It’s play-off time for your job search – what do you have to lose?
Here comes another basketball metaphor about your job search.
A few nights ago, my Varsity HS Girls Basketball Team played in the first round of the State Playoffs. In our section we were ranked 6th out of 32 teams. We played a team ranked 24 and almost lost.
Why? It should have been an easy win – a no-brainer.
At playoff time, teams change – they go from being conservative, playing careful, doing the same old thing, and usually playing within their capability. At playoff time, lower ranked teams hike it up to whole other level. They play with complete abandon – and give it a 110%.
What do the lower ranked teams have to lose? If they don’t win, their season ends right now. And if they can pull off one more win – they get to come back and play another game. Many upsets occur, because lower ranked teams fight as hard as they ever fought, they do everything they can to influence the outcome, and they leave nothing on the table.
If you asked the team last night that lost to us in the last 5 minutes of the game if they had any regrets – if any of the players felt they had not played as hard as they could – and the answer would be an overwhelming “I gave it everything I could”.
When asked that question, our higher ranked girls would have said there was a lot they could have done and they were disappointed in their performance since they didn’t “work hard enough”. They were coasting on their high ranking, thinking their past track record could speak for itself.
Are you guilty of this dysfunctional thinking in your job search?
If you ask most candidates that question about their job search, I would predict that most candidates would have significant regrets about their commitment, energy, and intensity regarding their job search.
Most candidates are not willing to “go beyond the call of duty” in their job search.
Most candidates could not claim that they have “outworked their peers” in their job search.
Most candidates are just doing the same thing over and over (Benjamin Franklin’s Definition of Insanity).
No wonder the typical executive/senior management job search is now significantly over 6 months. Here are some questions to ponder about your job search:
- What are you doing in your job search that your peers are unwilling to do?
- What are doing this week that represents a high level of energy, commitment, and intensity in your job search than last week?
- How would you quantify the effort and intensity of your job search?
- Shouldn’t you be treating your job search like it’s play-off time and it’s the last 5 minutes of what could be the last game of the season or your entire career?
- Are you going beyond the call of duty in your job search?
What could you be doing differently that would represent a higher level of commitment, energy, and intensity?
- Have you assessed your LinkedIn Profile and are making the necessary changes and investment of time to get noticed by recruiters and hiring managers?
- Are you writing custom cover letters for every appropriate job you apply for?
- Are you publishing a blog on your functional expertise?
- Have you joined two local networking groups and possibly a trade/functional group? Are you taking on a leadership role in these groups?
- How hard are you working your network using classic networking principles of being a connector, giving back, staying in touch through nurturing? Have your taught yourself how to be a master of networking?
- Have you continually refined your resume and turned it into a marketing document instead of a factual presentation of your history?
- How many blogs do you read, how many job search E-books have you downloaded, how many comments have you posted in Job Search LinkedIn Q&A sections.
This is just a small list of the hundreds of things you could be doing in your job search to reduce the time it takes to find a great opportunity. Most of your peers are unwilling to invest the time to do these job search best practices. Are you willing be to do what it takes to win – to go beyond what most of your peers do in their job search – or would you rather coast in the middle of the pack?
What’s holding you back from pouring everything you’ve got into your job search?
Barry Deutsch