IT Job Coach Blog

Get the IT job you want at the salary you need

Identifying Your Personal Brand

Posted by Ric Ward on March 20, 2007

Following is an excellent article by Robin Ryan.

Can you quickly state what your key strengths are? Do you know what your career identity is? We’re not talking about your job title, but your career identity. It’s that unique authentic reputation you have among bosses, colleagues, and other employees. This reputation is what I call Brand You.

Personal branding may not be a term you are familiar with, but you need to be. It took me quite a while to consider exactly how I could teach someone else about self-marketing their personal brand in order to advance their career. The heavy ‘corporate brand’ advertising or marketing approach would lose people quickly. So I spent over two years working on the process, and the end result is in my newest book, “Soaring on Your Strengths.”

Your career identity is not some slick piece of advertising. Brand You is based on the authentic, talented, and genuinely unique and special person you are. It is not phony or conceited, or an exaggeration, nor is it a trick or fleeting fad. The components of Brand You are the essence of you as a person, which include: your work strengths, your image, your passion and your personality traits, along with other people’s perceptions of you, applied in a work-environment that enhances your productivity.

I recommend you give yourself a gift if you care about career advancement. No matter at what stage you are in your career — at the beginning, middle, or at a senior level — or if you are changing careers or reinventing yourself — you’ll have a game plan for your future. You will know how to self-promote and market yourself successfully to become the very best you can be.

Robin Ryan is considered America’s top career coach with over 1000 TV and radio appearances including Oprah and Dr. Phil. Robin has a busy career counseling practice providing individual career coaching, resumé writing services, interview preparation, salary negotiations, and outplacement to clients nationwide. She is the best-selling author of:

I highly recommend Robin’s work. I have found it to be inspirational and I use many of her ideas in my work with my own clients.

Richard (Ric) Ward
IT Job Coach

Posted in Career | No Comments »

Your job search business card

Posted by Ric Ward on March 19, 2007

Looking for work, conducting a job search, is in fact a business in its own right. You are selling your services and looking for interviews.

Every business person and sales person has a business card. And when you are engaged in a job search you need to have a Job Search Business Card to hand out to everyone you meet so they know what you are selling. It is a micro resume.

Your Job Search Business Card should have the following information:

  • Your name
  • Your degrees and any certifications
  • Keywords about your IT experience
  • Your email address
  • Your telephone number - it needs to have voice mail
  • A link to your web based resume and profile

This is an especially useful tool to hand-out to all of your family and friends. Afterall you cannot really expect them to remember what your information technology skillset is. And give 5 or 10 copies. Ask them to hand them out to their friends. Build your network of people who know about you. If you are not sure about how to network for success then this ebook - The Last Guide To Networking You’ll Ever Need - may be for you.

Richard (Ric) Ward
IT Job Coach

Posted in Job Search, Resumes | No Comments »

Using a web based resume and personal profile

Posted by Ric Ward on March 19, 2007

Every job seeker needs a web based resume.

A web based resume is a necessary tool in your job search toolbox in addition to your email ready resume and your print resume…and of course a text based resume for easy posting to job boards.

Publishing a resume on the Web is advantageous in a number of ways:

  • Employers can access your resume 24 hours a day - 7 days a week.
  • You can quickly refer a recruiter or potential employer to your web resume during an impromtu phone conversation.
  • You can provide a link to your online resume on your job search business card.
  • Web published resumes are readily found by employers using resume spider technology to find passive resumes
  • A web based resume enables you to include links to work samples (written work, graphic design, other Web pages you’ve designed, photographs, reports, etc.) that can demonstrate your skills to employers.

Here is a sample of a web based resume and personal portfolio available at IT Headhunter.net and JobsWorkCareers.com.

Richard (Ric) Ward
IT Job Coach

Posted in Resumes | No Comments »

The Last Guide To Networking You’ll Ever Need

Posted by Ric Ward on March 16, 2007

In this tough economy, people who find jobs usually do so by networking. Are you networking at least two hours a day? Have you already called everyone you know to ask them not for a job, but who they know that you should call? Have you called those people yet? If not, then you’re being left behind in the employment race by those who know how to network. Now, with The Last Guide to Networking You’ll Ever Need, you won’t lose out to those who network and you’ll have a huge advantage over those who don’t.

