Showing posts with label Blitz Group. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blitz Group. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Dear Job Hunter Wants to Know

How are employers viewing job candidates with decreasing FICO scores and tarnished credit reports?

Please post your comments. You can also email me privately at TrishHoffman@gmail.com.

Look forward to hearing from you!

Trish Hoffman

Disclaimer: Dear Job Hunter does not offer job opportunities, guarantee work or future employment opportunities. Sorry!

Monday, July 5, 2010

A Working Passion

In the Summer 2010 issue of Connecticut College Magazine I read an article by Rachel Harrington in the Lives section. It’s about Nicholas Leichter (Class of ’94), who founded Nicholas Leichter Dance, a New York-based contemporary dance company two years after graduation.

In the article Leichter is quoted as saying, “When you’re younger, you want to focus solely on passion. But as you get older, it’s really important to be multifaceted.”

Leichter says he would like to just dance and teach, but also must work on fundraising for his dance company. He apparently has passion for his work.

His story and that quote made me think… Can we spend our careers without being passionate about what we do every single day? Without passion, isn’t work…well, just work?

Webster defines “passion” as a strong liking or desire for or devotion to some activity, object or concept.

Webster defines “work” as an activity in which one exerts strength or faculties to do or perform something.

So what if we connect the two? Let’s see if we can come-up with the answer...Working is an activity in which one exerts strength or faculties to do or perform something with a strong liking or desire for or devotion to some activity, object or concept…

Wow!! I am not rewriting Webster, just looking for ways to make us realize passion prevails!

Another good example…I recently attended the National Association of Securities Professionals (NASP) conference where I met Dr. Michael G. McMillan. Dr. McMillan is the Director, Curriculum Projects at the CFA Institute in Charlottesville Virginia. He was on a panel moderated by Ginny Clarke, author of the upcoming book Career Mapping.

That panel underscored the importance of networking, education, career planning and developing a 10-second elevator pitch. Dr. McMillan stressed the need for having passion to excel in life personally and professionally. Without passion, it is just work!

Dr. McMillan joined CFA Institute in October of 2008 after more than a decade as a professor of accounting and finance at Johns Hopkins University's Carey School of Business and George Washington University's School of Business. Before that he was a securities analyst and portfolio manager at Bailard, Biehl, and Kaiser and Merus Capital Management in San Francisco, California.

Dr. McMillan said he always returns to academia. It’s his passion!

And therein is the lesson…you NEED to look for your passion!

In today’s shrinking job market with millions of people looking for work, it is hard to place passion at the top of the list when listing pro’s and con’s for a new job.

We better like what we do because we are spending an awful lot of time doing it!

A Dear Job Hunter recipe: Try mixing in one-third passion with two-thirds work, maybe that’s a step in the right direction and maybe, just maybe that’s when we’ll be good at what we do and our work will be good to us!

Please post your comments below. If you would like to comment privately, please email me at trishhoffman@gmail.com.

Trish Hoffman

Monday, June 7, 2010

Making Yourself Standout in the Numbers Game

While researching for today’s column, I found so many dismal stories about the job market…and for those searching for work I don’t have to tell you the market stinks.

According to Mort Zukerman of the Financial Times, one in six Americans are out of work…that means 6.7 million people! The longer someone is out of work, the harder it is to get a job…anywhere!

When the recession started in 2007, there were less than two job hunters for every job opening. Just twenty months later more than six people applied for the same job. Today, we are told we are in a better position with just 5.6 people applying for the same job according to the chart published by the Economy Policy Institute's Economy Track.

Are we counting all job hunters, even those who have given up hope? Is that sector of the job hunting market even traceable? Reports say Americans do want to work…there just aren’t enough jobs to go around, according to a story by Lawrence Mishel, who writes in The Huffington Post.

So how do you separate yourself from the pack and get noticed?

Last week I placed a good friend of mine, career expert Ginny Clarke, on Oprah Radio. Ginny appeared on the Derek Ashong Experience. Most recently, Ginny was a partner at the global executive search firm, Spencer Stuart. Today, Ginny is an executive consultant directing people to stand out in front of the pack during a job search.

