The Job Seekers Mini-Guide Everyone Needs To Read šŸ”®

Even if you still have a job

Over the past 18 months, 1.4 million over 55ā€™s in the UK have chosen not to return to the workplace since the pandemic, unsurprisingly prompting a productivity challenge.

The Great Resignation, or ā€˜The Great Reshuffleā€™ as LinkedIn cites it, is more than a curiosity - itā€™s a biting reality.

Meanwhile, tech companies have realised that their recent overinflated valuations are the latest self-induced bubble to burst. Some have lost 75% of their value. So, who pays the real price for this harsh reality check?

The C-Suite? No. The Shareholders? Some. The employees? Unfortunately, yes.

Regardless of the unique circumstances of recent times, history, unfortunately, repeats itself when companies get it wrong, and itā€™s the employees with boots on the ground who feel the seismic impact of others' mistakes.

Your CEO is ā€˜very sorryā€™, but where does that leave you?

Iā€™ve felt this pain myself over the years, with roles being ā€˜put at riskā€™ and two redundancies within the past eight years. I am so glad it happened! What? Harvey, get a grip mate. You heard me, I am glad.

So, why am I jumping over fields of daffodils to tell you about this?

It took some time and some pain, but it really helped me clarify what I really wanted. I knew something was ā€˜upā€™ for years as I gradually became professionally unfulfilled working in multinationals.

Financial constraints, life choices, or just plain old fear prevented me from taking control of my own career and from being at the mercy of others' decisions.

As you stare at the letter or email that states, ā€˜Your role is at riskā€™ or some variation of the same, I want to offer you not just my empathy - after all, Iā€™ve been there more than once - but some practical, reassuring steps you can take, to get you on the path to whatā€™s really next.

You Arenā€™t Really Prepared For Whatā€™s Next

Iā€™m guessing whatā€™s next for you has already happened. Only, you were not expecting it, nor were you ready for it.

A wise and philosophical former manager of mine used to give me insight into C-level discussions. He used to say, ā€œI include myself in this, Harvey, but always be ready for whatā€™s next.ā€

Itā€™s fair to say that when ā€˜whatā€™s next cameā€™ (redundancy), I was not as ready as I could have been because I did not pivot. I did not think more laterally about what I wanted to do; I defaulted to doing the same thing.

But we all know that doing the same thing yields the same results.

What if I want to step off the hamster wheel of corporate life?

At this particular point, I was not quite sure what I wanted to do was any different to what I already knew. That is to maintain the status quo.

You Are The Product

Another wise manager once advised me to understand what my value was in the market before deciding anything.

Given that this is central to how you position anything, we can concur that you are the product, and you need to know how to position yourself in the market you want to enter.

When career coaching my clients, I often advise those looking for career guidance to think of themselves as the product they are working on.

Do the same work on yourself that you would on your latest product or service.

Only through this process will you understand your value and know how to position yourself to the (job) market you are targeting. Get your positioning templates and frameworks out and put yourself through them.

You Need To Play The Numbers Game

You need to learn it and play it relentlessly.

If you apply for only one job and do not get it, you canā€™t be disappointed, as the odds are not in your favour.

Despite some markets having a rich number of vacancies, the number of people applying is insane! Weā€™re talking four figures in some cases! The chances of your application getting lost in the noise or to the applicant tracking software are pretty high.

From my own experience and learning from others in similar circumstances, the application-to-offer funnel is a lesson in harsh reality you need to learn.

Pre-Covid, the UK Department of Work and Pensions (šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡øDepartment of Labor) told me that only 5% of job applications result in a first interview.

That means 95% of applicants arenā€™t even considered as someone the hiring company wishes to meet with. When you dwindle on from that 5% who do make it, this funnels down to a very select few who make it to the 2nd or 3rd interview.

Just think of the meagre odds. You are barely feeding on scraps here.

From my own and my peer analysis, I found that you have a 1 in 100 chance of getting the job you applied for. Letā€™s run the maths:

  • I applied for 125 jobs

  • 32% came from recruiters who approached me

  • 35% of applications secured a first interview which is around 43 interviews

  • Of those 43 interviews, 50% of the time, I got a second interview

By the time I got down to the third round of various interviews, I had left around 5 viable job opportunities before I was eventually offered a job.

