Category Archives: uncategorized

A Systematic Approach to Job-Hunting: Step 2

This post is part of a continuing series about job-hunting the Donald Asher way. In step 1, you identified your job targets. Now that you know what job you’re looking for, it’s time to find the employers who will hire you to do that job. That’s right — you’re ready for step 2: identifying raw leads.

Asher groups raw leads into 3 categories: organizations, people, and ideas. Start building a list consisting of these 3 things. Include all the businesses who hire people who do your type of work, all the people you know in real life and online (yup, every last one of them), and all the ideas you come up with as you listen to the news or talk to people.

First, list businesses. This will take some research. Ask a reference librarian for help researching businesses, visit your university career centre, consult business journals, contact your local chamber of commerce and other business associations. Heck, check out the Yellow Pages.

Next, list everyone you know. And trust me when I say Asher wants you to list everyone. List your family members, your friends, your family members’ friends, your friends’ family members, your dog walker — everyone. Don’t stop there. List the groups and associations you belong to in real life and online, and then start making contact with the individuals in these groups. You get a job by talking to people, and Asher has plenty of stories of people finding work because someone — and it’s always the person you’d least expect — had a vital piece of information that led to a job.

Third, list any ideas for leads that occur to you as you listen to the news or read. Asher suggests doing things like finding out what businesses in your area have recently signed new leases — a sign that business is booming.

Your goal is to create a list of 100 leads, which you will maintain at all times. Once you pursue a lead to its conclusion, you’ll need to replace it on the list. According to Asher, telemarketers claim to get a yes about 4% of the time, so having 100 leads means you should get 4 job offers along the way.

A Systematic Approach to Job-Hunting: Step 1

Donald Asher’s first step in a job search is identifying job targets. A job target has 3 components: industry, function, and title. Before doing anything, you need to know what job you’re looking for. You will not contort yourself to fit posted jobs; you will  go after the jobs you want. Go crazy with yourContinue Reading

A Systematic Approach to Job-Hunting

I recently discovered the books of career expert Donald Asher. In Cracking the Hidden Job Market, Asher offers a step-by-step approach to conducting a job search. The approach has 7 steps: Identify job targets Identify raw leads Convert raw leads into lists of names of specific people Turn a name into an appointment Sell inContinue Reading

Stay-at-Home Parents and Prisoners

I’m back after a summer of baseball, beach days, and burnt marshmallow ice cream (from Ed’s — mmm) followed by ACL surgery as soon as the kids were back in school. It’s been 20 days since surgery, and, though I have a long road of physio ahead of me, things are getting back to normal.Continue Reading

The Subversive Copy Editor (Part I)

There are two editing books that deserve space (not that they require much of it, being the pithy publications that they are) on every editor’s shelf: Strunk and White’s Elements of Style and Carol Fisher Saller’s Subversive Copy Editor. Upon seeing The Subversive Copy Editor lying on our bed recently, my husband assumed that theContinue Reading

Serena Williams, The Assailants, Their Victim, and Her Drinking

Ms. Williams got herself in hot water with the media this week when she suggested that getting drunk at a party might not be the best idea. She was commenting on a US court case that ended with two football players being sentenced to detention for raping a teenage girl at a house party. AfterContinue Reading

The Incomparable Lionel Shriver

Yesterday was the pub date for Shriver’s new novel, Big Brother. I went straight to the store and bought it. What a pleasure to be back in the presence of her insightful writing. A dozen pages in, she conveys so many ideas to which I find myself nodding my head in recognition and agreement, andContinue Reading

The Cold, Cold Call

I’m getting better at tailoring my resumé for specific companies and sending it out, but career counsellors still push the cold call. When you’re an introvert, the cold call is chilly indeed. I said last week that I would make my first cold call by Friday; it’s now Wednesday. The Wednesday after. I attempted toContinue Reading

Book is Dead

I’m reading Amanda Lang‘s Power of Why. It’s about letting go of preconceived notions, so that we can solve problems effectively. It occurred to me that anyone holding on to the old model of print books is not harnessing the power of why. I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: book, like God,Continue Reading

Copy Editor vs. Copyeditor

Like every good Canadian editor, I keep the Canadian Oxford Dictionary at hand to confirm spellings and definitions, and the COD spells my profession as copy editor. Ironically, everywhere I look, this term is spelled inconsistently — sometimes as one word and sometimes as two. The Chicago Manual of Style uses copyeditor, and thus soContinue Reading