The good jobs, the ones we all strive for are fewer and
harder to get than ever. This means, conversely, that you need to be better
prepared than others, more on your game and at your best. If you do not
recognize this, you obviously haven’t been in the current jobs market or you’re
simply going through the motions with your fingers crossed, or, you think
you’re extra special and a good job is going to find you.
Regardless, any claim you make about your employment
history, duties, accomplishments and anything you put on your resume needs to
be verifiable. I am not talking about a job you had for three weeks that you selected
not to put on your resume; this is trivia and unnecessary minutiae, in my view.
But let me share an easy example. I read an article recently that suggests if
you haven’t worked in a while, simply get some business cards made and award
yourself with the business title of consultant
and “voila”, problem solved and gap accounted for. Some people do, in fact,
consult while between jobs or as an extension of their work, so this is not an
indictment of those actually doing this kind of work and, why not, if they have
expertise from which they can leverage or profit. However, I’m a long-experienced
headhunter and I can identify and shoot down BS very quickly. I would simply
ask them for examples of their clients and what they’ve done for them – in
other words, show me the evidence. Trust me -- any experienced interviewer
knows to do the same.
This goes back to the point about what I am writing today.
Any claim you make on your resume must be backed up and provable; it validates your
claims. And by doing so, by being prepared and ready with facts, figures,
active references and/or reference letters, you will have more confidence. Combined,
these things will set you apart from most people, who either cannot or don’t
bother to take the interview process as seriously. Oddly, for such a serious
endeavor the vast majority are doing nearly nothing except sending resumes and
crossing their fingers. Not everyone is a top-ranked sales person, employee of
the month, or an award winner – but, you don’t have to be. In reality it
doesn’t take too much effort to separate yourself from the crowd. Sometimes the
difference between mediocrity and excellence is marked by small things, which
taken together make a difference; therefore, just be prepared so that whatever
claim you make can stand up to scrutiny.
The example of good work life balance "The employees of company have not use their system for searching another jobs"
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