Give it time.
In 15+ years of recruitment, I’ve placed thousands. Rejected thousands more. The difference isn’t what you think.
Let me explain.
The Communication Problem
I ask people what they want. Half can’t tell me. Ask what they’re good at. They recite job descriptions. Ask why they’re leaving. Corporate non-answers.
If you can’t clearly articulate what you want, why you’re qualified, why you’re moving – you’re not ready.
Clear communication isn’t optional. It’s the foundation. Without it, skills don’t matter because nobody knows you have them.
What Actually Works
After thousands of placements, I know what works. It’s not complicated. Just consistently ignored.
First, research like your job depends on it. Because it does. Know the company. Know the role. Know the interviewer. Know the industry. Know competitors. Know challenges.
Second, communicate clearly. Short sentences. Direct answers. Specific examples. No rambling. No corporate speak. No vague platitudes.
Third, follow up. Once is polite. Twice shows interest. Three times is too much. Learn the rhythm.
Fourth, be honest. About experience. About motivations. About what you want. Lies catch up.
The Uncomfortable Reality
Truths nobody wants to hear:
Connections matter more than qualifications. Unfair? Yes. True? Also yes.
First impressions form in seconds. Qualifications take hours to evaluate. Guess which matters more?
Companies ghost constantly. Unprofessional. Also standard. Expect it.
The ‘best’ candidate often doesn’t get hired. The one who fits best does. Not the same thing.
Accept these realities. Work within them.
The Communication Deep Dive
Communication is where most job searches fail. Let me be specific about what good communication looks like.
In emails: Short paragraphs. Clear subject lines. One ask per message. Professional closing. Sent at reasonable hours.
In interviews: Answer the question asked, not the question you wish they asked. Use concrete examples. Name specific results. Pause before responding. Ask for clarification if needed.
In follow-ups: Reference something specific from the conversation. Express genuine interest. Keep it brief. Send within 24 hours.
These aren’t personality traits. They’re learnable skills. Practice them until they’re automatic.
The Long Game
Careers are decades long. Individual job searches are weeks or months. But people get this backwards. They panic about immediate rejections while ignoring long-term reputation.
The recruiter you impress today might place you in your dream role five years from now. The hiring manager who rejected you might hire you at their next company. The candidate you treated well as a peer might become your future boss.
Every interaction matters. Every impression compounds. Every relationship has potential future value.
Play the long game. Be professional always. Follow up on rejection emails with grace. Connect on LinkedIn with genuine notes. Remember names and details.
Short-term thinking gets short-term results. Long-term thinking builds careers.
What Now?
Reading is easy. Acting is hard. That’s why most won’t change. Nod along, agree, keep doing what they’ve always done.
Don’t be most people.
Pick one thing from this article. Do it today. Another tomorrow. Small improvements compound. Big intentions without action go nowhere.
Market rewards action. Not plans. Not ideas. Not intentions. Action.
What’s your first action?
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