Showing posts with label Job Applications. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Job Applications. Show all posts

Job Applications -- A job in itself


On my separately maintained client website, the word ‘Checklist’ appears in the horizontal navigation section. Once opened, 15 commonly overlooked interviewing prep items appear. The checklist serves a twofold purpose: First, to avoid being blindsided by committing common (and in some cases comical) oversights, and second, to reduce job-interviewing stress.
Item nine on the checklist recommends having a prefilled out job application for quick reference. In roughly two-thirds of all scheduled job interviews, most employers have potential applications complete their employment application online prior to scheduling a job interview. This leaves approximately one-third who still prefer to do it the old fashion way—onsite and in person.
The majority of job applications will vary in length from two to five pages. Some openings are occupation specific, such as medical, engineering and education. Those positions often gravitate toward the anal, with education topping the list. It is not uncommon for an education application to exceed 15-plus detailed pages.
Job application forms need to be taken seriously. In many cases, job applicants will confront two different mindsets. Within each organization—especially those with 25 or employees, there will be the personnel or human resource department, and everyone else. As an unwritten rule, most HR departments do not make critical hiring decisions. Department heads reserve that unto themselves.
This does not mean that HR should not be taken seriously. The HR Manager or Director can easily influence a hiring decision, but more often than not, those individuals tend to focus on dates, why you left (or are leaving) and references. We are not talking about low-end hourly employment or part-time positions. The HR department often fills low-level positions as a matter of expediency.
Here is a quick scenario to illustrate a point. Suppose XYZ Corporation needs to hire an energetic, creative and highly gifted sales manager. The VP of Sales and Marketing would make the hiring decision. HR would be called upon to perform the screening, reference, background and credit file checks. To do this, they usually require a far more detailed job application.
What about the individual’s one or two-page creative résumé? That, of course, is for the overworked decision maker to read and use. That lengthy job application, however, is separate issue. What is in the résumé merely needs to track what appears in on job application. The moment it fails to do that, HR will alert the decision maker as to glaring discrepancies.
Via the Internet, there are an endless number of free blank job application forms available. It is strongly recommended that you download one that is at least five or more pages, and fill it out. If called upon to fill out an application onsite, you can complete the tasks in far less time when you have a prefilled out application at the ready.