You’ve probably heard it before, and probably dozens of times. You’ve got to network to find a great new job. While that’s true, very few people know how to network and even fewer are able to communicate how to do so to others. It isn’t just calling your friends and family to ask for a job. An average person knows 250 people. If you call all of them and ask who they know, you’re only one step away from 62,500 people. You’re in a fight to land a job, right? Wouldn’t you rather have 62,500 people on your side than just yourself?

Written by Keith F. Luscher specifically for the job hunters, this new book will give you a clearer understanding of what networking is all about, and what it isn’t about. You’ll learn how to overcome your fear of picking up the phone. You’ll learn the vital importance of listening twice as often as you speak. And you’ll learn to make networking a daily habit rather than a short-term effort.

Find out more about The Last Guide to Networking You’ll Ever Need.

Posted in Networking, Reviews | No Comments »

I’m back

Posted by Ric Ward on March 10, 2007

After dipsy doodling back and forth with installing WordPress on my IT Job Coach website I’ve decided to move my blog to WordPress so that I can focus on the coaching and writing and not have to deal with updates and upgrades.

Technorati Profile

Posted in A Thought or Two | No Comments »

3 steps to having a recruiter talk to you when you call

Posted by Ric Ward on October 26, 2006

For any Job Seeker the key to success in working with a recruiter is understanding the recruiter gets paid by their client to find skilled, experienced candidates – they are not in the business of helping job seekers find jobs. So never ask a recruiter to help you find a job. Recruiters don’t help people find jobs. A recruiter helps their clients to find skilled and experienced personnel.

Any recruiter will talk to you if you have:

  • the skills that they are looking for a current job order or
     
  • if you have a skill-set and experience that they can market.
     

There are three simple steps you can take when calling a recruiter and they basically involve good telephone manners, common sense and a little preparation:

  1. You should write a script to use when you make a call to a recruiter.
     
  2. Introduce yourself when the recruiter answers the phone
     
  3. Give the recruiter a quick synopsis of your skills and experience
     

Step 1: You should write a script to follow when calling a recruiter. All professional sales people and telemarketers use scripts when making cold calls – and that is what you are doing…making a cold call. The script will contain Steps 2 and 3.

Step 2: When the recruiter answers the phone introduce yourself by name. Speak slowly and clearly…this is not a race. “Good morning, my name is Ric, Ric Ward.” Never start your phone conversation by asking “How are you?”

Step 3: And then give a quick synopsis of your skills and experience. For instance if you are a web designer you might say “I am an experienced web designer with 3 years experience using php and Dreamweaver and I am looking for work.”

Practice making these calls with a friend or family member.

I’ll be writing more about calling recuruiters in the coming days.

Richard (Ric) Ward
IT Job Coach

Posted in Job Search | No Comments »

9 Steps to a great resume cover letter

Posted by Ric Ward on October 17, 2006

Your Resume Cover Letter has only one purpose - to get your resume opened & read.

Your Resume Cover Letter must stimulate the recipient of your resume to open your resume and give you consideration. You are introducing yourself and saying that you have what it takes to do the job that they are trying to fill.

Cover Letter goes in the e-mail Message

In the age of e-mail your Cover Letter should go in the message of the e-mail and not as an attachment because it probably will not be opened and read as an attachment.

Keep your cover letter brief.

Assume that the person receiving your resume is busy - very busy. Be thoughtful and put yourself in their shoes. Keep your cover letter brief and to the point. You are not writing an essay or a novel. You are trying to communicate with someone who is probably very busy and you are competing for their attention.

There are 9 basic parts to a great Resume Cover Letter:

  1. Your name, telephone number and e-mail address at the top of the Cover Letter.
     
  2. Address the letter to someone in particular, if you can, or use To Whom It May Concern.
     
  3. Name the position that you are applying for unless a file reference number is requested, then use the file reference number.
     
  4. Briefly give an overview of your experience as it relates to the position being applied for.
     
  5. In point form list the 3 or 4 most career highlights that relate directly to the job according to the ad that you are responding to.
     
  6. Tell them that you have attached your resume that provides a detailed overview of your skills, experience, education, training and achievements.
     
  7. Thank the person reading your resume.
     
  8. Sign the e-mail with your name, home telephone number and personal e-mail address.
     
  9. Add a PS to the note telling the recepient that you check your voice mail and email on regular daily basis.
     

Remember - your Resume Cover Letter has only one purpose - to get your resume opened & read.

Richard (Ric) Ward
IT Job Coach

Posted in Resume Cover Letters | No Comments »