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It is all about Networking. Building an Effective Job Search Strategy for International Students. The Brand Called YOU. Think of yourself as a one person professional service business Define your mission and business strategy Research potential customers
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It is all about Networking Building an Effective Job Search Strategy for International Students
The Brand Called YOU • Think of yourself as a one person professional service business • Define your mission and business strategy • Research potential customers • Find your customers, build relationships and secure a sale – getting an offer
Part I. Define Your Service What Is Your Competitive Advantage?
What Is Your Career Goal? Your Career Goal Defines Your Direction • Where do you want to be in five years? • What talents do you want to use? • What skills do you want to have learned five years from now? • Where can you make a strong contribution now?
Your Business Strategy Competitive Advantage Comes From Your • Work Values • Interests • Personality Preferences • Core Competencies
Using Competitive Advantage Regardless of Citizenship: Maximize your chance of success in the Job Market through using your Competitive Advantage and Core Competencies
Core Competencies Your Core Competencies Are A Unique Mix of • Global Skills • Hard Skills • Soft Skills What Are Yours?
Part II.Researching the Market and Building Relationships Putting Competitive Advantage to Work for You
Job Market Primer Listed Job Market • Jobs publicly listed in classified ads, UCSO CSJ listings, bulletin boards, web Hidden Job Market • Unadvertised or soon-to-be advertised jobs • Such job leads come from networking, direct contact or informational interviews • 85% of hiring in real world is in hidden market!
Understanding Your Market Build Relationships with Employers through • Networking at presentations, SCOOP, etc • Club events and career fairs • Informal networking • Informational interviews with alumni • Research and direct contact • Web and print listings
Tapping the Hidden Job Market • experience shows that networking is a very rich source of • job leads • information about unpublished job openings • career advice
What Is Networking • Networking is Building Relationships with Other Professionals In Your Areas of Interest • Develop knowledge about the contact, their work, and their organization • Search for opportunities to work together toward mutual goals
What is Networking? • it’s a learned skill • it’s all about visibility • it’s about creating your own ‘community’ • it’s about building alliances, not just about job hunting • it’s not a replacement for talent, it’s about being recognized as talented
Networking is Not • contacting everyone you know when you are looking for a new job • cold-calling people you don’t know • a one-way street…it must benefit both parties • about gaining the confidence to call strangers to ask for a job • always productive…expect some persons to not respond
Learning Networking Skills • start with people you know • move on to the referrals • get to the decision makers • make contact • conduct informational interviews • follow-up
Finding Networking Contacts • business cards collected • professors, friends, relatives • professional association colleagues • chambers of commerce • alumni • former supervisors • social contacts, former classmates, former group members • church members don’t be biased…use all resources
Networking Activities • CAREER EVENTS!!!!!! • attending professional or trade association meetings • talking to parents…yours and your friends • volunteering in your community • membership in social or religious groups • visiting with your neighbors • chatting with others while waiting
Obstacles to Networking • lack of • commitment, effort, discipline, self-esteem, persistence, mental toughness • failure to • socialize, stay connected, treat others as yourself, appreciate diversity, organize, make the 1st move • reluctance to • sell yourself, join in, take risks, gain from others’ experiences • complacency, being unlucky, feeling stressed
Networking Tips • Make sure you have the correct spelling of their name, correct job title and contact info • Keep your conversations brief • Follow up with a quick note referring to your conversation and future interests • Thank them for their time and consideration
Informational Interviews • What is it? • A type of networking that provides you with information about certain careers, companies, industries, positions or opportunities • Research the company and industry before asking for informational interviews
How to Obtain Informational Interviews • Write or email and introduce yourself, ask for an opportunity to get their advice and suggestions • Call to setup a meeting to see them • Ask for 15 - 30 minutes of their time—and stick to it! • Meet in person if at all possible • Prepare questions in advance • Bring business cards or resumes
What kinds of Questions to Ask • What skills, personality traits and work styles are necessary for success • What they like/dislike about daily tasks • Questions regarding career paths, environments, lifestyles • What advice they would give you in your search • Who else they know that might help you learn more about the field!
Informational Interview Follow-up • Send a thank you • Keep in touch and inform them about your progress • After accepting a position, keep in touch for future use
Direct Approach • Research on the industry, positions and companies that you are interested in • Send customized resumes and cover letters describing what skills you can contribute to their organization to the hiring managers or recruiters • Try to send them to specific individuals • Follow up with phone calls to confirm receipt of your resume and arrange an interview
Web Job Searching • Learn about companies and industries • Find job postings • Join newsgroups relevant to your career • Submit a resume online
Web Tips • Develop a Strategy • Know what kind of information you are looking for so that you don’t get overloaded • Avoid sites that ask for money • Be careful about providing personal information • Quality sites offer protection for your name and address
Resources Don’t forget the • Guide for International Studies • H1VisaJobs.com • Directory of Foreign Firms Operating in the United States, or • The Directory of US Firms Operating Abroad
Summing It Up Defining your unique Competitive Advantage, researching your market and helping employers meet their needs provides the best opportunity to overcome obstacles presented by immigration policies and land the job you want!!
Final Thoughts • it’s a numbers game…the more you contact, the higher the odds that you gain access and exposure • success depends on • effective communication • personal commitment • dedication • thorough follow-up
Questions? For further information, contact the UCSO Help Desk or schedule time with a Career Coach