One quick way to discover new opportunities is by doing structured search engine queries. And it’s fairly easy to do.   The video above gives you a good overview of how to do it for yourself:

Step #1

Develop a target list of companies you want to work for.  That list of companies is your baseline query for your search.   Now, here’s how you get the list.  The video above is an example using Google.com in which the job hunter want sto work in advertising in New York City.  {You  just do what I'm doing BUT substitute your industry parameters.}

1.     When you do targeted research, generally you concentrate on an industry or a geographic preference (in this case, New York City).  Substitute your city for your search. 

2.     You need to find the names of all the advertising companies in New York.  There are easy ways to do this using the Net.  Go to Google. www.google.com and type the following words in the “advanced” option box in Google.  The search string shown below instructs Google to search for a directory of advertising firms in New York or a conference on advertising held in New York.  We want this list to garner leads for companies.

Your text needs to be filled in exactly the way I did in the video. 
 
My search returned many hits including one for AD:TECH  “The Event for Interactive Marketing”.  This is a conference held in New York for the Advertising industry.  There where also hits for directories of advertising companies in New York, complete with web site addresses, phone numbers, and profiles of the owners.

Step #2 Find People Who Can Hire You:

Once you have a target list of companies to work with, you need to find out who the people are in those companies that can actually hire you.  A good headhunter would pick up the telephone. You might not be so inclined, so here’s another way to accomplish your objective.

Go to each company’s web site and gather the names of the people who can say yes.  Those people are the executives not the human resource people – they can only say NO! unless you’re a human resources professional.  If you’re lucky, every web site will identify their senior executives, including names, titles, phone numbers, career summaries and sometimes email and photos!  Web information should be up-to-the-minute accurate, but I would call the receptionist and confirm it.   

For this example I’m looking for a sales position.  Therefore I’ll seek to locate or research the VP of Sales, VP Sales & Marketing, VP Marketing or General Manager. You would focus your research on the functional areas of interest for your search.

If you’re experiencing difficulty finding names on the site, then go back to Google’s advanced search box and type in the company name in the first box and (Vice President Sales Marketing Director)in the third box.  By-the-way, you don’t need to place the words in brackets and don’t put in any commas or punctuation. 

That search string will bring you:
All the people who are, or have ever been, VPs OR President OR Directors of Sales and/or Marketing for that company.
The resumes of a whole pile of people from that company whom you may be able to phone to coax information from them.

OR

You can skip all that and use LinkedIn, Spoke, or ZoomInfo

Once you have the name of the individual who is one rung up the ladder from the job you want, you need to process their name through Google again.  This time you put their first and last name in the first box and the company name in the third box.

This will produce a list of press releases, and news articles in which they are mentioned, as well as conferences they’ve attended.  Read an article or two and clip something memorable to use in a  NarrowCast letter.

When you send them the letter, you’ll be able to say.  “I read your article in… about… which prompted me to write.”  Very powerful.

Compliments of David E Perry and Kevin Donlin. For more creative job search tactics, go to the Guerrilla Marketing for job hunters blog and download the free audio CD.

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On the 6th Day of Christmas…

On December 16, 2012, in job hunting, by David

 Click Here To Download the complete “12 Days for Christmas Job Hunting with LinkedIn“.

Day 6

On the 6th Day of Xmas – Guerrilla Marketing for Job Hunters revealed to me:

6 Tools to Download

LinkedIn applications make using LinkedIn easier and extend its functionality.

JobsInsider

This free applet let’s you see your inside connections for any job online at Monster, CareerBuilder, HotJobs, Craigslist, Dice, Vault, and many more.

Vanity Profile

Get a vanity profile.  Click here for a full explanation. You can use it in your regular email, blog, put it on your resume…  there are a ton of good reasons to get a free Vanity Profile – besides looking hip – cool and in the know!!!.

Slide Share

Slide Share example

If you have Power Points that demonstrate your proficiency in the area you want to be headhunted for then by all means upload them here.  Check to insure you aren’t giving away proprietary information first though.

