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Today's Best Job-Search Websites
By Marty Nemko
Here’s my current list of essential job search websites.
For identifying career goals
The government offers terrific sites:
www.acinet.org and, for
people just starting out,
www.careervoyages.gov. To explore self-employment, visit
www.sba.gov.
Another standout comes from the University of California,
Berkeley
www.career.berkeley.edu
For creating your resume and cover letters
 Resumemaker.com ($29.95 for students and
entry-level workers, $49.95 for more senior professionals.) Here,
you’re handheld in crafting your resume and cover letters from
start to finish. Resumemaker.com offers dozens of resume styles,
and for inspiration, hundreds of professionally created sample
resumes and thousands of employer-pleasing phrases.
For networking
Participate in your field’s online discussion group(s).
Not only will you learn about industry trends and tips and tricks,
after you’ve established credibility, you may be able to solicit
job leads. To find on-target groups: groups.yahoo.com and
groups.google.com, or through your professional association’s
website.
Alumni websites. Most college alumni websites
contain databases of their alumni, including their job title,
employer, and contact information. It’s a bit surprising to me but
fellow alumni, even if strangers, are often willing to provide an
informational interview or even job leads. That’s especially true
at private colleges. Perhaps that’s because people feel a bond
with others who, like them, were willing to spend so much money on
that college.
Linkedin.com. Here’s how it works. After
completing a profile of yourself, you’re allowed to find people
you know from among linkedin’s three million members. You can
search them out by name, employer, or keyword. You then ask them
if you can link to them. That gives you access to all of those
people’s linkedin connections, including their profile and contact
information. That can be very useful. For example, when you’re
applying for a job at a particular company, linkedin.com lets you
search your network to find all the people who work there. You can
then email them with a request for an informational interview. If
you’re a salesperson or consultant, linkedin can be a source of
leads.
To research an industry
Margaret Riley Dikel, creator of the highly regarded career
website portal www.rileyguide.com, recommends the following
starting places: Yahoo Directory (http://dir.yahoo.com/
) the Librarian’s Index to the Internet (www.lii.com),
Scout (http://scout.wisc.edu/)
and the University of Delaware Subject Guides. (http://www2.lib.udel.edu/subj/)
Richard Bolles, author of What Color is Your Parachute, adds
the Internet Public Library (www.ipl.org),
InfoMine (http://infomine.ucr.edu),
andwww.refdesk.com.
To research a prospective employer
Step 1: Obtain objective information. Useful
clues can often be found on the employer’s website, for example,
in its mission statement, press releases, annual report, even how
the site is structured: for example, which aspects of the
employer’s business are most prominently featured? Want more
information? See that employer’s listing on Hoovers.com or
Reference USA, the latter which is available on many public
libraries’ website.
Step 2: Obtain more subjective information.
Likely sources: google using the news tab, then the groups tab,
and then the web tab. Also use www.A9.com, which searches all the
books on Amazon.com! Scuttlebutt on large companies may also be
found in the by-company discussion groups on
www.vault.com and the $20
insider profiles on
www.wetfeet.com.
Employment ads
Simplyhired.com and indeed.com aggregate job
listings from hundreds of employment websites, including the big
ones, for example, monster, craigslist, and America’s Job Bank.
Work.com aggregates the job openings listed on
hundreds of employers’ own websites.
Once you’ve identified target employers, especially smaller
ones, there’s no substitute for checking the individual employer’s
site every few days for new listings. Or at some large
corporation’s sites such as Microsoft’s, sign up for their service
which emails you every time it posts a job opening that matches
your chosen keywords.
For government jobs, the easiest option is
usajobs.opm.gov, which, as of this writing, lists 18,767
job openings scattered all across the country, indeed some
overseas. Find 10,000 more federal openings on individual federal
agency sites. A gateway to those sites is:
www.federaljobs.net.
You may find less-noticed job listings on the website
of a local chapter of your professional association. For
example, if you’re a technical writer, visit the website of the
Society for Technical Communication (www.stc.org)
and find the link to your local chapter.
For a wealth of other job-related websites, go to
www.rileyguide.com.
Advice I’d Give My Child
It’s tempting to spend most of your job-search time on the
Internet. That avoids having to schmooze and cold call, but
successful job seekers spend most of their job search time
contacting people in their network and attending events at which
they’re likely to meet helpful new contacts. Rule of thumb: Spend
25 percent of your job-search time on the Net. Oh, and just
because your father wrote it, don’t ignore my website:www.martynemko.com.
If offers my best advice on every aspect of finding a career,
landing a job, and self-employment. And it’s free.
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