| Where's my interview? | | Print | |
| Written by Jane Jackson |
|
You are looking for a new job, and you've sent your resume in response to numerous advertised roles without success. If this sounds familiar, read on! What happens to your resume once you click on the ‘Apply' button? On average, every new job advertisement elicits an average of 200-300 resumes. Many recruitment agencies and some companies use selection software (such as ‘Turbo Recruit') that automatically screens resumes for key words that are a match to the job advertisement. Other organizations still rely on the human eye when it comes to screening resumes. If the average recruitment consultant or HR consultant takes about 20 seconds to review each resume, that's 3 resumes per minute (without a break.) To get through 200 resumes it would take over an hour. Multiply this by 10 or 20 positions, which is the average number of openings managed by a recruiter or HR professional and that's 10 - 20 hours just screening resumes! After resumes are screened, then what happens? The screener is looking for resumes that will fall into the categories of ‘Yes' or ‘Maybe.' The ‘Yes' and ‘Maybe' resumes will be given a more thorough reading after the initial screening. The ‘No' resumes will be out. Those candidates who are in the ‘No' pile may, or may not, receive an email letting them know that they have been unsuccessful. Often it's an automated response along the lines of, ‘We have received many applications from candidates who are a close match to our requirements and unfortunately you were not successful.' Which resumes end up in the ‘No' pile? The resumes that don't match those key words required for the role, the resumes that have typographical errors, the resumes that are hard to follow, the ones with unexplained gaps in employment, the ones that don't address the selection criteria, the ‘generic' resumes and the resumes from candidates who simply send the same resume for every role without tailoring it to suit. What about the resumes that end up in the ‘Yes' or ‘Maybe' pile? Perhaps they are from candidates who were referred by another employee or were recommended by a friend, and those candidates who demonstrated in their resumes the closest match to all the relevant key words in the job advertisement. After more in depth consideration the ‘Maybe' resumes that join the ‘Yes' resumes will generate a screening phone call or email suggesting a time for an interview. Those successful resumes will probably an initial phone-screening interview. The hiring manager will have provided the screener with specific requirements for the role (hope that those requirements don't change during the selection process - sometimes changes do happen which are frustrating to the screener, the recruiter and disappointing to the applicant.) If the candidate is granted an interview another waiting process for the candidate begins. There will be interviews, feedback, more questions, and more interviews. These interviews might be one-on-one or panel interviews, there may be psychometric assessments; skills assessments and/or role-play situations and presentations to be made as part of the selection process. Between each stage there will be a waiting period, often agonizing for the candidate. If the process continues successfully there will be reference checks, salary negotiations, background checks and finally - hopefully - an offer. Meanwhile, back to those resumes that didn't quite make it. The odds of those candidates getting an email or an actual phone call thanking them for taking the time to apply are not very high. Some companies will respond to each and every applicant. The majority don't. What can you do to maximize your chances of getting in to the pile of ‘Yes' resumes so you continue in the selection process?
Make sure that you expand your job search so that you have several options on the go at any given time. This will enable you to move forward, stay focused and remain positive whatever the outcome of any individual application. Good luck! Jane Jackson is a career coach and director of Style Success. For enquiries about career management and career transition coaching email This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or visit www.stylesuccess.biz
|






