Jjob Searching Facts

From 3arf

Search only for those jobs you known you can do. When the kids are hungry and no money is coming in, is the wrong time to dream. When searching for a job you have a wide range of possibilities within any given field of endeavor. First, you must know your limits within this field and second, be willing to add extra classes and training if your job fit is almost but not quite. There are general fields and there are special fields and each have their own set of rules. Get to know them:

Narrowing your field down to what you know you can do and settling for nothing else is the first choice. This may not be possible if you find nothing available in your chosen field. In order for you to find the job you've trained for you must be willing to relocate to where there are a need for this kind of work.

To begin your job search you need to fill in all the blanks. That means you not only need to list on paper the jobs you are qualified to do, but how you plan on going about finding them. Keep this list updated and ever present. It will be your daily guide. A part of your job-searching day will be researching online; and a part of your job searching day will be out walking the streets and going from place to place and introducing yourself.

To be realistic, you may have to settle temporarily with something less if the bills are piling up and you need work and need it fast. Know that to work is honorable and is not beneath you; what is beneath you is being snobbish and insisting on finding work in areas in which you have not had any experience.

Work that is in service to people is never demeaning no matter how low on the scale it is thought to be. With that kind of attitude you will eventually land that job that you have been dreaming of all your young life. Let's say you are fresh out of school and you have a BS in art. What kind of job does that entitle you to apply to for?

The answer is all kinds of jobs are vacant just waiting for you. All you need to do is to find them. To get to where they are search the job market on the internet and all around your area of the country. Send out lots and lots of resumes but make each one individual to the job requirements and your ability to fulfill them.

On your simple resume, a one or two page will be sufficient, be sure to list all the sideline experiences that will qualify you for the particular job. Tailor each resume to fit the job application. As an example, if you are applying for a position at an assisted living home for the elderly as an occupational therapist, be sure and tell them of your volunteering experience while in school.

Leave nothing out of your resume that will help you with that particular job and your special expertise; put nothing in that does not relate to it. Finding work, in the long haul, requires a little common sense and a lot of stick-to-itiveness. Don't try to fake education requirements or experience, be honest; nor should you shortchange yourself in not listing your capabilities. In the same way do not attempt shortchange your prospective employer by overstating them.

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