If you’ve been another victim of our terrible economy in the last few years, you’re not alone. Thousands of people have been laid off across all industries in a top shakeup of our workforce. Recession-related woes affect clinical and health care revenue less than other industries, but there has still been a top effect–especially within clinical sales.
If you’ve been out of work for a while, it can take a toll on your finances, certainly, but also on your morale and your career opportunity hunt itself. There’s a stigma that can become attached to candidates who’ve been out of work for a while. Employers think, basically, “If that person is so nice, why hasn’t he/she found a job yet?” Obviously an unfair blanket assumption, but there it is.
If you’re finding yourself in this situation, there’s a terrific article on CNN.com you should see called In the job hunt, the stigma of being unemployed is hard to erase (and I am thrilled to have been quoted in it!). It talks about the effect that being laid off can have on your career opportunity search, but more importantly, it shows you what you can do to overcome it. Very worth the read.
If you’re unemployed, you’re in a defensive career opportunity in the job search. That affects what you might normally do or say in the job search, but not by much. Here are some of my strategies you can use to get past this negative situation and land the job:
- Have an explanation ready. Prepare a short but simple explanation about what happened. You don’t wanna spend your time defending yourself–you want the focus to be on what you offer the employer.
- Quantify your achievements. Just as in any career opportunity search, you wanna have the evidence that you’ve done a good job–with performance stats, sales numbers, or specific instances where you saved/made your company money. Improving efficiency or pulling in customers works, too. Just be sure to quantify it with percentages, dollar signs, or other relevant numbers-based stats.
- Gather awesome references. If you have evidence that someone else thought you were outstanding, then it’s more likely you’ll get a favorable reception. People like recommendations. Personal phone calls are best, but an email or letter you can show in the beginning could work very well here.
- Use creative job interview tools. This is totally the time you need a brag book (to show how amazing you were in past jobs) and a 30/60/90-day plan (to show you have a strategic plan for success at the new one).
- Be strong in the interview. It’s more important than ever that you close for the job. Ask for it. Uncover objections while you’re right there. It could easily turn the tide in your favor. If not, you’ll know what to fix for next time.
No matter what, stay active. Keep reading articles about job searching strategies. Learn to use social media like LinkedIn, and network like mad. Invest in yourself and hire a career coach who can help you spin your situation and give you strategies for success.
Job hunts can be a numbers game, and you got to keep playing. Eventually, you’ll win. Worthwhile luck.
Meanwhile, check out this free training on “How to Get a Better Position Faster”
2: Click here to register for this no cost webinar.
Article courtesy of Peggy McKee - Owner / Senior Recruiter at the nationally
recognized medical and pharmaceutical sales recruiting team of PHC Consulting.
© Copyright 2008 PHC Consulting | All rights reserved
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