The number one item on her list of things to do is to be sure to make your search for a job a full time job. Another must-do is to write your elevator pitch and get out there and network, network, network...so let’s get you started!

In Ginny’s blog she says, “One of the most important parts of managing relationships and effective networking is being able to tell someone about yourself in only a couple of minutes – the length of an elevator ride. What exactly would you say if you found yourself on an elevator or at a cocktail party with the hiring manager for a job you really want and you had 2-3 minutes?”

Ginny Clarke’s Do’s and Dont’s…

  • Don’t try to cram your entire career into 60 seconds
  • Do give highlights of most prestigious and recent roles, including company name and title
  • Don’t assume people know or understand your space
  • Do describe and quantify – industry segment, budget, revenues, employees, etc.

  • Don’t oversell or ask favors – you are meeting for the first time
  • Do be clear about what you think your strengths are
  • Don’t be one-dimensional in your commentary
  • Do offer an interesting personal fact about yourself

You can read more tips from Ginny at www.mycareermapping.com.

Please comment right here on Dear Job Hunter, or email me privately at trishhoffman@gmail.com

Trish Hoffman

Monday, May 31, 2010

Welcome to Dear Job Hunter!

Think of this blog as the Dear Abby of job hunting.

This blog is meant to be an inspirational forum for Americans who need a job.

I want to hear from THE REAL job hunter…the unemployed, recent college grads and job changers. Share your stories of how you are making ends meet and how you are maintaining your integrity and self-esteem during this job revolution.

I will share ideas that can help you look for a job, identify your skill-set and get your resume ready. I’ll post tips on interviewing, networking, using social media, plus offer suggestions on what to wear on that all-important interview.

In this day-and-age, you have to bring out the big guns and get creative! You are the only one who can lead your job search.

Dear Job Hunter is where you can post questions about your job search. I will work on finding the answer.

Don’t be shy, even if you have a job that’s okay, you may want a better one and we can help there too!

There were several motivating factors that caused me to create this blog.

First of all, I have been unemployed…so I have first hand experience! I actually started my boutique media company on an unemployment check with a laptop and a cell phone.

With hard work and perseverance, I’ve gone from an award-winning journalist to running my own successful firm.

The second reason was seeing my family members, of all ages, out of work and struggling to make ends meet in this dreary job market.

Most unemployed Americans are in the same boat…expired unemployment benefits, insurance coverage is threatened or gone…and dark days looming ahead because the job market is shrinking.

Look at those closest to you. You my have a job, but I bet someone in your inner circle doesn’t.

Research shows millions of Americans have been affected by this dreadful economy. So much so that we find the job market shrinking with little hope of recovering.

According to
David Wessel’s Meet the Unemployable Man on May 6, 2010 in the Wall Street Journal, more than 6.5 million people are looking for work right now, and that doesn’t include those who have given up.

Let’s face it, without a job there isn’t much you can do…you can’t shop, you can’t improve your lifestyle, and chances are you can’t make anyone happy…especially yourself. In most cases, unemployment strips you of your self-esteem and begin to wonder "what in the world can happen next?".

Dear Job Hunter is here as a tool to help everyone remain positive, but offer solutions. Remember, there’s strength in numbers!

Send me your questions with a little bit about yourself. In turn, I will interview experts in the field of career management and psychology, to give you some tips on how to make your life better during these trying times. From time to time I will interview top business executives, who will tell you what they are looking for from job seekers and what gets their attention when reviewing a swell of resumes.

Let’s not make excuses about why America isn’t working, let’s make it work! Please share your stories and I will work on finding you an expert who can help you out of this mess!

If you are an expert and think you can help, please send me an email so I may feature your work and suggestions.

If you are an employer hiring, please post your job here!

A little more about me…

I’m the founder of
Blitz Group based in Chicago. I’m an award-winning journalist, publicist and volunteer. I’m currently creating “A Healthy Serving”, a 501 C-3 non-profit organization that raises money for nutritional programs for underprivileged families.

Disclaimer: Dear Job Hunter does not offer job opportunities, guarantee work or future employment opportunities. Sorry!