10 Tips for a Successful Job Search

2009 July 23
by Corinne Hoener

I’ve been pretty quiet lately, I know. But that’s because I’ve been focusing intensely on my job search. I’ve been at it for about two months now and let me tell you: looking for work is every bit as demoralizing and depressing as everyone says it is. You bang out cover letter after excellent cover letter and the calls still may not come. It can be rough on your self-esteem and motivation.

However, I’ve learned a few things through my ongoing job hunt and I’d like to share them with the hope that perhaps they will help fellow job hunters just a little bit.

Be organized!

Be organized! I cannot stress this enough. Fortunately, I am naturally inclined to color-code and categorize, so when it came time to start my job search the first thing I did was create a Google Docs spreadsheet to keep the process running smoothly. I’ve saved it as a template here, so anyone can use it. Check it out.

This serves a few purposes. First, you can track your progress. How many applications do you send out each week? When were the jobs posted and when did you apply for them? (The less distance between those dates, the better.)  Second, it’s an easy way to keep lots of information tidy and accessible. Who is the contact person for this application? Is there a due date? Are there special instructions? Avoid making silly mistakes simply by taking a little extra effort to organize.

Unless you’re really lucky, you will have completed dozens of applications by the time you find a job - keep track of all of them.

Set goals and be realistic!
It is important to have a goal for how many applications you submit each week. But if that goal is too high, you’ll disappoint yourself and become demoralized. If that goal is too low, you’ll have given yourself an excuse to slack.  Be realistic about how long it can take to write a quality cover letter and tailored resume. (Don’t just send out form letters! Bad strategy!) My personal goal is four completed applications a week. Sometimes I can do more and then I can feel particularly good about myself.

Exercise!
Even if you don’t normally exercise, now that you’re unemployed, you are almost certainly engaging in less physical activity than you were when you had a job. My current “commute” is the five feet between my bed and my desk. Just two months ago I was accustomed to walking at least a couple miles per day around campus. You and your body will respond badly to this decline in activity, making you less productive. Put in the extra effort to get yourself out of the house and moving around.

Volunteer!
Now, this is a good idea, but it comes with a caveat. Volunteering can be great for many reasons - you gain experience, you meet others with similar interests, and it’s good for your community. However, given the unemployment rate right now, even a volunteer job can be difficult to get. Since becoming unemployed, I’ve submitted a couple volunteer applications and have not gotten called. So if you can volunteer, do so, but don’t focus too much of your energy on landing a job that won’t get you a pay check.

Go to MeetUps!
Search meetup.com for professional groups in your field of interest and go to their social meetings. It’s a great way to meet people and network. When employers receive hundreds of applications for a job, you need to have an extra edge to get yourself noticed. Knowing an employee at the organization who can put in a good word for you might be all you need to get noticed.

Now I must admit, this is great advice that I haven’t taken myself yet. Showing up for a group meeting when you don’t know anyone can be very intimidating. If that’s not your style, no worries. But if you’re not too shy, go for it; it could help.

Send your documents as attachments AND in the body of the email!
Some job postings want your documents (cover letter, resume, etc) as attachments, some job postings want them as plain text in the email itself, but most do not specify. Follow the specific instructions given, if there are any, but if there’s not, it’s a good idea to do both. That way you’ve got your all your bases covered.

I always write individualized cover letters, but I use a form email. I use TextExpander to have this  text pop up after a short command (saves a lot of time):

To Whom It May Concern,

I am writing to apply for the [INSERT POSITION] position with [INSERT ORGANIZATION]. Attached you will find my cover letter and resume in PDF format. For your convenience, I have also included the plain text of those documents in the body of this email (see below).

If selected for an interview, I can be reached at corinne.hoener@gmail.com or 347.410.1857. If hired, I can begin working immediately.

Thank you for your time and consideration.

Best wishes,
Corinne Hoener.

Use PDF files!
I use a Mac as my primary machine and I built my cover letter/resume form from a Pages template. My documents looked very, very pretty on my Mac. Satisfied, I sent out a couple of applications. Then, just for funsies, I downloaded my resume onto my parents’ aging PC to check it out.

Holy formatting problems, Batman!! Word 2003 didn’t even have the font I was using so the whole document looked horrible. Ever since then, I’ve saved my documents as PDFs and sent those out. With PDF your formating is preserved and will look the same on any computer. It’s easy to save a document as a PDF. If you’re using MS Word on a Mac, just go to File -> Save As and select PDF from the format drop down menu. Windows folks will need to download a PDF tool, I believe. Worth the effort though.

Google yourself!

Why? Because potential employers are going to. You need to know what information about you is online and how you can control it. Lifehacker has a good guide to controlling your what Google says about you.