This means that despite a 35% ā€˜hit rateā€™ at the top of the funnel far exceeding the average, the conversion rate at the bottom of the funnel resulted in a less than 1% average. However, this can change entirely if you diversify and apply the power of your network.

The job application funnel does not need to be this way.

Is The Job Market Friend Or Foe? The Answer May Surprise You

It depends.

Despite all the doom and gloom of the tech world getting a bloody nose, the market facts were simple: there were more jobs available than candidates!

Twelve months ago, the market was driving salaries up and enriching offers for those well-positioned to take advantage. Not only was it a good time to pivot if you wanted to, but it was also an excellent time to move to a better version of the status quo.

Looking at the market now, it's totally the opposite. After multiple rounds of well-publicised layoffs, there are more candidates than jobs, and as a result, there's price pressure on salaries being offered.

We have moved from a sellers market during lockdown, to a buyers market, post layoff

But the key is to be a well-positioned thoroughbred in your field.

Thereā€™s Only One Person Who Will Suffer From Your Terrible LinkedIn Profile. You

In the past twenty years, Iā€™ve had five jobs. Two of the five gigs I applied for (outbound), and three of the five sought me out (inbound).

Ignoring the network effect and personal brand-building capability of networks such as LinkedIn is effectively saying to the market, ā€˜I donā€™t careā€™ and ā€˜Iā€™m not worth itā€™.

So why is it that most LinkedIn profiles are terrible?

Your profile and activity on LinkedIn are more important than your CV at this stage. There, I said it. Itā€™s more important than your CV. Recruiters with a LinkedIn Recruiter account can search and compare with ease (Iā€™ve had one, I know) and are more likely to approach you than entertain your application.

LinkedIn is the top-of-funnel for every job seeker and the platform for business engagement for everyone else

I hear it often. ā€˜Harvey. I am going to make a website for myself with my portfolio to show the world how shiny and fantastic I am.ā€™ I gave everyone the same advice; donā€™t waste your time or money.

I make no apologies if Iā€™m squeezing your creative juices for the simple fact that no one is looking for you. The fish mostly get caught on LinkedIn, and the oceans of LinkedIn are your opportunity to shine within the networks that care.

It might be that your profile right now is not so great, and you are in a job. What happens when a trigger such as redundancy happens?

Or you wake up one day massively unfulfilled, you have to start over, and it takes time, the time you already wasted on ā€˜my name.comā€™.

There are so many ways to raise your profile within networks that care. It can take a little time, but it should not cost you money. I encourage those in the product marketing community to contribute via article writing, event talks, or even becoming Ambassadors or Experts in Residence.

PMA provides the platform and the audience. If you want to create and contribute, you can start here.

They have meet-ups online and in person around the world, too, most recently in the UK, Australia, the US and Africa! Join the free Slack and engage with 40,000 like-minded product marketers.

This advice applies to everyone. In every field. Everywhere.

Do not ignore the power of the network. It is the roadmap to your next opportunity.

Your CV Needs To Be A Missile, Ready To Penetrate

If a rockstar profile on LinkedIn is top-of-funnel, then your CV/resume serves the consideration stage. Once a recruiter has reached out to you on LinkedIn, they will ask you for your CV/Resume.

This is the asset that gets circulated inside the company.

It has to say, ā€˜This is the candidate you have been looking for,ā€™ as if Yoda himself had used a Jedi mind trick on the whole organisation you are trying to join.

However, as a hiring manager of more years than I am willing to admit, I am still shocked at how terrible most CVs are.

There are two key considerations you need to take:

  1. Design and formatting

  2. The key content

What you donā€™t know is that your CV is an X-wing missile to penetrate the Death Star applicant tracking software (ATS), and if itā€™s not formatted for the purpose, the ATS will act like the Death Starā€™s reflection shield and blow you up!

