Job Seekers Success: Teach

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Showing posts with label Teach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teach. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

What An Almost Five-Year-Old Can Teach Job Seekers About Interviewing

InterviewingOver the weekend, I attended a pre-holiday gathering. One of the little boys there – we’ll call him Jessie – was 4.75 years of age, soon to be a full five years old! Jessie is hilarious, smart and not afraid of asking questions – many of them. He doesn’t think questions are weird, uncomfortable, complicated, strange, stupid or silly – he just thinks they are questions.

I have been thinking about Jessie and his incessant questioning.

Will you roll down the big hill with me?

Do you want to play in the “leafs?”  

Can I frost the cake with you?

How come you don’t like whipped cream?

Why do you wear lipstick?

In a conversation this morning with a client, we were chatting about the questions she feared being asked. How would she respond? What would she say? How will she remember everything? What if she messes up? What if her answers are wrong?

Jessie isn’t afraid of questions – yet.

He hasn’t learned how not to ask questions – yet.

He hasn’t learned how to fear questions being asked of him – yet.

He doesn’t know how not to be curious – yet.

He doesn’t worry about what someone else will think about his "brand" – yet.

Jessie doesn’t care if he falls down, gets dirty and gets “leafs” all over himself  – give him two seconds, and he’s back at it again – full steam ahead.

When you go to your job interview this week, here’s an idea to consider:

Ask good questions. Give the best answers you can. Be curious; stay curious.

And, if the interview doesn’t go the way you want, give yourself a couple of seconds and get back at it again – full steam ahead.

cross-posted billiesucherblog


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Tuesday, March 20, 2012

What The Voice Can Teach You About Job Interviewing

Image 2012 0313vAre you watching The Voice? I love this show – not only do I enjoy watching the contestants, I really like the constructive feedback from Adam, Blake, Cee Lo and Christina. If by chance you are interviewing for a job, perhaps you will consider clearing your calendar on a few Monday evenings to tune in to this two-hour program. As silly as it may sound, I would even encourage you to take notes. Shown below are a few feedback examples from last night’s performances:

More emotion.

More heart.

More story.

Hungry for it.

Soul.

Flattery will get you everywhere.

Don’t be too crazy.

Do not seem intimidated.

Love your style.

Love your energy.

Come out swingin’.

Be present.

Be here.

Focus on your own uniqueness without being in contrast to someone else.

Know your strengths and use them.

Will your next job interview warrant a four-chair turnaround?

Check out next week’s show – who knows, that little tip of free advice may be the very one to win you your dream job!


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Thursday, July 28, 2011

Teaching Others to Teach Others is the Biggest Reward

What is your wish and what do you have that others might wish for?

This past week, I have heard amazing stories of entrepreneurs who almost in their final hours said, “What the heck, I’m going to do what I always wanted.” And they “went for it” in a big way.

However, this isn’t a story about one individual becoming ultra wealthy. The people I came to meet both in-person and online, without exception, had a dream of helping others; the by-product was helping themselves and their business.

photoOne woman has built a hospital for ailing children. Ella Waldrup is now fund raising for an accommodating facility to house the parents so they may spend quality time with their children and meet with their doctors on a moment’s notice. The foundation is named after Ella’s son who passed. She calls it the Phillip J. Waldrup Foundation.

Several people this week mentioned they are working to bring clean drinking water into poor and forgotten countries. What is extraordinary is funds received for these projects go to the indigenous people of each area to build what’s required to bring clean water, but none of the funds go to administrative functions. It’s a 100% donation for the purpose of clean water

A good friend of mine, Valeri Bocage, in spite of having lost everything in Hurricane Katrina never lost her vision for empowering women worldwide. Today she has established chapters for women to network in thirty cities around the world, and Powerful Women International is growing by leaps and bounds.

In each case, these businesses and dreams presented themselves in the wake of disaster. Realization hit each that what they originally faced was opportunity in disguise.

As my friends remained steadfast in their belief of helping, teaching and empowering others, they began attracting people who could help them grow their business. Help came in many forms including donations, connections, and in some cases affluent investors. You can see that as they build goodwill for people everywhere, the goodwill is returned in kind. In turn, their brand took off as others began to pay attention.

Likewise, it became easier to ask for money, create events that sell out and develop new ideas to further build a bridge to communities that need help.

Each friend had modest beginnings and faced severe obstacles but had a vision worth pursuing. The people they now encounter help promote these enterprises by keeping everyone they know up to date on their progress. But most of all, these savvy entrepreneurs teach others how to empower those they know and so on down the line.

