I’ve written a number of posts lately
describing how people get interviews and job offers and what to do if they’re
not a “perfect” fit. What I find interesting is that many of the people who
don’t fit the traditional mold find the advice refreshing and just as many find
it depressing. I’ll use this post to summarize the advice and provide more
ammunition for using the back door to get an interview. I’ll start with a
high-level view of the current job market (February 2015).
I’ve written a number of posts lately describing how people get interviews
and job offers and what to do if they’re not a “perfect” fit. What I find
interesting is that many of the people who don’t fit the traditional mold find
the advice refreshing and just as many find it depressing. I’ll use this post
to summarize the advice and provide more ammunition for using the back door to get
an interview. I’ll start with a high-level view of the current job market
(February 2015).

As the graph (JOLTs Report) from the U.S. Department of
Labor (DOL) indicates, job growth is continuing to strengthen, with over one
million net new unique jobs posted online this past year. (This is the top line
in the graph.) A separate DOL report indicates that 3 million jobs were filled
in 2014. Expect these trends to continue for at least the next 6-12 months. As
a result, now is a great time to get a job, a new job or a better job. It’s
also exactly why you should not apply directly to a job posting.
How and Why You Should Use the Back Door to Get Your Next
Job
1. There are two job markets - the
public market and the hidden job market. Jobs are filled in the public market with people who have “perfect” backgrounds
and are willing to take lateral transfers. Careers are created in the hidden job market with
people who have non-traditional backgrounds. The JOLTs report represents all of
the open jobs in the U.S. public market. There are just as many better jobs in
the hidden job market, but you’ll only get to these through the back door.
2. In the hidden job market, people are
judged by their past performance and future potential. Before a person is even interviewed
for public jobs, they must pass through a bunch of filters largely based on
things that represent a “perfect” background. Companies are now using predictive analytics to
find even more perfect people. Those with non-traditional backgrounds can get
hired by gaining entry through the back door and getting assessed largely based
on their accomplishments.
3. Demonstrate your ingenuity, drive,
persistence and ability by hacking a job. Here are 15 different techniques you can use to get an interview by
entering through the back door. Most of them involve demonstrating your ability
to do the work in lieu of a perfect background.
4. Spend at least 80% of your time
finding a key to the back door. Unless you’re a perfect fit you will not get an interview
by applying directly to a job posting. So don’t waste your time. Limit this
effort to one hour per day. Here’s what to do with the other 6-8 hours.
5. Getting a back door interview
increases your chances of getting the job by 2-3X. Hiring managers assign more value
to those who bypass the gatekeepers. Most of these are referrals and people who
have contacted them directly in some unusual way. By ensuring you’re being judged
on your past performance, you’re more likely to get past the first round of
preliminary assessments. Here you have a 1 in 3 chance of getting hired. Job
seekers who apply directly have less than a 100 to 1 chance of being
interviewed and a 1 in 10 chance of being hired if they get interviewed by a
recruiter. (Contact Dr.
John Sullivan if you want to dispute these figures.)
6. Once you get the interview, don’t
wing it.
Candidates must be be fully
prepared. It's even better if they're given the questions ahead of time.
If so, they can then formally present their answers using this template.
Regardless, completing and practicing using the template will help during the
actual interview. (Job Hack 16: send a recording of your best practice session
using the questions in the template as another idea for getting an interview.)
I’m still amazed that active job seekers think complaining
about the unfairness of the job market and the hiring process will help their
situation. It won’t. What I’ve learned is that the best people take advantage
of the situation regardless of the circumstances to achieve their objectives.
If your objective is to get a new or better job, recognize that how these jobs
are being filled is now changing. So take advantage of these changes. Getting a
job is a sales process. And like a sales process, you have a choice: either
make lots of cold calls or a few warm calls. More important, the warm calls
will help you get a key to the back door and a better job. The cold calls
won’t.
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