Box.Net

Download and install this so you can link to your Guerrilla Resume  AND the full one You will eventually need.

WordPress

Do you blog?  You should you know.  This free download will help insure your blog postings are seen by anyone looking at your profile in LinkedIn.  Your posts will load on to your LinkedIn profile auto magically every time you do one.  For Guerrilla marketing for Job Hunters, my posts replicate across www.GM4JH.com, www.GuerrillaJobHunting.com, Amazon.com, LinkedIn, GoodReads and finally – out to Twitter.  I post once and the chain of events takes care of itself.

LinkedIn Polls

Great tool to use to start discussions.  Terrific way to discover insider information on your Target List of Top 10 Companies.

And of those who are truly on the leading edge… check out LinkedIn Labs for the latest and greatest.

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10 raisons pourquoi acheter « Guerilla Marketing pour Trouver un emploi » ?

Depuis la sortie du livre « Guerilla Marketing pour Trouver un emploi« , dont j’ai assuré l’adaptation, journalistes et candidats me posent régulièrement la même question : pourquoi l’acheter ?

Alors voici 10 bonnes raisons de vous précipiter chez votre libraire préféré pour le réclamer ou le commander sur Amazon ici :

Recrutement 2.0

via www.altaide.com

French Guerrillas?
Now available in French in France. A French Guerrilla only has one 'r' though!

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In my ongoing series of interviews with job search experts, I tracked down Marky Stein, a career coach in San Jose, Calif., who’s perfected a strikingly innovative approach to finding a job fast – in any economy.

 

She’s the author of "Fearless Interviewing: What to Do Before, During and After an Interview" (iUniverse.com Press, 2001). Her Web site is http://www.markystein.com.

 

I questioned Marky to get her very best tips to help you access the “hidden job market,” where upwards of 70% of all jobs are filled. Here’s our conversation …

 

 

Kevin: “Let’s cut to the chase — what’s the very best way people can uncover and apply for job openings right now, in this time of economic uncertainty?”

 

Marky: “Study after study and my own 10+ years of experience have proven that, hands down, cold calling employers is superior to all other methods.

 

“Now, before your readers say, ‘Yuck! I don’t want to cold call anyone – I’m not a sales person,’ read the following facts.

 

“The firm JIST Works, in Philadelphia, trained 1,000 job seekers in cold calling during the last recession, in 1990. These 1,000 people were trained to devote 25 hours per week to their job search and cold call employers to ask for a face-to-face meeting. As a result, 66% of them were employed within 2.3 weeks and 90% of the rest were employed within 90 days.

 

“In my own study, from 1992 to 1998, I trained over 700 disabled job seekers to spend at least 17.5 hours per week cold calling employers. Of those I counseled during those six years, 90% found jobs within 90 days.

 

 

Kevin: “OK. So what is cold calling? How is it done?”

 

Marky: “It’s simply direct contact to set up an interview. And it works for anyone, from entry-level job seekers to CEOs.

 

“To succeed, you must stop seeing yourself as a job seeker and think of yourself instead as a business person making a proposal. Instead of thinking ‘Please give me a job,’ think, ‘Here are all the good things I can do for you.’”

 

 

Kevin: “Who, specifically, should job seekers try to get on the phone?”

 

Marky: “Try to connect with a decision maker above your future boss. This is important.

 

“The person directly above you may, and often is, threatened by such a call. They may figure, “If this person is so assertive NOW, they may be after MY job in the future”.

 

“Also, a more senior person, such as your potential boss’ boss, has a more expansive view of the kinds of changes that could result in a new job being created or in someone being replaced.

 

“Third, executives often enjoy mentoring junior people, and those with a generous character can do wonders for job seekers, even if that means referring you to someone DOWN the ladder. If you get such a referral from an executive, other members of the team are likely to be open to meeting with you.”