Once we teach, and teach how to teach, the change becomes enormous. When we form a chain by holding out hands across the planet, big change is possible bringing about peace and hope for all. It’s only possible when we take a leap of faith to try.

Thinking bigger, recognizing the value you bring, and distributing your knowledge will help build your brand in a most uplifting manner for all.

Author:

Elinor Stutz, CEO of Smooth Sale, LLC authored the International Best-Selling book, “Nice Girls DO Get the Sale: Relationship Building That Gets Results” and “HIRED! How to Use Sales Techniques to Sell Yourself On Interviews”. She provides team sales training, private coaching and business retreats to grow you business. She is available upon request for consultation.

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Thursday, May 12, 2011

What ‘Angry Birds’ Can Teach You About Getting Hired

Author’s Note: This is the fourth in a series of blogs in which author of the best-selling “Headhunter” Hiring Secrets: The Rules of the Hiring Game Have Changed . . . Forever! and professional “headhunter” Skip Freeman draws an analogy between “Angry Birds,” the wildly popular online game, and another, far more important game—the hiring game. Previous blogs in this series are: The Pig’s Lair (Part I); Are YOU the ‘Red Bird’? (Part II); and How to Become MORE than just the ‘RED BIRD’ (Part III).

At the end of Part III of this blog series, I said that the next installment (this one) would consider the characteristics of the “blue bird.” But just this week I encountered a situation that so clearly illustrated the necessity for quickly moving beyond being just the “red bird” and adopting the characteristics of the “yellow bird” that I simply had to postpone the “blue bird” until the next installment.

For those of you who are “Angry Birds” aficionados, you may already know the characteristics of the “yellow bird;” for those of you who are not, here are those characteristics:

The “YELLOW BIRD,” when tapped, flies off at warp speed, crashing through the barriers the pigs have set up to keep you from getting the egg.photo

In other words, unlike the “red bird,” who merely “loads” himself into the “sling shot” and “fires” himself off willy-nilly, HOPING to crash through the barriers the pigs have set up, the “yellow bird” is wily, aggressive, assertive and knows precisely how to break through the barrier and attain his desired goal!

As we’ve already seen in this series, many (if not MOST) job seekers start out as the “red bird,” usually by responding to, say, an online posting, and never advance beyond the “red bird” stage during their entire job search. That is, they, like the “red bird,” “load” themselves into the “sling shot” and “fire” themselves off willy-nilly at a company—HOPING that—somehow!—they will break through the “barriers” set up by the company! That somehow they will hear back from the company and get an interview. Not a very sound strategy and certainly not a very reliable way to achieve the objective of getting an interview for a new job in today’s job market.

A brief aside . . .

This past week I spoke to about 300 juniors and seniors at the University of Alabama about the hypercompetitive, brutal job market of 2011. I asked the audience, “Who plays Angry Birds?” and the majority raised their hand.

I next asked, “Can anyone tell me about the ‘red bird’?” One young lady quickly responded, “A bird that is pretty useless!”

And there you have it! “A bird that is pretty useless,” and that is how many job seekers today position themselves, how they BRAND themselves. As noted in previous blogs—and as is certainly worth restating here—companies are NOT in the business of hiring people. They are in the business of making money. So the ONLY way for anyone to get hired in this economy is to brand themselves as someone who can make a company money or save a company money (or, ideally, accomplish both of these things). (See Part III, “How to Become MORE Than Just the RED BIRD!”)

And, just for the record, companies don’t hire job seekers, either. They hire revenue and profit producers.

Now to this past week’s example of how a “red bird” quickly learned how to become a “yellow bird.”

I received a LinkedIn InMail from a job seeker with this subject line: “Looking for a job.” This person immediately branded himself as a “red bird”! He had “flung” himself out there, HOPING something would happen. I responded to his InMail and suggested that he consider subject lines such as, “Driver of new business,” “Profit Producing Performer,” or “Successful marketer in the age of Twitter.” (You see, according to this person’s LinkedIn profile, he was in MARKETING! Unfortunately, however, I couldn’t tell from his profile precisely what he had done. I could see what he NOW does, but I was left clueless about his past accomplishments and achievements, if any.)

In my response back to this applicant, I told him that, with the subject line “Looking for a job,” he had just BRANDED himself as “weak” and “desperate,” not as a proven marketer with prowess and significant accomplishments that could be expected to tweak the interest of a potential employer. I also noted that he wasn’t marketing himself as a marketer should—yet here he was claiming to be a marketer! (I admit I was a little hard on this young man, but I really felt he needed a dose of “reality”!)

