Friday, November 29, 2019

Four ways you can network on your next cruise

Four ways you can network on your next cruiseFour ways you can network on your next cruiseBefore visiting the Lido Deck to enjoy the buffet and following the after-dinner musical view show in the gorgeous theater on your next cruise, there are ample opportunities to grow your professional network aboard a cruise ship.Not only are your prospects a captive audience, but people are also happier on vacation and the drinks are plentiful and the best part No one has to drive home.You travel in the same circleCruises are an ideal networking umgebung because you spend a large amount of time with the same group of people, including meals, says Annick Lenoir-Peek, travel blogger at The Common Traveler. Whats nice about cruising is that you see familiar faces youve met throughout the ship.You may even end some of the same tours together, which shows that you have the same interests, she adds.Unlike a shorter period of time, like a meal or a stay at a resort, youll have more time to get to know each other on a more personal level. You can move past the shop talk quickly and develop friendships, Lenior-Peek says, which may lead to collaborations or future dealings.Size of the ship promotes can networkingConsider river cruising, which are ships that can only have just a few hundred passengers, making the intimate setting ideal to forge new opportunities. River cruises offer the perfect networking setting, with small vessels designed for guest interaction and mingling, Wesley Bosnic, VP Charter Incentive Sales for Uniworld.Itineraries often include social activities onboard such as cooking and fitness classes, and small group excursions onshore so guests can get to know others with similar interests. Also, on our cruises, we offer all-inclusive pricing so professionals can relax and elend worry about who will be picking up the check at bars or in the dining room, so they can focus on what theyre really there for making meaningful connections, Bosnic says.You can woo prospe cts without it being awkwardUnlike a typical networking event, where there are a few hours to make connections and then it ends, cruising provides several days to interact with people sometimes multiple times to establish meaningful and lasting bonds, says Tanner Callais, founder of Cruzely.com, a website about everything cruising.For instance, you could have dinner with someone one night, see them by the pool the next day, and have a drink at the bar the day after, explains Callais. These multiple points of contact are huge in creating a lasting connection.The vibe is relaxedCruises offer a great atmosphere for networking, because even if you are thinking about work on the trip, says Callais, everyone is still in vacation mode.While it might feel awkward to break the ice in a business setting, its completely normal to strike up conversation with strangers on a cruise ship, Callaissaid. The result is the perfect place to get to know people without the awkwardness of having to brea k the ice.

