Importance of your job search
By Paul Debognies
More Details at: http://www.career-builder-information.com Importance of your job search Copyright 2004 by Paul Debognies / Career Builder Information
So that you can decide just how critical your job hunt is in your
total life scheme, let's put a kind of frame around the importance
of the effort ahead. The difficulty is, most people don't know where to go to get highly valuable job interview tips and help. It's true there are mountains
of interview questions and interviewing data available online, but
the truth is, very few sites are really qualified to give you
effective & proven advice. Besides, don't you want to sound different than your competition? Don't you think the people you are competing against for your next
job have combed through all the FREE job search engines interviewing
information online? Of course they have. So what will give you that
competitive advantage on your job search? That is exactly where I come in! I created an e-book "How to apply for a job!" that will teach you a proactive new strategy to help you successfully beat out your competition and get the job of your
dreams. After studying this e-book, you will know far more than
nine out of ten applicants do about the best ways to cope
successfully with obscure but critical problems that defeat so many
job seekers. More than that – and this is important – you will know
more than most employers do about the dynamics controlling hiring
decisions. With that knowledge, your job search can become an
exciting challenge in which you confidently approach employers as an
equal to negotiate the best possible working relationship – a
challenge offering vast promise for your future. In truth, you may
find – as many do – that it becomes a fascinating game.
Unhappily, the path pursued by most job seekers is nothing like
that. Instead, they take a tortuous, trial-and-error, castabout
approach as they try to figure out, without competent guidance, what
steps are most likely to turn up a job. For many, it becomes a
desperate, soul-shattering problem. For most, heavy delays that
routinely add days, weeks, even months or years to their
unemployment despite the millions of jobs that, literally, are
available each day but are going unfilled. Such is the impact of ill-
conceived placement systems that dominate hiring action today.
It would be much better, instead, simply to give all applicants
access to good, strong, authoritative help – like in our e-book – on
how to deal most efficiently and effectively with your job-search
problems. Learn more at:
Reflect on it.
A job is not just a job. Half of you waking hours are devoted to
it. Its quality ramifies through all other aspects of your life.
It determines your productivity and how far you will go in achieving
full self-realization. It governs your happiness, the happiness of
your family, where you live, and how well. The quality of the job
you land now will inevitably affect the quality of your next one.
It will even determine the kind of education and opportunities your
children will have and, consequently, their future prospects. Not
to mention whether your retirement years will be beautiful or bleak.
With all that and so much more hanging on the outcome, good sense
says you should proceed with your job-finding campaign as though
your life depends on it. In fact, most of it does.
When you get right down to it, aiming for a really good job doesn't
require more effort than setting your sights on a poor one. And
aiming high leaves you in far better control of the outcome.
Consequently, it is plainly your duty - your duty to yourself, your
family, your new employer, even to society – to proceed with your
job search in ways that will produce work as close as possible to
the peak of your abilities and at the highest possible pay.
Yet, few job seekers – even though their careers, their lives, are
on the line – sense that such urgent considerations require a
carefully planned approach. And, unhappily, it is generally not in
the interest of people who know better – the employment agencies and
other applicant services – to show them a better way.
So that you will know what to avoid and the strong advantage you
will have if you plans your approach, it is important to understand
this: Most people – and that includes others who want the job you
want – do a very poor job of job finding. In the absence of
adequate guidance, their only alternative is to cast about in the
job market while painfully learning lessons by trial and error that
have already been painfully learned, at least in some small parts,
by tens of millions of applicants before them – at a great cost of
time, money, morale, and employment. Virtually all make critical –
and entirely avoidable – mistakes, mistakes that delay the day when
they are hired.
Now perhaps you are one of the many recent unfortunate who have been
downsized by their company, or maybe you are beginning a job search
so you can enhance your career. Which ever the case may be, looking
for employment in today's highly competitive job market is not easy.
There are so many good candidates competing for the same position
today, that landing your "dream job" is becoming more and more
difficult.
That being the case, when an opportunity arises where you are called
to go on job interviews, you need to be ready, and fully prepared.
The employment interview is by far, the single most important step
in landing a job. So, you have to be sure that you do well when
answering tough interview questions, because if you don't, you will
not get a second chance.
Because your career is so important, isn't it worth taking five
minutes now to discover exactly how my e-book can make you rise to
the top of the list of candidates? You decide. It's time for you to
take the stress and headaches out of the job hunting process. And,
it's especially difficult if you have been out of the job-seeking
role for a while. I'd like to help you.
http://www.career-builder-information.com
*Article by Paul Debognies, visit www.career-builder-information.com
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