To his credit, he wrote back, saying, “Skip, I am duly embarrassed and you are right.”

It wasn’t long before I noticed that he had revamped his LinkedIn profile to include the fact that he had launched three new products in 2010, achieving over $1 million in sales! Additionally, a notable industry publication awarded one of the products the distinction of “product of the year” in a particular category! (Talk about “hiding your light under a bushel!”)

Now, THAT is BRANDING! That is showing that you can MAKE A COMPANY MONEY or SAVE A COMPANY MONEY!

Branding yourself as someone who can make a company money or save a company money enables you—like the “yellow bird”!—to go after the company at warp speed and crash through the barriers they have set up to keep you from getting the job.

To be successful in today’s brutal job market, you MUST become the “yellow bird”! You MUST power yourself up with quantifiable accomplishments and achievements. You MUST define, specifically, how you can MAKE A COMPANY MONEY or SAVE A COMPANY MONEY, or ideally, accomplish BOTH of these things. Once you do this, the chances of winning that job go from hope to reality.

Next: The “Blue Bird” Job Search Methodology

Author:

Skip Freeman is the author of “Headhunter” Hiring Secrets: The Rules of the Hiring Game Have Changed . . . Forever! and is the President and Chief Executive Officer of The HTW Group (Hire to Win), an Atlanta, GA, Metropolitan Area Executive Search Firm. Specializing in the placement of sales, engineering, manufacturing and R&D professionals, he has developed powerful techniques that help companies hire the best and help the best get hired.

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Monday, April 18, 2011

What Angry Birds can Teach you About Getting Hired

Editor’s Note: This is the third in a series of blogs where author of the best-selling “Headhunter” Hiring Secrets: The Rules of the Hiring Game Have Changed . . . Forever! and professional “headhunter” Skip Freeman draws an analogy between “Angry Birds,” the wildly popular online game, and another, far more important game—the hiring game. Previous blogs in this series are: The Pig’s Lair (Part I) and Are YOU the ‘Red Bird’? (Part II).

As a quick review: We are on level 1 . . . the game starts . . . and the first bevy of birds is set to go—three bouncing, flipping red birds. We pull back the sling shot, let a red bird fly, sit back and watch what happens. The bird (job seeker) sails through the air, the screen moves from left to right, the lair (company) comes into view, the bird (job seeker) hits somewhere and “hopefully” we achieve a breakthrough by knocking down some of the barriers surrounding the lair (company), enabling us to find a way in and get to the pigs (influencers and decision makers).

(By the way, we are NOT suggesting that influencers and hiring managers are pigs! This is simply an analogy of the game.)

So, what do most people do when they first decide to look for a new job? They “load” themselves into the “sling shot,” become a “red bird” and “fire” themselves off willy-nilly at a company after finding some posting online, sending in their résumé and hoping they will achieve a breakthrough by getting an interview with the company.

For the first nine levels of the game the only bird you encounter is the red bird and it has rather limited capabilities: It can fly through the air, hit a barrier and, depending upon where and how it hits, it may or may not break through the barrier(s) and enter the lair (company).

I see day-in and day-out people with exceptional capabilities simply positioning themselves as the common red bird with limited abilities, which ensures they will limit their abilities to knock down the barriers and break into the company.

Let’s start with your basic branding document in a job search—your résumé.

As a preface, here is a critical “Headhunter” Hiring Secret: companies are NOT in the business of hiring people. Companies are in the business of making money! We all have limited resources, including companies. Thus, you will only get hired if you can make them more money than what they can make with the alternative uses of their cash.

U.S. companies are currently sitting on $1.9 trillion in cash, the most since 1959. We constantly hear politicians and the news media clamoring for companies to use the money to create jobs. That’s not why they exist. In a capitalistic economy, companies are not instruments of social justice. They are businesses. And, whether you (or I) think that is “right” is totally beside the point. What must be accepted is this: It is one of the rules of the hiring game and a job seeker ignores it at their own peril.

What this means is that there are only two reasons you will get hired. You must show a company that you can:

• Make them money; or,
• Save them money

Ideally, of course, you would be able to do BOTH of these things for a company. And where (and how) do you begin showing a potential employer how you can do either (or both) of these things for them? Your résumé!

Our executive search firm, The HTW (Hire to Win) Group, receives approximately 200 resume a day. Over 90% fail to address how the individual can “make a company money or save a company money.”