Sunday, November 24, 2019

Making Friends and Finding Free Resume Advice

Making Friends and Finding Free Resume AdviceMaking Friends and Finding Free Resume AdviceHow to approach recruiters, HR pros and resume experts for advice without being a pest.Its not that Linda M. Duffy minds giving a little advice to job candidates. Its just that, well, youre not exactly helping her pay her grocery bills.I dont mind giving quick advice to candidates, especially if its someone I already have a relationship with, said Duffy, a senior professional in human resources and president of Leadership Habitude, an HR consultancy. The need, though, is to keep it to a 15-minute conversation or so. Otherwise, it becomes all-consuming and detracts from paying clients.Like Duffy, resume and hiring professionals are constantly sought after for free resume or job-search advice. Most of us dont think twice about asking behauptung professionals to take a look at our resumes, but few of us are savvy enough actually to cultivate a relationship with these professionals that will pay off in the end.Were not just talking about being considerate. Were talking about taking the extra steps to ensure that you get the resume advice youre after and that you come to mind when these influential professionals get a lead on a job opening.You would be surprised at how few people (not just job seekers) offer to return the favor, Duffy said. I help people because I like to help, and I do it without expectation. However, for those rare people who say thank you and then, ?What can I do to help you? in return - believe me, I remember them Something that simple really does help them stand out in a crowd.How do you cultivate these relationships? How do you even start them, if you dont personally know any HR professionals, executive recruiters or resume writers? Ladders spoke with a number of them to develop the following tips on how to approach them and properly return the favor of free advice.Making friends with career prosIf youve ever had any contact with a rekrutierer, youve got a name, and thats a fine place to start, said Debra Benton, an executive coach and president of Benton Management Resources. Being friendly means staying in touch. If things change in your career, let them know, Benton said, but also keep your ear tuned for anything interesting you might reisepass on to them.Be an extra ear and eye for them. Be helpful, Benton said. A lot of times headhunters have assignments that dont fit you. But if youre known by the headhunter as someone who profers a name, or resources, they will love you.This means that if a headhunter calls to talk about a job, you should hear them out even if youre not necessarily interested, Benton suggested. Is the opportunity a good one for someone whos at a different stage in her career from yours? Do you know of any names you could pass on to the headhunter, any contact information? Pass it on and tell the headhunter to use your name. Headhunters love that, Benton said. Youre resourcing someone theyd never know.Or say youre out and you run into the most fabulous finance guy youd ever want to meet. Tell your headhunter pal that youve just encountered somebody who needs to be on their radar screen, and pass on the name, Benton said. While youre sharing this pearl of wisdom, make sure to sprinkle in your interests and strengths, but do it subtly. Heres how that might sound The reason I thought Id pass on the name of this great finance guy is you and I were talking about XYZ job, and you know me, Im actually interested in ABC job.If youre currently working, make sure to befriend HR. If you give them proper respect, Benton said, youre the one theyll remember you when they move on to other companies, Benton said. It can be something simple If you have an encounter with HR, let them know youve worked with plenty of HR, and they stand out because they know their stuff. One sentence like that, and theyll love you, she said, adding, It has to be true, of courseIf youre not working, and you walked away with out HR buddies, you need to take the initiative. How do you do that? Benton suggested reaching out to professionals in this way Say youre reading the Wall Street Journal and an article quotes an HR executive from Colgate-Palmolive. Dont be afraid to send a short note to that person to say, Hey, I loved the article in the WSJ. I welches really impressed with that angle you came up with on that subject. I totally concur. I hope our paths cross sometime. If you have a card, send it or a resume or a letter with some of your background. Dont ask for a job just let the HR pro know youre including the information to clarify whos writing.Nine out of 10 may not respond, but 10 out of 10 will remember you, Benton said. And one out of 10 will respond. My guess is theyll remember that person, Benton said. If they need a source, they might pull your card out of their file.Payback is a blessingAfter giving quick, free resume advice, Duffy has received many forms of thanks over the years. People h ave made introductions and referrals. Job candidates and clients have written great recommendations for her on LinkedIn. Hands down, though, her favorite thank-you came from someone shes never met. Duffy posted on several LinkedIn group discussion boards that she had a free list of 850-plus resume power words and would send them no strings attached.One job seeker responded with an e-mail Duffy still keeps because, she said, it touched her heart Thank you for the delivery of the power words, I loved them. I looked at your Web site and it gives a nice and warm impression and I wish you all the best with your consulting. Unfortunately, I havent anything nice to send you in return, so I wanted to send you my smile ?? where your kindness affected me. Thank you Linda.Barbara Roche, a lebenspartner at BC Communications and a lecturer for The Wharton School, has given free resume advice (in two cases, a complete rewrite) to five people so far this year. Each has given responded to express t heir appreciation and offered payback of some sort. In one case, a woman nearly paralyzed by stress brought on by reporting to a bully boss paid Roche back by giving her a day of consulting work in her department. Another offered Roche tickets to see a well-known news journalist speak. Most importantly, Roche got her name around town, which was her goal, so when youre after free advice, think about how you can spread your benefactors name around town.How to work your alumni connectionsJulie Hays Bartimus, vice president of the Alumni Career Center at University of Illinois Alumni Association, recommended making connections with people who can give you resume or job-search advice far ahead of when you actually need them. Contacts sought out in ?emergency situations will be the least effective and may do more harm than good, she said.Also, research the types of information and contacts that a career coach or adviser have to offer before making a specific ask, Bartimus said. For instan ce, my colleagues at the University of Illinois Alumni Career Center have profiles on LinkedIn and accept connection requests from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, University of Illinois at Chicago and University of Illinois at Springfield alumni. We also offer free advice to these alumni through our Virtual Career Center and webinars. Alumni career-services staff members at other institutions and independent career coaches may similarly provide general information online and offer individualized advice through fee-based advising appointments.For payback, offer to be an informational interview contact for other alumni, or consider volunteering as a program guest or panelist, Bartimus suggested. At her school, some alumni have come back to recruit other Illinois, UIC and UIS alumni, so its smart to stay in touch, she said.

Thursday, November 21, 2019

How Long Should A Resume Be

How Long Should A Resume BeHow Long Should A Resume BeDoes My Resume Need to be One Page?One of the most common questions our teamatResumeSpicehears from job seekers is some variation of I heard that a resume needs to be one page. Is that true?The short answer is no. Somewhere along the line, a hiring manager must have expressed a strong preference for one page resumes and all across the candidate landscape, the mythology took off. And it stuck in candidates heads. The reality is that we have yet to encounter a hiring manager, human resources executive, or anyone else in a hiring position who has ever rejected a candidate because their resume was mora than one page.So how long should a resume be?Again with a short answer as long as it needs to be to effectively, yet concisely, communicate a candidates background and experience. As a general rule of thumb, we recommend the followingNew grad 1 pageTwo years of experience 1 to 1.5 pagesTwo to ten years of experience 1 to 2 pagesTen or more years of experience 1.5 to 3 pagesImportant caveat the above should be used as a guide, as every candidates situation is different. For example, a job seeker with ten years of experience, who has a college degree and who has held one job their entire career, may be able to fit their entire work history in one page. Conversely, a job seeker with four years of experience may require two pages in order to fit their college degree, advanced degree, multiple internships while in school, and the responsibilities and accomplishments from two different work positions.Can a resume be too long?Yes. In very rare instances is there a need for a resume to go beyond three pages. A resume, unlike a traditional CV (curriculum vitae), is not a complete summary of ones work history. Rather, its a document that highlights ones career and education, focusing on the parts most relevant for a particular role.Hopefully that helps clarify a very common question. If you have questions about your parti cular situation, call or email us. We would love to talk to you Contact ustoday at832.930.7378