Category Archives: Organising

Beware the black hole!

It is not as ominous as the title sounds. What I want to write about is the problem of internet time wastage. Unemployed, with copious amounts of time on your hands, the internet can suck time like no other supposedly constructive tool in every day life. Don’t get me wrong, all day should definitely not revolve around job hunting, but dedicating some quality time to it is necessary and that’s when all kinds of useless tumblr streams become so much more interesting..

The mornings I know I’m on my own and need to get some serious job searching going I find getting up early and jumping in the shower as a good way to start. The moment I find myself still sitting in my pyjamas when the evening’s gone dark I tend to feel like a bit of a loser.. It’s all about feeling like I’ve accomplished something, however tiny sometimes!

So today I decided to address the internet time wastage head on with some anti-procrastination- procrastination! I do some paid work remotely and the time wastage on silly sites still applies for that, it isn’t just the job hunting that tends to side-track my concentration..

I have now installed a temporary site blockage on my Chrome browser, and it has worked so far. Every time I’ve landed on a site I have defined as unnecessary, a message comes up saying ‘Shouldn’t you be working?’ I might be of weak/strong mind because that has been enough to steer me back on the right track again. Nothing like some self-inflicted guilt! Let’s see how long it lasts.

Organising your job searching

As you may have gathered from the previous post, I am a big fan of organisation. Lists, stationary and overview make me breathe easier. When I was told that the average time it takes a graduate to find a job after finishing uni was 6 months, I thought I should probably get a system going sooner rather than later. Also seeing my partner, who had been doing the job hunt some months prior to myself, and the amount of cover letters and applications he sent out, I figured a document folder would not suffice.

This is why I have wholly embraced the beauty of jreepad. It is a really simple, small programme that allows you to easily organise your thoughts, applications, informations in a no-frills database layout. You can only save text in it and you cannot format anything in the programme, but it is a great place to have it all saved together. This way you can arrange it in folders and sub-folders and save any bit of information you might need for later.

I have arranged my jreepad into sources for job search, advice, etc, as well as actual applications and job descriptions. I have a folder for each month and within that I save each job I’ve applied for with the individual job descriptions, cover letters, CVs and application forms.

Word processing

I still write my cover letters and CVs in a word processor, but I save a copy in jreepad so I can easily go back and see which version I attached or what I wrote in the email I sent with the application. I also use it to keep track of deadlines and see the progress I’ve made each month.

With an increasing amount of applications written you’ll see that it gets easier with time. I truly hate sitting down with a new cover letter or CV, but with time I’ve saved phrases or CV versions that have worked and I only need to do a little tweaking each time rather than start all over again.

Jreepad is a freeware for Macs, while Windows machines do Treepad. The latter comes in paid versions and as freeware.

It’s worth a look if you feel like doing a bit constructive yet procrastinating organisation!

Screenshot from jreepad

New year – New CV

What better way to start the new year full of potential prospects, paid work and continued recession than to update the CV? Probably loads of ways, however, that is how I’ve chosen to start mine due to sheer necessity.

I began the year by tearing up my old calendar planner and transferring information into a brand new red one. Quite satisfying actually. Sometimes nothing cheers me up as new stationary! There is something about the buying of new stationary as being supposedly conducive to organisation, as well as being brightly coloured with blank pages wiping out the old, used and useless ones.

Picture from here

When it comes to CV writing there is tonnes of information online, so there is little I can add here that will be anything revolutionary on the subject. However, with a couple of months of CV writing I have started to discern what works and what doesn’t work.

Tailor-made and proof-read

Rule number one that is a pretty well-known fact in UK CV writing is to always tailor your CV to the job description. The advice I’ve gotten is to simply use the verbs in the job description and mirror them directly in your CV. When the employer or HR person then scans it your CV will easily tick all their initial boxes. My partner have done some recruiting in his job and they tend to chuck all applications that they can tell have been made on a mass-production scale. So it seems worth spending the time to fashion a CV particularly for each job, or at least for each sector if you are looking across different ones.

The next thing to remember, which I have been a bit sloppy with, is to ALWAYS proof read it, preferably by someone else than yourself. I’ve swapped CVs with friends so we can help each other and possibly notice things that could be improved that we do not see ourselves.

There are all kinds of different ways of organising your CV and it is usually a matter of taste and convention in terms of what sector you’re applying for, what experience you have and what you want to accentuate. A careers adviser gave me a really good tip once where he showed me the a way to give the recruiter a ‘trailer’ to my CV so they could straight away see that my CV was relevant and worth reading. I usually call the header ‘personal profile’ and provide 3-4 bullet points with particularly relevant pieces of information about me that I believe will help me get an interview. And straight after I started using this I got two interviews in short succession!

Personal profile

  • Graduate of University of Awesomeness
  • Considerable experience in what your job entails
  • Project management of something that is super relevant
  • Training in that exact software your company uses

Obviously this trailer should actually reflect what will follow in the CV, but it is a nice way to underline what matters straight away and make the job easier for the recruiter to pick you for an interview!

Here are some CV buzzwords that can be helpful to get you started with the CV rewrite:

Task done?

accomplished
achieved
conducted
created
implemented
organized
performed

Solved a problem?

analyzed
corrected
debugged
decreased
diagnosed
overhauled
rescued
streamlined

Trained others?

coached
counseled
empowered
guided
instructed
taught

So the personal profile can work as a great trailer to what is to follow in the rest of the CV. As long as it isn’t like the trailer for Pirates of the Caribbean 3 where the trailer looked it would be a huge pirate fleet bust-up at sea and the film turned out to be the slowest load of crap I’ve seen and we got so bored we had to walk out mid-way..