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How to Supercharge Your Job Search in One Week
by Kevin Donlin - Guaranteed Resumes - Click for Info
Back in the 1990s, when I worked for other people, one of my clients was a
little company from Tennessee called Federal Express. Since its founding in
1973, FedEx has grown from literally a "fly-by-night" 14-plane operation into a
multi-billion dollar corporation.
And ... what does this have to do with your job search?
Well, success leaves clues, as the gurus say.
And one of the reasons for the great success of FedEx can be traced to the
following motto, which is a part of their corporate culture: You can't improve
what you don't measure.
It's the same for your job search.
To get the most from every hour of every day -- and get hired faster -- you have
to track how you spend your time. Only then can you really improve what you're
doing.
OK. Let me make a proposal and a prediction here.
The proposal is simple: I want you to track how you spend your day from the time
you wake up until you knock off at night. Track your activities in 5-minute
blocks and do this for one full work week, from Monday to Friday.
That's my proposal. What's my prediction?
You will be shocked -- Shocked! -- by how much time you're frittering away each
week. We're talking hours and hours of wasted effort, if you're like most job
seekers I meet.
Now. I'm not one to give advice that I don't follow. So I decided to try this
experiment on yours truly. Here's what happened ....
Two weeks ago, I started carrying a little black notebook to write down how I
spent my time Monday through Friday, from 6:00 a.m. until 7:00 p.m. I tracked it
all in 5-minute increments, right down to telephone calls, checking email and
bathroom breaks.
At the end of that week, I tallied up the numbers in an Excel spreadsheet for
analysis. The results were nothing short of astonishing.
Here's just one example: I spent 585 minutes that week reading and responding to
email. That's 9.75 hours -- more than one workday! Multiply that by four weeks
and it's 39 hours -- nearly one full workweek -- spent on email each month.
If I were looking for a job, do you think I could have spent, say, four of those
hours each week on something more productive? You bet your bippy.
So I made changes.
I limited myself to checking email only three times a day instead of the 9 or 10
times I was before. Result? The next week, I slashed email time to 250 minutes,
or about 4.15 hours. That's an extra 5.6 hours of time every week to spend on
higher-level activities.
If you're in a job search and save 5-10 hours a week by tracking and eliminating
unproductive activities this way, you could see a dramatic increase in job
leads. Especially if you replace low-level tasks like checking email with
high-value activities like networking and calling on employers directly.
Example: you can make networking calls to 6 friends in one hour to remind them
that you're in the job market, explain what you're looking for and ask for
assistance. Six calls multiplied by 5 hours equals 30 calls a week -- 120 a
month.
Now, do you think you MIGHT get hired faster if you called to network with 120
people this month? I'll answer that for you -- Yes!
It all starts with tracking how you spend your day, identifying chunks of wasted
time and replacing them with productive activities, like networking or
hand-delivering your resume.
And here's an immediate, extra benefit: the mere act of measuring what you do
will improve how you do it. By some quirk of human nature, when we know that
we'll be held accountable for our actions, we tend to perform better. Try it and
see.
The first step is easy -- carry around a little notebook for one week and write
down how you spend each day. Start tomorrow.
Please don't underestimate the incredible power of this simple idea. I promise
you will be energized and excited when you measure -- and improve -- how you
spend your time. You WILL get hired faster if you do this.
Now go out and make your own luck!

Kevin Donlin is President of Guaranteed Resumes.
Since 1996, he and his team have provided resumes, cover letters and online job-search assistance to clients in all 50 states and 23 countries. Kevin has been interviewed by USA Today, CBS MarketWatch, The Wall Street Journal's National Business Employment Weekly, CBS Radio, and many others.
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