Let me provide two examples from just this past week:

This first example is from a professional who sent in his resume for a National Accounts Manager’s position we are recruiting for that has a base salary of $100K to $120K:

Regional Sales Manager (2009- Present)

• Managed accounts in U.S., Canada and Mexico
• Analyzed and improved packaging efficiencies for largest customer
• Product manager for new product in development
• Planned and coordinated inventory for largest customers
• Worked with Distributors to increase sales to end users
• Primary Liaison between Customers and Manufacturing

This person tells us what they did, but what he failed to tell us is HOW he did it! What was the end result of his actions? What are the pertinent “numbers”? What percentages of increase do his actions represent? What are the dollar amounts involved?

This person has been excluded from further consideration for the position. (See “How Do You Get Hired? First, Don’t Lose!“)

Here is the other example. This is from a person who has a B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering and is interested in an opportunity for an Instrumentation and Controls position with one of our client companies. The base pay for this position is $80K.

Electrical Engineer – XYZ Company – 2007 to present

• Design, build, test and troubleshoot electrical and electronic components
• Experience with AC and DC systems
• Implement methods to increase production rates
• Experience working with assembly line in the production of control systems
• Experience working with drills, thread machines and other production tools
• Handle electrical and mechanical devices required for the production unit
• Experience handling batteries, controllers, converters, regulators, motors, generators, relays, shunts, rheostats, etc.
• Responsible for quality assurance of the systems produced

Again, how much did this person’s efforts and methods increase production rates? What impact did they have on quality assurance of the systems produced? Did their troubleshooting save the company (or the end user) money or prevent lost productivity?

As a job seeker, it is critical that you brand yourself with quantifiable accomplishments and achievements that are translatable into pertinent DOLLARS, PERCENTAGE and NUMBERS! (And, coincidentally, every communication—résumé, cover letters, direct mail letters, LinkedIn InMails, etc.—should contain these quantifiable measurements.

Without branding yourself as someone who can “make a company money or save a company money” you simply will NOT get hired. You simply will bounce off the “barriers” set up by the company, much like the red bird does off the pig’s lair.

The moral of this blog? You MUST become MORE than just the “Red Bird”!

Next Week: Part 4 – The Blue Bird

Author:

Skip Freeman is the author of “Headhunter” Hiring Secrets: The Rules of the Hiring Game Have Changed . . . Forever! and is the President and Chief Executive Officer of The HTW Group (Hire to Win), an Atlanta, GA, Metropolitan Area Executive Search Firm. Specializing in the placement of sales, engineering, manufacturing and R&D professionals, he has developed powerful techniques that help companies hire the best and help the best get hired.

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Saturday, April 2, 2011

What Can “Angry Birds” Teach You About Getting Hired?

What in the world can “Angry Birds,” the ubiquitous, phenomenally popular game for hand held devices by Rovio Mobile, teach you about getting hired? You might be surprised to learn that the answer to this question is PLENTY!

“Angry Birds” just passed the 100 million downloads mark. If you have downloaded the game yourself you already know what all the “buzz” is about, and you may already be a “pig-slaughtering,” “slingshot-wielding” addict. (I must confess, I am!)

As discussed in an earlier blog in this series (“Is Hiring a Game? Yes, it is!”), usually, when we think of games, we think of an activity or event that is a diversion, sport or some other form of competitive entertainment. Based upon that definition, “Angry Birds” clearly qualifies as a game. But, as we’ve seen in previous blogs in this series, hiring is also a game.

To briefly review, according to game theory, a game is defined as an event or situation involving two or more players, in which each player may win or lose, based upon the decisions that they themselves—or others— make or fail to make. In addition, virtually all games have the following elements in common:

• Players
• Payoffs
• Rules
• Strategy
• Uncertainty
• Common knowledge
• Uncommon knowledge

So back to “Angry Birds.” The principal object of the game is for the player to use the birds, fired with a slingshot, to “pop” all the pigs that are housed in structures made of stone, wood and ice. If the player is able to break through the structures and “pop” all of the pigs before using up all the birds, then he or she advances to the next level.

One of the many skills and strategies that Angry Birds can help us with (or provide us with a way to compensate) is our short-term memory ability (or generally, the lack thereof.)

How many times, for example, are we introduced to someone and just 15 seconds later we can’t remember their name? Or we hear a phone number and we can’t even remember 7 digits! Quite common for most of us, wouldn’t you agree?

As a job candidate, it’s quite commonplace for you to go into a company and meet half a dozen or more people during the day of interviews. And then what happens? One of them sees you in the hallway later and you can’t remember his or her name! Not so good, and certainly no way to make a good impression!

