
Job hunting involves much the same research, whether you are a graduate looking for your first job, or an experienced civil engineer looking a career move. Job hunting is all about finding jobs, of course but not any old job.
Successful job hunting means:
There are two main ways of finding a job by browsing in the open job market and or by hunting in the hidden job market. You may be surprised to hear that only around 20% of jobs are ever openly advertised most people, in fact, secure their jobs via the hidden market.
The Open Market
In the open job market, vacancies are advertised openly. Graduate vacancies are advertised on vacancy databases at universities. They are also advertised in graduate directories and publications.
Generic job websites have general vacancies, but industry websites run by professional bodies or commercial agencies (like yourenergyjobs) will have vacancies for specific industries.
Employers will advertise vacancies on their own websites, so you can do some research to target employers that you would like to work for, and then monitor their vacancy pages.
The national broadsheets newspapers have at least one day/week dedicated to engineering vacancies. Smaller companies will advertise in the local papers.
You can also approach recruitment agencies (who may or may not advertise the job directly in one of the above mediums or on their own website).
The Hidden Market
Many employers try to minimise the expense and risk of hiring new staff by recruiting in the hidden job market. Why bother with the expense and hassle of advertising a job and then having to have a full selection procedure when they may already know, or have heard of, someone who would fit the bill perfectly? This will also spare them from being swamped by applications, particularly in the most competitive job areas.
So how do you, as job seeker, maximise your chances in the hidden market? Try these tips:
Job hunting hints and tips
There are lots of books and websites offering job hunting advice and we have listed some of the best ones below but in your hour of need, dont forget to follow yourenergyjobs's commonsense rules of job-hunting.
Use the web
Online recruitment is one of the great internet success stories, but when
job hunting your best bet is a specialist 'vertical' job site like
yourenergyjobs rather than a bigger, generalist 'horizontal' jobboard (like
Monster.com).
Sign up for regular job alerts
YourEnergyJobs has a particularly good line in
E-mail alerts, but you may decide to register to receive them at a
personal E-mail address. One risk of job hunting online is that your inbox
at your current employer fills up with job prospects with their competitors.
Not the most embarrassing thing you can do with your email, but best avoided
all the same. SMS alerts are also available on some sites, but read the ts
and cs to make sure you aren't paying for them
Register with a recruitment consultant
You can take some of the pain out of job hunting by using a consultancy, but
job hunters proceed with care. There are reputable consultancies which will use your CV with discretion,
where others will throw it around like confetti. When job hunting,
especially if you are already in a job, the last thing you want is your CV
turning up on the desk of your current employer. Remember that consultancies
are recruiting to fill specific jobs you can't rely on them to find a job
for you.
Rewrite your CV
Web sites and consultancies will expect to see an uptodate CV, so
revisit and refresh your CV to make the best impression