Shows business awareness.
Every week I see this pattern. Every week people nod, agree, then do exactly what they were doing before. Maybe you’ll be different.
Probably not. But here it is anyway.
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.
The Details That Matter
Little things add up fast.
Email response time signals interest. Same day good. Next day acceptable. Three days concerning.
CV formatting signals attention to detail. Inconsistent fonts, mixed bullets, typos – character indicators, not minor issues.
Questions signal intelligence. Generic template questions sound generic. Specific questions about challenges sound prepared.
Follow-up signals professionalism. Brief thank you within 24 hours. Reference something specific. Express continued interest. Simple. Most skip it.
The Hard Truth
Most people don’t get jobs because they don’t deserve them yet.
Sounds harsh. Is harsh. Also true.
Six months searching with no offers? The problem isn’t the market. The market is the same for everyone. The problem is you – approach, preparation, communication, attitude.
That’s actually good news. You can change yourself. Can’t change the market.
Stop blaming external. Start fixing internal.
Common Objections I Hear
‘But I’m an introvert.’ Introverts can prepare thoroughly, answer concisely, and ask thoughtful questions. Introversion isn’t an excuse.
‘But I’m not good at self-promotion.’ Nobody’s asking you to brag. They’re asking you to clearly explain what you’ve accomplished. Facts aren’t bragging.
‘But the market is terrible right now.’ The market is the same for everyone. Some people still get jobs. Be one of them.
‘But I don’t have enough experience.’ Then get creative about how you frame what you do have. Transferable skills exist.
Objections are comfortable. Results require discomfort. Pick your discomfort.
The Real-World Application
Let me give you a concrete example from last month. A candidate came to me – great experience, solid CV on paper. Three final-round interviews, no offers. Couldn’t understand why.
I watched them do a mock interview. Within five minutes, I knew. They answered questions that weren’t asked. They gave ten-minute answers to two-minute questions. They never once asked about the team or the challenges.
They were so focused on impressing that they forgot to connect. Interviews aren’t presentations. They’re conversations. Act accordingly.
We worked on it for two weeks. Three specific changes: listen fully before responding, keep answers under two minutes, ask at least three substantive questions. Next interview? Offer.
Small changes. Big results. That’s usually how it works.
Final Thought
I’ve been direct because sugarcoating doesn’t help. Market is competitive. Rejection common. Success requires more than showing up.
But here’s what I know: people who consistently apply these principles get results. Not immediately. Not always first try. But eventually, reliably, predictably.
Success in job searching isn’t magic. It’s method. Clear communication, thorough preparation, consistent follow-up, honest self-assessment.
Simple doesn’t mean easy. But achievable.
Good luck. Need less of it if you do the work.
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