Sunday, April 12, 2020
4 Realities Job Seekers Must Face About Job Gaps - Work It Daily
4 Realities Job Seekers Must Face About Job Gaps - Work It Daily A recent question posed to a general Q A site sparked my interest: âWhy do employers avoid hiring job seekers who have been out of work for a while?â The question was interesting, but the responses were even more interesting with some valuable lessons for job seekers. Related: How To Handle Career Gaps On Your Resume The initial answer placed all the blame on employers: a) a presumed âshelf-lifeâ to skills, b) youâre âstale,â or c) âif you were any good, youâd already have a job.â Then, in an unhelpful statement, the respondent wrote: âItâs wrong on a dozen levels.â without providing even one as even an example. For over a dozen additional responses, most agreed with further criticism for HR while one respondent asked for elaboration on whatâs âwrong.â While there is clear evidence that this bias does exist in some hiring managers and HR representatives, it is also clear that job seekers need to face some other realities. Reality #1 â" Candidate Volume Too many job seekers assume they are the best candidate for every job they apply for. Wrong! First of all, in most cases, you are one of a hundred (or hundreds) of applicants. Many are going to be equally qualified; some are likely to be more qualified. Your resume or online submission is likely to be scanned for key words related to accomplishments, skills, and/or education. You may be rejected for a reason completely unrelated to âjob gapsâ on your resume. Given the high volume of resumes that are screened out by automated searches, your âjob gapâ could easily be an unknown factor. Reality #2 â" Resume Quality Whether or not the decision on your application is affected by candidate volume, the quality of your resume is very likely to be a determining factor. A hiring manager or recruiterâs job is to very quickly sort a high volume of resumes into some type of grading, often a simple A-B-C rating. Research on this has shown that 80-90% of resumes end in the âBâ pile, e.g., because of an obvious experience mismatch, or in the âCâ pile, e.g., because of a poor quality resume. Iâve been receiving resumes almost daily for review, and more than 90% are immediate âCâ pile because of boring, âfacts onlyâ descriptions of experience, small font size, tiny margins, or completely irrelevant information. Your resume may be missing the âAâ pile for nothing related to your âjob gaps.â In todayâs competitive market, only âAâ resumes are likely to survive. Reality #3 â" Interview Quality Hereâs one possibility where a candidateâs âjob gapâ may be directly responsible for rejection â" but not because of the âjob gapâ itself. Interviewing several candidates, Iâve noted that âjob gapsâ are often explained very poorly: âLet me tell you about the jerk who ran that department.â âThat company was so poorly managedâ¦â âI just got burned out and decided to take a few months off.â In todayâs working world, the majority of HR professionals and hiring managers are aware that individuals quit jobs, are laid off, or have jobs eliminated for a variety of reasons that have nothing to do with their track record of accomplishments. However, if a candidate focuses on almost any variation of a ânot my faultâ explanation, it is not the âjob gapâ thatâs hurting. The broader issue of interview preparation is relevant here too. If a candidate is poorly prepared to answer questions about their accomplishments, e.g. answers that are too short or too long, then it is very likely the candidate is not scoring well on the interview â" whether or not there are âjob gaps.â Many organizations today are placing a significant emphasis on âfit.â Interviewers are attempting to measure how well a candidate fits the organizationâs culture. For some organizations, it is considered the most important factor. A candidate with a âjob gapâ may have the right skills and accomplishment, the right education â" and yet again, be judged as not as qualified compared to other candidates based on perceived âfit.â Thereâs a final key point here â" related to the interview. If a candidate has been granted an interview, it means the âjob gapâ did not affect that choice for initial screening or the resume review. So it is much more likely it is one of the other problems identified above. Iâll vote for poor interview preparation and lack of âpractice, practice, practiceâ in most cases. Reality #4 â" Background/Social Media Check A recent study showed that 94% of companyâs used LinkedIn as part of their recruiting process. Organizations routinely use outside agencies to perform background and reference checks. There are many possibilities here for turning a positive interview into a rejection. Hereâs an obvious one: What did your supervisor at the company that downsized you say about your performance? Alternatively, how is the âjob gapâ explained on your LinkedIn profile? A Note On âConsultingâ It was mentioned in the discussion on âjob gapsâ that a recommended alternative to the âjob gapâ is âconsulting.â I do not recommend this unless you are really consulting and can document this activity with accomplishments and results. A skilled interviewer will quickly uncover a âconsultantâ claim that doesnât include some meaningful accomplishments. Moreover, that will eliminate you as a viable candidate. Conclusion I do believe that some candidates are rejected for an interview or a job just because of âjob gaps.â However, the assertion that it is wrong for a dozen unknown reasons is a poor argument when there is likely a much different reason for the rejection. If a candidate has a strong resume, prepared and practiced answers to interview questions â" including about the âjob gapâ â" and has carefully addressed their social media presence, it wonât be the âjob gapâ thatâs preventing them from receiving an offer. Disclosure: This post is sponsored by a Work It Daily-approved expert. You can learn more about expert posts here. Photo Credit: Bigstock Have you joined our career growth club?Join Us Today!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.