppliers
Communication Skills • Good communicators • Listen attentively • Ask questions to ensure the have understood the message • Are aware of the context or situation within which communication takes place.
Interpersonal Skills • You need to demonstrate that • you can solve problems and conflicts with your colleagues and peers • that you have in the past been able to build effective relationships with supervisors and management.
Interpersonal Skills • how well you interact with other people particularly your ability to understand "cultural" differences and act accordingly. “ • Culture" relates to ethnic and social cultures as well as different workplace cultures.
Team work A work team’s purpose is to Achieve the goals that meet the needs of the organisation
Team work • People in a team may be allocated different tasks. • e.g Readers Services team • Circulation • Shelving • Shelf Tidying • Display/Activities • Role in that team may change during the work day
Team work • Take responsibility for your own performance • Be part of the decision making
Teamwork • As a effective team member you need to be able to • Work towards a common goal • Help and not hinder the team • Communicate with others • Listen to others • Speak to others and present your point of view • Please customers • Understand that things may not always go your way • Accept others ideas • Work in a manner that supports other members of the team
Customer Service • Help customer to satisfy their need • Provide feedback to the customer • Consult with customers • Build goodwill Provide prompt and courteous customer service
Customer Service • Listen and question well • Use appropriate verbal and non-verbal behaviour to find out what the customer needs and how your product or service can best fill these needs • Use problem-solving techniques effectively
Customer Service • 5 step approach to problem solving • Listen • be open minded. This is not a personal complaint against you • Respond Show concern and apologise for any inconvenience • Decide on any action Is the complaint justified; what is the policy; you may need to ask for advice/assistance
Customer Service • Take prompt action • Follow up • Confirm the problem has been resolved and the customer is happy
Conflict Resolution • Present your perception of the problem • Use active listening • Discussion is courteous and non-confrontational • Brainstorm possible solutions • Negotiate a solution
Preparing your Resume • Library resources • Job seeking sites • Seek, My Future • Office software has resume building templates
Finding a Job Advertisement • Seek, My Career • Create job alerts • Organisation’s website • Newspapers • Networking, word of mouth
Preparing Cover Letter • Address the selection criteria precisely & concisely • If no definite selection criteria include • Communication & interpersonal skills, teamwork skills, customer service skills, any special skills, knowledge which are relevant to the position concisely
Preparing Cover Letter • Advice is available from • The organisation’s “How to Apply” advice • Job sites such as Seek etc • Other job seeking websites • Library resources • Always read the organisation’s “How to Apply” information very carefully • Make a checklist to ensure you have covered everything.
Resume • A resume is a description of your • education, • paid employment, • volunteer activities (including school activities), • general interests • personal strengths
ResumeWhat to include • HINT: Use a resume template as a guide • Include • Personal details • Name, address, contact information
ResumeWhat to include • Employment History • Job Title • Dates employed • Company/Organisation name • What you did/responsibilities/achieved
ResumeWhat to include • Education • Highest level first • Interests, hobbies other skills • Include other languages spoken • Membership of groups • Referees’ names and contact details
Resume-What not to include • Don’t say you have done something that you haven't. • Don’t include anything that relates to your personal life (except contact details). • Don’t include age, height, weight, marital status, number of children, condition of health, or religious or political beliefs (except where religion or political beliefs are important to the position). • Don’t include negative reasons for leaving previous employment such as ‘asked to leave’ (fired) or ‘sick of travelling’. • Don’t focus on any barriers to getting a job. • Don’t make the resume too long.
Resume • Your resume is a business document. • Don’t use coloured paper • Don’t use borders or other decorative effects • Don’t include a photo
Your Application • Always read the organisation’s “How to Apply” information very carefully • Make a checklist to ensure you have covered everything. • Don’t miss the Closing Date
Help with Job Applications • Use websites • Seek • My Career • My Future