Also, be sure to check out the privacy settings on any social networks you belong to. For instance, you may have your Facebook photos set to “Friends Only,” but what about other people’s photos in which you’re tagged? Facebook provides a lot of flexibility in their privacy settings, but it is unfortunately difficult to navigate. So be thorough. There’s a lot of information online to help guide you through confusing privacy settings.

Follow up with a phone call!
I know, I know, “NO PHONE CALLS, PLEASE!” But hear me out. You submit an application. A week or two goes by and you’ve heard nothing. They’ve either read your application and decided to pass or they haven’t noticed you at all (and at this point probably never would). Call them to “confirm that your application was received.” They’ll search their files and find your application (or maybe they won’t - in which case, good to know and you’ll send it again!). If they’ve already passed on you, this will change nothing. But if they weren’t going to notice you, now they’ve noticed. It really can’t hurt you.

Reward yourself!
Rewarding yourself goes hand in hand with having goals. It’s very easy to start feeling badly about yourself while you’re out of work. But if you have tangible, achievable goals, you will feel more like a worthy human being when you meet them. And when you do, treat yourself - watch a little TV, have a snack, do something fun. This productivity/reward cycle will become self-perpetuating.

Do these tips seem helpful? Am I missing anything? What helped you survive a job search? I’d welcome more suggestions!

Testing for Sweetcron

2009 May 29
by Corinne Hoener

I’m trying to put together a nifty lifestream using Sweetcron and apparently I need to learn me some more PHP because I can’t figure out what’s going wrong. Anyway, I needed a new post on SotI to help me test, so… this is it!

Quick Tip: Change Music to Jumpstart Out of Procrastination

2009 May 26
by Corinne Hoener

If you find you’re procrastinating, think about the music you’re listening to and consider changing it. It’s a simple tip, but you might not think of it until you’ve already wasted an hour or two.

If you’re like me, your mood is strongly affected by the tone and type of music that is playing in the background. Just before writing this, I realized that I felt kind of blue and sluggish, and that this was contributing to my procrastination - big time. Well, what was I listening to? Casiotone for the Painfully Alone’s Vs. Children and then The Decemberists’ Hazards of Love. Well, of course I was feeling down and depressed! Time to change the music to something more upbeat and motivating.

Automatic Music Management With Hazel

2009 May 5
by Corinne Hoener

Hazel is a great file management app. By using “rules” that you define, Hazel automates mundane tasks like emptying the trash or moving files around after you’ve downloaded them. The developer has some nice screenshots and video tutorials up on his website, so I refer you to those for more information if you are interested in the details of how Hazel works.

When I first downloaded Hazel, I had trouble figuring out what exactly I’d use it for. (Really, how hard is it to empty the trash every now and then?) After some poking around and fiddling, I’ve established some Hazel rules that are really fantastically useful. For example, I download a lot of music and keeping it organized has always been kind of a pain. Now Hazel does it for me. Check out the video below to see how. Starts off a bit slow with me explaining how Hazel works. All the action is in about the last 30 seconds, so hang in there those of you with short attention spans.

Another great thing about Hazel is that it allows you to import rules written by other people. So if the video blew your mind and you want to set this up on your Mac, you can download the rules I used and import them into Hazel running on your machine.

Hazel Rules: 1) Open zipped files, 2) Run rules on folder content, 3) Move music to iTunes folder

I hope you enjoy Hazel!

(Also: I highly recommend Songbird.)

What To Do If You Accidentally Delete Your Wordpress Blog

2009 May 4
by Corinne Hoener

Yesterday, I had a rough afternoon. I accidentally deleted this blog.

Or at least it seemed that way.

(skip the narrative. tell me how to fix it!)

SotI was being hosted by Blogger, using a custom domain name. Meanwhile, I had installed Wordpress in the /blog/ directory on my server. So it used to be that blog.corinnehoener.net brought you to the active, Blogger blog and corinnehoener.net/blog/ brought you to the Wordpress blog that I was playing around with for a few months.

Being finally (finally) satisfied with the layout, I wanted to move completely to the Wordpress blog and have blog.corinnehoener.net point to it. This really shouldn’t have been as difficult as I made it.

After importing all posts, comments, etc, into Wordpress, I naturally deleted the Blogger blog. (Who needs it, right?) Then I removed the custom DNS settings for blog.corinnehoener.net and changed the settings in Wordpress so blog.corinnehoener.net would be the address of the blog.

At this point, my crisis could have been avoided. What I forgot to do was specify /blog/ (where Wordpress is installed) as the web directory for blog.corinnehoener.net! Because I did not do that, I kept getting the following error when I tried to visit blog.corinnehoener.net:

Warning: require(./wp-blog-header.php) [function.require]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory

Fatal error: require() [function.require]: Failed opening required ‘./wp-blog-header.php’

Couldn’t find the blog files. I never said where to look for them.

