A geek's guide to getting hired
description
Transcript of A geek's guide to getting hired
A geek's guide to getting hiredDave Ross for Uniforum Chicago
August 24, 2010
Dave Ross
• Lead Developer at Straight North
• Founder, Suburban Chicago PHP & Web Development Meetup
• 11 years experience
Dave Ross
• Star Trek & Doctor Who fan
• Linux user for 15 years
• Proposed to wife on a Scrabble board at a Mensa meeting
Turing
Finding Jobs
The big three
• Monster, Careerbuilder, Dice
• Recruiters, fake jobs
• Scams
Alternatives
Automate
• “Email me this search”
• RSS
• Yahoo! Pipes
The target area is only two meters
wide
• What jobs sound exciting?
• Focus your search
• Don't waste your energy
Higher-level jobs are not posted as often as lower-level jobs online. In-person networking may be needed to uncover these higher-level positions...
Tim Schoonover, OI Partners, qtd. Wall Street Journal
Your Resume
Multiple pages
• Automatic keyword filters
• Online viewing
• More detail
IT professionals...their roles are so complex and...they often wear multiple hats. It's hard for them to encapsulate everything they've done into just a few bullet points per position.
Shana WestermanRecruiting Manager, Sapphire Technologiesqtd CIO.com
Stand out
• PDF (have a plain Word version)
• Fonts(within reason)
• Color
• Humor
Get a life!
• Volunteering
• Open source
• Groups/associations (Uniforum!)
• Speaking
As long as your resume only shows accomplishments that others asked you to do, you are not showing signs of an entrepreneur.
Those of us who went the extra mile and did cool stuff without asking for permission or without being told to do so, that’s a major sign.
Alain Raynaud, Founder Institute
Tailor your resume for the position
Personal branding
• Companies do use Google, LinkedIn, etc.
• How do you sell yourself online?
• Github, Sourceforge
Cover letter
• Company name
• Hiring manager’s name
• Specific technologies they use
• Local color(restaurants,employees you’ve met)
Customize it
Call to action
• Review my resume
• Call/Email me
• Provide contact info
First impressions are important. Yeah, I know, it sucks and your technical prowess should speak for itself, but it doesn’t. Let’s face it, if you forget the “L” in Klocwork in your cover letter, I’m laughing too hard to pay attention to your superior coding skills.
Carolyn Perkins, Director, Human Resources at Klocwork
Submitting
• Usually only allow DOC or text resume
• Generic questions
• “I paid for this lead”
Form on a job site
• Job title in the subject line
• Cover letter as the body
• Resume attached
Email it
• Read about them
• Look for a career section
• Fill out forms or email
• “Someone was checking us out”
Company Web Site
Interviews
What should I wear?
• Learn the culture
• Dress one step better
• One thing that surprises
Do I need to say this?
• Be on time
• Dress nice
• Dress appropriately
• Be polite
We know you're nervous.
Practice interviews
• Spouse/siblings
• A mirror/your cat
• School career center
• Toastmasters
A year from now, my advice could be different. What worked five years ago for a resume probably doesn't matter now.
Shana WestermanRecruiting Manager, Sapphire Technologiesqtd CIO.com
davidmichaelross.com