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Ten
Terrific Ways to Gain Job/Career Experience if You are Starting from Scratch
We've heard a classic complaint
from AltaVista Career participants that it is tough to break into a career
field if you lack experience. But how are you going to get experience if
no one will hire you?
Actually, many
colleges today are solving this problem for students by offering programs
in conjunction with their studies that are called internships or cooperative
education programs. This means taking some time out during your college
study to work in the field you are considering after graduation. Many times
employers are so impressed with the quality of the interns or coop students
that they offer job opportunities upon graduation. A similar situation
could also be established by signing on with a temp agency that hires you
out on assignment. Many professional or technical assignments are showing
up today.
If you have not
had the benefit of a coop, internship or temp assignment yourself, here
are ten other ideas you can explore:
-
Contact the school
you graduated from and see if they would work with you and the local employers
to create a post graduation internship. Start with the department you majored
in and/or the career planning office on campus.
-
Find a business on
your own and offer to volunteer your services for a period of time (3 to
six months) in turn for a letter of recommendation upon the successful
completion of this project.
-
(Re)Write your resume
in a functional format, using college course content, demonstrating your
knowledge of the field. For ideas about how to do this, visit Yana Parker's
Web site that compliments her Damn Good Resume books, http://www.damngood.com.
-
Write a proposal
for a project that will meet an unmet need of businesses in the field you
are pursuing and start heavily networking in the industry until you find
someone who will take you up on your project. (You may need to do a bit
of research to pull this off successfully)
-
Look for a job in
an emerging industry such as new media where the criteria for credentials
are less stringent than that in older, more established fields.
-
Network heavily with
alumni from your college. Obtain their names from the alumni office at
your school. People who have a graduated from your alma mater will have
more of a vested interest in your career success and may be more inclined
to take a chance on you, especially with the confidence of knowing the
kind of education you have had.
-
Get yourself some
publicity or get yourself published. If you write an article or book or
get recognition for some sort of contribution in your community, you will
have a feather in your cap and employers will see you as having something
worthwhile to offer them.
-
Volunteer for work
in a third world country or in Russia or one of the former Soviet Union
block countries. These countries are desperate for competent business help
and after you've worked under constraints you would face in these situations,
who could dispute that you have credible experience?
-
Join a job search
club or start a success team. Others may have some ideas and insights for
you that you can't see for yourself. Others will inspire you success and
you will increase your networking community. There are affiliates in many
churches around the country or there is an organization called the 5 O'clock
Club http://www.fiveoclockclub.com
that has branches primarily on the East Coast. You can read about success
teams by scouting out a book now out of print called Teamworks! By Barbara
Sher and Annie Gottlieb.
-
Hire yourself a career
coach. Visit the International Coach Federation and investigate the numerous
coaches listed through their referral service. Look particularly for those
who specialize in career and job search matters. You can find these connections
at http://www.coachfederation.org.
Many coaches offer free sample sessions.
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