I realize this now. At the time, I didn’t know what was wrong and Google wasn’t helping. I found this article on giving Wordpress a separate directory from the site root and decided to do just that and start from scratch. So I deleted all the contents from /blog/ and created /wp/ and installed Wordpress anew in that directory.

…wait a minute…

Holy crap, I just deleted my blog.

And I already deleted it from Blogger.

Crap, crap, CRAP!

Click to continue reading “What To Do If You Accidentally Delete Your Wordpress Blog”

Moving to Wordpress; Update Your Feed Reader

2009 May 3
by Corinne Hoener

I’ve fully revamped the look of SotI about 3 or 4 times behind the scenes now and every time I lose interest and don’t implement the new layout. Well, not this time, baby!

Later this afternoon, I will retire Blogger and finally put Wordpress to work. The URL will not change, but the feed will. So if you enjoy my sporadic thoughts in a feed reader, you’ll want to update the feed to:

http://blog.corinnehoener.net/feed/

(If you just can’t wait to see the new site, you can currently check it out at http://corinnehoener.net/blog/ . I’m still tweaking.)

Personal == Political?

2009 April 23
tags:
by Corinne Hoener

This tweet from @JoinTheImpact: “Take Action! Today’s Impact: Make the commitment to Tell 3. www.tell-three.org” led me to this site, which calls on LGBT folks to talk to three people about “what it’s like for you or your loved ones to be LGBT.”

Immediately put-off, I made some snarky tweets, but I feel like I can’t let the issue end there. It’s nagging at me.

I feel a little bad making fun of the “Tell 3″ campaign because they clearly have good intentions and I don’t disagree at all with their premise. I believe that homophobia can only be fought by the visibility of queer folks simply living their lives as normal, regular ol’ people. In that sense, the personal certainly is political. Inevitably.

But to claim that LGBT people have some sort of obligation, a mission if you will, to talk to people about “what it’s like to be LGBT” (what on earth does that even mean anyway - I’m unconvinced that there’s some sort of singular LGBT experience to be talked about) is absurd. Simply living productive and meaningful lives as LGBT people may well be the means by which equal rights are achieved, but it will happen naturally. It will happen as it did when I came out at 14 years old and friends told me they defended me at their family’s dinner table, that when someone made a negative remark about gay people, they chimed in, “What about Corinne?” and then people thought a little differently.

That is how it happens - but don’t try to co-opt the natural human experience of learning about the differences between people into a contrived obligation to ’spread the bad word’ about just how “hard” it is to be queer. It feels evangelical. It feels fake and lame.

Just live. For better or worse, if you’re queer, just living is inherently political. You don’t have to force it to be. And you are certainly not obligated to.

We Are All Social Media Specialists

2009 April 22
by Corinne Hoener
I’ve started my job search, sort of - I still have a couple papers to write, so it’s hard to give job searching the attention it really deserves right now.

But I came across a listing for a “Social Media Specialist” for some nonprofit. The job entails running their social media campaign to promote their organization, i.e., being paid to use Facebook, Twitter, etc, all day long. Oh em gee, I have so much experience in this field, let me tell you. Please hire me?

I just started following @dunkindonuts. Someone, somewhere (probably Boston), is being paid to represent Dunkin Donuts on Twitter. Possibly more than one person! This is astounding.

Of course I realized before that corporations and organization have employees representing them online, but I never really thought about it. It never really occurred to me that people are paid good money to do what I do when I waste my time every day. Whacky.

The Pirate Bay Sentenced to Prison

2009 April 17
by Corinne Hoener

Iowa Will Recognize Same-Sex Marriages

2009 April 3
by Corinne Hoener
This is really wonderful and incredible news. If you have 15 minutes to spare today, I highly recommend you read the full text of the State Supreme Court’s ruling. There’s something so gratifying in reading stereotype after hateful stereotype completely blasted apart in semi-legalese.

The County offered five totally lame reasons why discriminating against gay and lesbian couple is a-ok: “(1) tradition, (2) promoting the optimal environment for children, (3) promoting procreation, (4) promoting stability in opposite-sex relationships, and (5) preservation of state resources.” The Supreme Court ruling destroys each one of these in very satisfying detail. Seriously, you want to read this.

Some of my favorite parts:

Equal protection under the Iowa Constitution “is essentially a direction that all persons similarly situated should be treated alike.” Since territorial times, Iowa has given meaning to this constitutional provision, striking blows to slavery and segregation, and recognizing women’s rights. The court found the issue of same-sex marriage comes to it with the same importance as the landmark cases of the past.

We are firmly convinced the exclusion of gay and lesbian people from the institution of civil marriage does not substantially further any important governmental objective. The legislature has excluded a historically disfavored class of persons from a supremely important civil institution without a constitutionally sufficient justification. There is no material fact, genuinely in dispute, that can affect this determination.

Thank you, Iowa State Supreme Court.

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