Career Advice

by Rebecca Henninger Rebecca Henninger No Comments

How to Ask for Informational Interviews – What to Say and How to Say It!

If you’re a job seeker in today’s market, you’ve probably heard of informational interviews, but may be wondering why they are useful, who to ask, and how to ask for them. I’ll cover the basics here and give you language for your requests to customize based on your audience.

When you’re job searching, you know you need to get to a hiring manager. You also probably know how important getting that inside referral is to getting your application past the ATS to an actual human being decision-maker.

So how do you accomplish that? The informational interview is a great tool to have in your arsenal! It can help you build connections, learn about a company’s hiring process, and better understand what positions, departments, and companies are the best fit for your skills, experience level, and career goals.

Who to Ask

I like to break it down into two primary groups.

One would be your contemporaries, counterparts in similar roles who can shed light on the application process, do’s and don’ts, position hierarchies, and what the actual job is like. These would be professionals in lateral roles to the one you are currently in or applying to and can help you understand what titles you should keep on your radar, how the hiring process works, and what to expect during an interview process.

The other is potential hiring managers. These contacts can give you a broader, more strategic understanding of the company and the industry. Believe it or not, these people are often most open to informational interviews, because they understand and respect your initiative. They have likely had to network and navigate to get where they are today.

How to Ask

This is often the hardest part! I’ve included a bunch of prompts to help you get started below. Send out a few today and see what happens. If you get a positive response, use that as your base for future requests. If you’re not getting anything back, tweak your request and your strategy.

Informational Interview Request (Referral)

Hi Name!

{Name} suggested I reach out to you as a potential contact with expertise in (field). I hope you don’t mind me contacting you out of the blue!

A {title/function} with {# of years} of {industry} experience, I am really interested in learning about {something you know about contact or company} and would love to hear more about your journey.

Are you open to a quick call?

Happy to help with anything at all on my end. I look forward to connecting.

Thanks,

Rebecca

Informational Interview Request (Cold)

Hi Name!

My name is [Your Name] and I came across your info on X while researching X. I hope you don’t mind me contacting you out of the blue. I am reaching out because

Possible next lines:

  • your work in X really intrigued me! I have been working on similar projects {include details} at {current company} and love to connect with other pros.
  • your transition from financial services really impressed me! I’m sure that transition wasn’t easy.
  • Company Name is on my radar and I’d love to learn more about what you’re doing in the X space and learn more about the culture.
  • I saw you have extensive experience {in function}, which is an area I’m also passionate about.
  • I saw you have extensive experience {at Company}, which is a company I’m interested in learning more about.

I know your time is valuable and don’t expect you to know of any open positions. I’d really just love to hear more about your journey and have the opportunity to learn more about the company!

If you do have a few minutes to chat, I’d be really grateful. If not, no worries! Either way, have a great day and stay well!

Thank you!

{Your Name}

What to Ask

Once you’ve secured the interview, do your homework! Study their profile, google the contact, and make a (long!) list of possible questions. You won’t necessarily get to ask all of them, but you definitely don’t want to waste their time or appear unprepared. Great starters include:

  • How did you get to where you are?
  • What do you do every day?
  • What do you like about your job?
  • What’s the culture like?
  • What’s the best career advice you have ever been given?

Why Informational Interviews are Helpful

Beyond the value of building new connections, informational interviews help you to cultivate a deeper understanding of the role you want, the companies you admire, and the skills and attributes hiring managers value the most. With this renewed understanding, you can more effectively evaluate your own candidacy. What are opportunities to upskill? What kind of feedback can you integrate to improve your resume or LinkedIn profile? What can you volunteer for at work to bolster your candidacy for the jobs you really want?

Reach out with any questions at all – 973.270.1777 or [email protected]. Happy hunting!

by Rebecca Henninger Rebecca Henninger No Comments

Targeting Your Resume for Different Jobs

personal-brandingAlmost every client I work with has some nuances to their search. Really, aren’t we all a little diverse in our experiences? Interestingly, for the ones who are not, that’s always the biggest roadblock in their pursuit of happiness…they are stuck in a box and can’t get out.

