10 Things You Must Do If You Want To Guarantee You Won't Find A
Job
What an experience! I've spent the last month looking for sales
professionals with some astonishing results. I have distilled my
favorites in the following "top ten" list. Use any of them to
make unquestionably certain you won't find a job. 1. Don't
bother to read my ad carefully. After all, I didn't list those
qualifications for an important reason. What's genuinely
important is to get a certain number of resumes out the door.
Then you can moan about how you sent out 500 resumes and got
zero responses. 2. Send me a note ordering me to call you
"ASAP." Don't bother giving me a valid reason to call you. Your
unmitigated arrogance will send me scurrying to the telephone
immediately. 3. Don't bother having a resume ready to go. I'm
not actually interested in your qualifications, so it will be
fine to keep me waiting days for your resume. I love to waste
time. 4. Don't bother to follow my instructions. I didn't really
mean it when I asked applicants to send their resumes to a
specific address. After all, I live to interrupt my work to
answer your call. 5. Send your resume under someone else's name.
Why would I assume it's someone else's resume when you've put
their name on it? Silly me! 6. Include an objective that tells
me you have no interest in my company. My all-time favorite
career objective . . ."a job where I can make a lot of money
fast." Hmm, the jobs I know of that provide "a lot of money
fast" often include the possibility of spending time in jail.
Otherwise, you might have to contribute something to your
employer and make money a bit more slowly. 7. Don't bother to
check your resume for spelling and grammar. After all, spelling
and grammar are important only to fossils. It's your innate
brilliance that will dazzle me! 8. Don't visit my website, and,
above all, don't learn anything about my company. You have told
me quite clearly that you are laser-focused . . . on yourself.
What more could I want? 9. Make sure your telephone isn't
answered. I have nothing better to do than to try over and over
to reach you by phone (assuming you put your phone number in
your resume). You just know I'll keep trying! 10. Don't bother
to send me a thank you note. After all, it was to my benefit to
spend time talking with you. Those old-fashioned courtesies are
just a waste of everyone's time. Aren't they? There you have it
- my top ten list of things to do to be sure you won't find a
job. Of course, if you really want to find employment. . .
copyright 2003 by Phyllis Staff, Ph.D. - Phyllis Staff is an
experimental psychologist and the CEO of The Best Is Yet.Net, an
internet company that helps seniors and caregivers find
trustworthy residential care. She is the daughter of a victim of
Alzheimer's disease. Visit the author's web site at
http://www.thebestisyet.net. Dr. Staff is the author of How to
Find Great Senior Housing: A Roadmap for Elders and Those Who
Love Them:
http://www.thebestisyet.net/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/pando19/start.cgi/boo
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