Thursday, May 21, 2020
Job Hunters Think Youre Not in Sales Think Again! - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Job Hunters Think Youâre Not in âSalesâ Think Again! - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Editorâs Note: This blog is a modified excerpt from professional âheadhunterâ and bestselling job-hunting book author Skip Freemanâs next book in the âHeadhunterâ Hiring Secrets series of job-hunting books, CAREER STALLED? How to Get Your Career Back in High Gear and Land the Job You Deserve-Your Dream Job. Publication is scheduled for early 2013. ________________________________________________________ Once I decide to present a candidate to one of my client companies to fill one of their open positions, I stress to the candidate that, from that point forward, he or she should consider himself/herself in the sales business. As you can perhaps imagine, I quite often get some stammering and stuttering from candidates, who usually say something like this: âNo, Skip, I am a chemist (or whatever). I donât know anything about sales!â My usual response? âAu contraire. Youâre definitely in the sales business, whether you know it or not, or whether you like it or not. And you definitely need to start thinkingâ"and actingâ"like a salesperson from this moment on!â If you are currently in a new job search, or expect to be sometime in the near future, in order to be successful in landing your new job, you have to adopt this same type of thinking, this same attitude. Here is how I strongly advise you to approach each and every career opportunity you pursue during a new job search: Understand that you have a âproductâ to sell in the âmarketplaceâ known as the job market, and that product is YOU! Initially, at least, it is uncomfortable for most people to think of themselves as, well, a âproduct,â and thatâs completely understandable, of course. But the fact of the matter is, whenever you enter the job market as a candidate, that is precisely how you must view yourself, as a product being offered for sale at a given âaskingâ price (salary). (You can bet your life that this is the way your potential âcustomers,â i.e., hiring managers and the companies they represent, will initially view you!) Plus, you, like all âproducts,â also have certain real and perceived product characteristics, e.g., your education, experience, skill sets, career achievements and accomplishments, etc., a.k.a. your âprofessional brand,â that you will be (or better be) âshowcasingâ during your entire new job search. In other words, the product you are offering for sale consists of all of the factors that go into making up the professional YOU! You also have a âsales brochureâ for the âproductâ youâre selling, and itâs normally referred to as your résumé. If you want to ensure that the product that is YOU stands out from the competition, i.e., other job seekers vying for the same position(s) as you, you will therefore want to make sure that you have a high-quality âsales brochure.â To put this issue in perspective, imagine that youâre shopping for a âhigh-ticketâ item, such as an expensive vehicle (which would actually amount to the equivalent of an average annual salary in todayâs job market!). When you ask the salesperson for a sales brochure, she hands you one that is visually unappealing, totally disorganized and includes the following âsellâ copy: Our vehicle features: Four wheels Four doors A steering wheel Can take you from âpoint Aâ to âpoint Bâ Absurd? Of course it is! But it is also analogous to the approach many job seekers take in their âsales brochures,â i.e., their résumés! In every sense of the term, most come across to hiring managers (and corporate recruiters and âheadhuntersâ) as nothing more than âme tooâ candidates and are immediately eliminated from considerationâ"just as you wouldnât even consider buying an expensive vehicle from our fictitious dealership. Like every other âsalespersonââ"or at least every other successful salespersonâ" you must be prepared to engage in many âsales callsâ (prospecting activities) before actually making a âsaleâ (getting a job offer). Salespeople would be elated if all they had to do was to make one or two sales calls and âcloseâ the deal and make the sale. But that certainly isnât how it works at all. They have to continually prospect (and network) among potential customers, utilizing a variety of media and approaches: the telephone, email, direct mail and, of course, in person, in order to âstay in the gameâ and ultimately make a sale. Just coincidentally, as a job hunter, you have to be prepared to do these same things, and effectively use these same media and approaches, if you want to stay in the game end up âmaking the sale,â i.e., getting a job offer. There are few âshortcutsâ in the sales business. This is equally true when it comes to landing a new job in todayâs extremely challenging job marketâ"donât expect to find many âshortcutsâ there, either. Remember: Selling is NOT âtelling,â itâs asking! When is the last time you bought anything from a salesperson who insisted on overwhelming you with his or her âsales pitch,â never giving you a chance to ask probing questions about the product or service being considered? (If youâre like most people, your answer quite likely is NEVER!) The salesperson who does not, or will not, take the time to learn and understand what the âcustomerâsâ needs and desires are before trying to make the sale is rarely among the top salespeople! As a job hunter, you also need to learn what the âcustomer,â the hiring manager, really wants and needs in a position he or she is trying to fill before going into your âsales pitchâ! How do you accomplish that? By doing research before making initial contact, and then by asking necessary clarifying questions about the position once you actually make contact with the hiring manager, either on the telephone or in person. Successful salespeople know, instinctively, that most customers will tell them (the salesperson) how they (the customer) can be âsold.â All the salesperson has to do before making his or her âsales pitch,â then, is simply listen to what the customer is telling him or her. Actually quite simple, huh? Also very good, sound advice for job hunters trying to learn the best way to sell the value of their own candidacy to hiring managers! Learning and then effectively applying tried-and-true sales techniques to the job hunt is NOT rocket science! When you think about it, it really is nothing more than common sense, and the payoff can be tremendous! Why? Because most of your âcompetitors,â others job hunters going after the same career opportunities as you, will not even attempt to learn, let alone adopt and then effectively employ these techniques during their job search. As a matter of fact, most wonât even think about it! Author: Skip Freeman is the author of âHeadhunterâ Hiring Secrets: The Rules of the Hiring Game Have Changed . . . Forever! and is the President and Chief Executive Officer of The HTW Group (Hire to Win), an Atlanta, GA, Metropolitan Area Executive Search Firm. Specializing in the placement of sales, engineering, manufacturing and RD professionals, he has developed powerful techniques that help companies hire the best and help the best get hired.
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