For the rest of you, the challenge is this. How do I create a resume that will allow me to apply to lots of different jobs? Do I need lots of different resumes?

It’s a doozy, right?

Here’s the deal. Applying to jobs is time-consuming. No one is organized enough to maintain 7 different resumes and keep track of changes you make, then apply that across each. If you are, you should immediately change your career focus to professional organizer!

What I do with my clients is work with them to identify their professional brand. Figure out that particular brand of awesome that makes them different, what sets them apart from the competition, and then – most importantly – how to sell it and to whom.

It can be daunting (torturous, even) to work on things like this alone. Endless evaluation and self-examination, comparing yourself to the competition, figuring out the competition, back to the self-evaluation. It’s exhausting!

Then how do you apply to different jobs – what are the keywords from the job description that need to be in your resume to attract the right recruiters?

Before you know it, you’re stuck on a hamster wheel, running around and around in circles.

How do you get off? Simple! Stop focusing all your attention on the online job market.

  1. Differentiate yourself with a powerful resume. Create a resume that is unique and that clearly articulates your value, then quantifies the results that come from that value.
  2. Start building a strong network. Once the job hits the open market, it likely has already been filled. Only 20% of jobs are filled through online application.
  3. Don’t apply for jobs that you are not qualified for! Just because you “could” do that job, doesn’t mean someone you have never met will contact you to interview you for it. If your dream job is a reach job, you need to work that from another angle. The job boards will not work for you.
  4. Stop obsessing over your resume. Work with a certified and proven expert, invest in yourself, and then focus your efforts on your search strategy. Instead of tweaking your resume every hour, spend that same 15 minutes on LinkedIn, using the powerful search feature to find 5 hiring managers. Reach out to them!

While your resume is always a work in progress, it’s only 1 component of your search. If done right, it should be very easily customized for different opportunities. The trap that many people fall into is focusing only on the resume because it feels controllable.

I challenge you to flip the script! Take control of EVERY aspect of your job search. Start building a rich network with connections that will enable you to access jobs before they hit the open market. Take control of your personal brand – don’t let others interpret what you are and what you can do. Make it easier for people to help you find your next opportunity by getting clear on what you are great at and where you can add the most value.

Book an intro call to learn more so we can get started creating your story – https://calendly.com/rhresumes

by Rebecca Henninger Rebecca Henninger No Comments

How To Write the Perfect Resume…And Other Unicorn Myths!

resume-writingIs there really a such thing as a perfect resume? Unfortunately, it’s not that simple; however, by keeping a few guidelines in mind you CAN create a branded, targeted resume that positions you for new opportunities!

Resumes need to be customized to your unique goals, objective, and value proposition.

The one-size-fits-all approach runs the risk of making you look like a jack-of-all-trades but master of none. If you don’t have a specific field or position to target, you can still focus your resume by honing in on key transferable skills and utilizing quantifiable metrics to demonstrate mastery.

Here’s the challenge though. Even a professionally written, amazing resume may not get your foot in the door for career pivot opportunities on its own. You still need to do some networking work on your end to crack the door open.

Think of your resume as the door stop you jam into the slightly ajar opening.

Don’t think you have a network? Think again. Everyone you know is part of your network. Just because you are shy or introverted doesn’t mean you can’t start networking like a boss.

In fact, sometimes the more passive approach works in your favor. People who know and love you are excited to be able to finally help you with something because you have never asked them before!

Ok. Back to the “perfect resume”. My team and I create amazingly branded resumes that boost your confidence and pique the interest of hiring managers to get your phone ringing. As a professional resume writer, what I do for my clients is three-fold.

1) Understand your strengths

2) Qualify & quantify your achievements

3) Demonstrate your emotional intelligence in addition to subject matter expertise

Interested in learning more? Contact me to set up a consultation and mention promo code PERFECTRESUME for a free cover letter with your resume order!

by Rebecca Henninger Rebecca Henninger 8 Comments

What Keywords Should I Use In My Resume?

This is a question I get from almost every prospective client. How do you know what keywords to use in my resume? They’ll invariably test me with “I’m assuming you know which keywords the scanners need to get my resume past the computers?”

And while yes, I do – I also have a lot of mixed feelings about this topic. Here goes!  Read more

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