When we first start to play “Angry Birds” at any given level, we see the pig’s shelter and where the pigs are located within that shelter for two seconds. (The same amount of time it takes for someone to say, “Hi, I am Jim Smith.”) The screen then moves to the left, moving the pigs out of sight and bringing into view the bevy of bouncy, chirpy, flipping birds behind the slingshot.

I don’t know about you, but when I first started playing the game, I was not able to remember the layout of the pig’s lair? So I just started shooting birds willy-nilly which was ineffective.

I soon realized two things:

First, I needed to start remembering where the pigs were within their lair (i.e., working on my short-term memory skills) or figuring out a way to compensate. Our brain, like any muscle when exercised, gets stronger. Angry Birds provides a fun way to exercise and improve our short term memory which enhances our brand and, without question, improves our ability to effectively play the hiring game.

Secondly, Angry Birds does indeed give us “normal” humans a way to compensate for our lack of short-term memory. We can “pinch down” the screen and now see both the pig’s lair and the bevy of birds on one screen.

So when you have met six people at a company during an interview, you must be able to address them by name later in the day or you will have almost guaranteed your elimination from the hiring process (game). Thus, you must either improve your short term memory skills or compensate in some manner. For example, you can compensate by making sure you get each person’s business card and quickly jotting down on the card something that enables you to remember them. (Jim Smith – brown hair, tall, mustache, glasses.) Now, when Jim says “hello” to you in the hallway three hours later, you can remember his name and make a solid impression.

Think about this situation. You applied for a position online and the hiring company later calls you about the position—and you don’t even remember which position you applied for or the name of the company having the opening, let alone remembering anything specific and pertinent about the company itself! Again, not a very good way to make a good first impression.

Or you contacted a recruiter about an opening you saw advertised and he or she calls you back and you can’t remember why you called! This situation can quickly evolve into a distressing one. Let me give you an example, based upon my own experience just last week, of how disastrous this scenario can play out for a job candidate.

A person (I’ll just refer to as “Sam”) called my executive recruiting firm and left me this voice mail message:

“Skip, this is Sam. I am calling about the National Account Business Development Manager’s position. My phone number is…….”

When I called him back (1) I introduced myself, (2) I told him my firm’s name, (3) stated that I was returning his call (4) regarding the National Account Business Development Manager’s position. His immediate response:

“Tell me your name again, please?”

OK, I will give him the benefit of the doubt at this point. I may have caught him off guard and he didn’t hear my name.

We went on to speak about the position after which he asked,

“Now, what is the title of this position again?”

As a recruiter, it is my job to identify and qualify only the best professionals for my client so I am now beginning to question the mental agility of this particular potential candidate. I told him, again, the title of the position after which he asked,

“What is the name of your company again?”

After telling him that again, he concluded with,

“And how did you get my name?”

To which I replied,

“As I mentioned, I am returning your call. You called me. That is how I got your name.”

We are now up to four strikes and clearly this person has several short-term memory “challenges.” Not at all a good first impression for someone competing for a high-level position that will pay $100K plus. (Which is why one of my secrets in “Headhunter” Hiring Secrets for job seekers is to never answer the phone. Unless you have superior short-term memory skills, you must compensate. Let the call go into voice mail so that, when you retrieve the message, you can write down the pertinent facts in regard to who is calling and why. You can then review your notes in regard to the position you applied to before you call them back. (You are keeping records aren’t you?))

So, needless to say, I quickly excluded “Sam” from further consideration. (See the previous blog in this series entitled, “How do you get Hired? First Don’t Lose.”) Sam lost before he even got into the hiring game!

So, let’s circle back to the original question posed in this blog: What can “Angry Birds” teach you about getting hired? Among the many things it can teach you or help you further develop, is the all-important job-hunting and branding skill of having a good short-term memory. (Or showing you that you need to learn how to effectively compensate for weakness in this skill.) As a result, you will enhance your professional image, improve your brand and, if you are a job seeker, help you avoid getting eliminated from the hiring process. Add to all of that that “Angry Birds” is GREAT fun to play and you’ll benefit both personally and professionally! Not a bad deal any way you look at it!

Next week: What Angry Birds can Teach You About Getting Hired – Part 2 (Are you the Red Bird?)

Author:

Skip Freeman is the author of “Headhunter” Hiring Secrets: The Rules of the Hiring Game Have Changed . . . Forever! and is the President and Chief Executive Officer of The HTW Group (Hire to Win), an Atlanta, GA, Metropolitan Area Executive Search Firm. Specializing in the placement of sales, engineering, manufacturing and R&D professionals, he has developed powerful techniques that help companies hire the best and help the best get hired.

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