For example, if you have fabulous key points to make contained within a border, the ATS will see an empty space, and you will not move through the funnel; your CV will have a terminal meeting with Darth Vader.

Applicant Tracking Software is like Darth Vaderā€™s Death Star

Almost impossible to penetrate

Now that you know your own positioning, the critical content should focus on keywords (the ATS will reward you), write a snappy synopsis of your career across no more than two pages, and use numbers to cite your achievements.

HR and hiring managers luuuurve numbers as it grounds discussions around your achievements. Yet, 95% of the CVs I see have zero numbers.

If Yoda were writing your CV, heā€™d tell you that ā€œThere is no try; there is only doā€. You need to do it.

If CVs Open Doors, Side Hustles Blow Them Right Off

Having a side hustle is a good diversification strategy, especially in the current climate. Volunteer, create a podcast, vlog, or blog for yourself or others in your chosen field. Do pro-bono work. Any of these things will serve to enhance your personal brand.

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The new consumption is creation

The beauty of side hustles, in general, is endless.

Firstly, they can create some excellent transferable skills to slide you into a different career path, which, following the aftermath of COVID-19, could make all the difference.

Plus, you might be getting paid to do something you enjoy on top of your regular income. It also signals to an employer that you're engaged in what is, hopefully, central to the positioning you have chosen for yourself.

Likewise, if youā€™re a marketer, create engaging, relevant content and market yourself. During these trying times, content online is being consumed at a breakneck pace, so there is an actual demand for it.

If you are not sure how to go about this, there is plenty of free content to absorb on the likes of LinkedIn Learning or YouTube to sharpen your skills.

Remember that the power of your network and your personal impact is your net worth in this context. If your CV is a door opener, this will blow that door right off its hinges. So as challenging as it is and no matter how many knock-backs you face, keep the productivity levels up and eventually, that work will have an impact.

Help Is At Hand. You Just Need To Know Where To Look

Most of us are not experts at applying or interviewing for a job. Why should we be? We want to be good at being in work! Inevitably, though, these challenging times come around for all of us, so letā€™s review some of the available resources.

Suzy Welsh rocks it on MSNBC with her Get To Work series. She founded the Jack Welch Management Institute, which Princeton Review and CEO Magazine rank as one of the top online MBA programs in the world. Suzy has excellent advice for anyone looking for work. Check out the whole series of free videos here.

Iā€™ll post another Mini-Guide on how to ace the interview soon, so stay tuned to the Below The Waterline newsletter!

Your five-step plan

So there you have it, challenges afoot but nothing insurmountable. There are five key steps:

  1. Consider yourself a product and market yourself as you would the widget you were responsible for in your last job

  2. Take your LinkedIn profile and your CV seriously. These are your assets for the ā€˜funnelā€™

  3. Getting a new job is your new job (for now), so plan relentlessly, know your numbers and execute flawlessly.

  4. Ask for help.

  5. Build, grow and enrich your network to deliver value to them.

Despite the positive overtones Iā€™m playing, itā€™s tough being out of work.

It's hard on you, hard on your loved ones, and sometimes hard on your finances. Itā€™s too easy to get into a negative spiral. After all, rejection is not easy to take, but unfortunately, itā€™s a part of life.

And the last thing anyone needs after an unprecedented two-year lockdown is to lose their job - in some cases, again.

I am appealing to the sense of goodwill of everyone in the business community. Iā€™ve seen the power of networks at play, the generosity of others and happy career-search endings.

But only you can make it happen. If you take and follow through on 50% of the lived-in advice in this article, youā€™ve moved forward further than you know.

Itā€™s hard. Itā€™s not your fault. You are not alone, and you can and should ask for help.

Be kind to yourself. Be kind to one another.

Harvey.

Client Love ā¤ļø

Itā€™s been my pleasure to coach several outstanding professionals recently. All came to me needing help.

Of my last 6 recent clients, 5 were back in work within 8 weeks.

I warmly invite you to consider asking me for help. You can learn more about how I do that and read testimonials from some of my recent clients here.

If you need actionable career inspiration, an excellent place to start is to read my multi-award-winning #1 book, Backstage Pass.

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