 

 

Kevin: “Is there a script job seekers should use?”

 

Marky: “Yes, you can use the following example script to get started:

 

“Hello, my name is _________. I have _______ years’ experience as a ____________, specializing in _____________, ____________, and ______________. I have a (B.A., M.S., certificate) in _______________ and I recently completed (name a recent successful project with a measurable result). When may I come for an interview?"

 

 

Kevin: “What can job seekers expect when they start calling employers?”

 

Marky: “Cold calling has about 1 in 20 success ratio, in general. Of course, 19 ‘Nos’ on the phone may hurt more than 1,000 rejection letters, but you’ll hear it less often. Just make those calls until you connect!”

 

 

Action Step: Cold calling can dramatically shorten your job search, by putting you in direct contact with employers who can hire you. You’ll have no competition, because 99% of job seekers would rather answer classified ads and complain about the economy than be assertive and proactive.

Compliments of David E Perry and Kevin Donlin. For more creative job search tactics, go to the Guerrilla Marketing for job hunters blog and download the free audio CD.

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Write Down — And Follow — A Job Search Plan

On September 21, 2012, in job hunting, by David Perry
Job Search Plan

Job Search Plan

The successful job search all boils down to one word — synergy.

Synergy is defined as “the interaction of two or more agents so that their combined effect is greater than the sum of their individual effects.”

Synergy explains the difference between John, Paul, George and Ringo (individual musicians) and The Beatles (a magical combination).

Most job seekers apply for positions haphazardly — sending out an email resume for this opening, a printed resume for that one, sometimes following up and most often not.

But you’ll get far better results — and create synergy — if you first write out a job search calendar, to schedule your efforts over the next 60-90 days. Then, follow your plan and systematically use as many tactics as possible for each job you apply for. Organizing your efforts this way will focus your job search, like sunlight through a magnifying glass.

Here’s how to create synergy and job search magic, in 5 easy steps.

 

Step 1 — Choose your target job

You can do so by picking a job title (example: Sales Manager) or skill set to shoot for (example: sales, marketing, management). No target job = no results in your job search. Because you can’t score if you don’t have a goal.

Step 2 — Choose your tactics

There are many. Among the most effective is networking with your personal and professional contacts. Let people know you’re in the job market and tell them what you’re looking for. Then ask this question: “Who do you know that I should be talking to?” This one question can double or triple the size of your network.

Other job hunting tactics include submitting your resume to online job postings, the newspaper classifieds, recruiters and temp agencies. But try to spend 80% of your time networking.

Step 3 — Plan your work.

Create a job search calendar. This time of year, you can get free wall calendars from many stores and businesses. Any calendar will do, so long as there’s room to write brief notes for each day.

Map out the next 30-90 days with specific goals for every day, such as visiting 5 Web sites, calling 10 networking contacts and mailing 7 resumes.

Post your job search calendar prominently. Then …

Step 4 — Work your plan.

Devote at least 3-5 hours a day to your job search if you’re currently employed, and 5-8 hours a day if you’re unemployed.

Recognize that your job search is a job in itself, the most important one you have right now. And that means you look for work EVERY day, Monday through Friday. Because just one day skipped per week equals a 20% loss in output. You can’t afford that.

Step 5 — Fail your way to a new job.

As you follow your job search plan and contact all those people every day, you’re going to hear one word more than any other: “No.”

Learn to embrace failure like Thomas Edison, who “failed” 10,000 times before inventing the light bulb. He said: “Every wrong attempt discarded is another step forward.”

Every “no” you hear in your job search is another step closer to the one “yes” you need to get that position you really want. It’s simply a numbers game. Take heart in this fact.

 

-=-=-=-

 

Action Step: By following this five-step formula, you can create synergy, magic and the job offer you’re dreaming about.

 

Compliments of David E Perry and Kevin Donlin. For more creative job search tactics, go to the Guerrilla Marketing for job hunters blog and download the free audio CD.

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