Showing posts with label job search. Show all posts
Showing posts with label job search. Show all posts

Sunday, 6 October 2019

#LISprochat lead-in - topic & questions for Mon Oct 7 2019 - 8:30pm ET ANNIVERSARY CHAT! #lisprochatis

5th birthday cake by Andy Eick via Flickr

TOPIC

HAPPY 5th ANNIVERSARY TO #LISPROCHAT: Translating Skillsets- how to sell yourself to non-libraries & sell libraries on your non-lib skills



Leigh and I realised that we completely forgot to celebrate the chat's 5th anniversary! Which was actually back on March 8th of this year, oops! So we've actually been chatting for five-and-a-half years at this point! I've decided that to celebrate, we're going to go back to our roots, we're revisiting the first chat we ever ran (back when we were still #inaljchat), which funnily enough I was one of the co-hosts for!

The chat was originally based on this article: Translating Non-Library Skills to a Library-Directed Résumé. Interesting enough this is what we're discussing in my LIS foundations class at the University of Alberta this week too and I had no idea about that connection until I sat down to write this post!



PLEASE REMEMBER THAT WE'RE CHANGING THE TIME TO 8:30PM ET!


QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.


Q1 What do you think are the most transferable LIS skills you learned in school or on the job? What industries do you think they apply to?

Q2 How do you showcase your transferrable skills on your resumes and in your cover letters?

Q3 What are some positions you think LIS skills translate really well too? Have you ever worked in any of these roles?

Q4 What do you think the future is for librarians in non-library roles?


PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 8:30 PM ET NEXT MONDAY, OCTOBER 7 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Saturday, 27 July 2019

#LISprochat lead-in - topic & questions for Mon Jul 29 2019 - 8:30pm ET

via Flickr by Alan Levine


TOPIC

Imposter Syndrome in the Library Industry


We're revisiting a topic we first chatted about back in 2017. Imposter syndrome!

Leigh will be hosting the chat this time around and she's put together a list of a few articles to look into before the chat:


  1. Measuring impostor phenomenon among health sciences librarians
  2. 19 People With Impostor Syndrome Told Us What It Feels Like
  3. 5 Different Types of Imposter Syndrome (and 5 Ways to Battle Each One) 
  4. Is impostor syndrome holding you back at work?



PLEASE REMEMBER THAT WE'RE CHANGING THE TIME TO 8:30PM ET!


QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.


Q1 Have you ever dealt with imposter syndrome? Please share your experience.

Q2 What external triggers do you think cause imposter syndrome? How about internal triggers?

Q3 What advice do you have for dealing with imposter syndrome?

Q4 What resources do you turn to help you cope with imposter syndrome?


PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 8:30 PM ET NEXT MONDAY, JULY 29 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Friday, 31 May 2019

#LISprochat lead-in - topic & questions for Mon Jun 3 2018 - 8:30pm ET

via INFOSPACE



TOPIC

Non-traditional jobs for Library Professionals


We've discussed this topic before, but not in quite a while from what I can remember, and given that it's the time of year when many new grads are hunting jobs in the industry I thought now was a good time to revive the topic. I've always been a fan of reminding people to remove the "library blinders" and remember that the skills we've trained in and developed in libraries translate very well to a wide variety of "non-traditional" roles in other sectors. I first wrote about that topic for INALJ back in 2013. It's especially relevant these days with the funding cuts we're seeing to all areas of libraries in North America thanks to shifts in Governments. Here are some reference articles for the chat:

https://ischool.syr.edu/infospace/2018/05/24/45-more-non-librarian-jobs-for-mlis-grads/
http://www.ala.org/educationcareers/careers/paths/jobtypes/privatesector
https://medium.com/sjsuischool/5-ways-to-find-non-library-jobs-that-match-your-lis-skills-88562cbfe768


PLEASE REMEMBER THAT WE'VE CHANGED THE TIME TO 8:30PM ET!


QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.

Q1 What are the skillsets that trained library professionals possess that translate well to jobs that aren't in libraries specifically?

Q2  What sectors and job roles do you think suit library professionals outside of libraries?

Q3 What resources do you use when you're trying to find non-traditional jobs as a library professional?

Q4 Have you ever worked in a non-traditional role? Tell everyone about the non-traditional work that you've done as a library professional and how you feel it related to libraries?


PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 8:30 PM ET NEXT MONDAY, JUNE 3 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Friday, 21 September 2018

#LISprochat lead-in - topic & questions for Mon Sep 24 2018 - 8:30pm ET

via matamoros on Pixabay

TOPIC


The catch-22 of "experience required" for entry-level library jobs


We're taking it back to job advice again this week, figured since it's the start of another academic year now was a good time to discuss getting experience in libraries in order to get an entry-level library job. As the Annoyed Librarian once pointed out, most MLIS programs don't actually give their students any library experience, or at least they didn't in 2011. I have seen a few programs since then offering optional practicums for their students. Interestingly this is in contrast to Canadian Library Technician college programs which all have a mandatory 105 hours of library practicum placements as graduation requirements.

My inspiration for today's chat is the article "When an entry-level job requires experience" from TheMuse.


PLEASE REMEMBER THAT WE'VE CHANGED THE TIME TO 8:30PM ET!


QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.

Q1 Did your library program require you to do any work experience in a library in order to graduate? Was there an option? If not, did you make your own options by working or volunteering?

Q2 How did you find volunteer and employment opportunities as a library school student?

Q3 Did the experience you got during school help you get into your first post-grad library role?

Q4 What more do you think library schools can do to support their students in getting library experience to improve their eligibility in hiring once they're post-grad?

PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 8:30 PM ET NEXT MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Friday, 30 March 2018

#LISprochat lead-in - topic & questions for Mon Apr 2 2018 - 8:30pm ET

TOPIC

Career regrets and how to avoid them


Regrets suck, so let's talk about career regrets and some strategies for avoiding them, or dealing with them after the fact. This week's chat is inspired by Ms Career Girl's How to avoid the 5 biggest career regrets article. And here are a few other articles on the topic:

Coping with Career Regret by Priscilla Claman over at Life Hacker
5 Common Career Regrets To Avoid by Glenn Llopis at Forbes
Why We Have Career Regrets, And What To Do About Them by Caroline Beaton on HuffPost


PLEASE REMEMBER THAT WE'VE CHANGED THE TIME TO 8:30PM ET!



While you're here please consider checking out our new feature for 2018: #LISPROCHAT Reads, our professional development book club. The next book club session will be running next Monday, March 23, at 8:30 pm ET.


QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.

Q1 Have you ever found yourself having a regret in your LIS career? If so, share that with us if you don't mind.

Q2 Did you overcome that regret? If so, how? What strategies and tools did you use? If not, why don't you think you did?

Q3 What are your suggestions to people for avoiding regrets in their LIS careers?

Q4 What do you think some of the biggest dangers for regret are in the LIS industry?


PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 8:30 PM ET NEXT MONDAY, APRIL 2 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Friday, 19 January 2018

#LISprochat lead-in - topic & questions for Mon Jan 22 2018 - 8:30pm ET

via WOCinTech on flickr

TOPIC

Common Interview Questions, the Hidden Meanings Behind them and How to Answer Them


It can be very difficult sometimes to interpret what an interviewer means when they ask a certain question. You want to be sure you're giving them the answers they're looking for, but you don't always know what they're trying to get at with a given question. Because of that, it can also be hard to figure out how to prepare to answer even the most common of job interview questions.


PLEASE REMEMBER THAT WE'VE CHANGED THE TIME TO 8:30PM ET!



While you're here please consider checking out our new feature for 2018: #LISPROCHAT Reads, our professional development book club. The first book club session will be running next Monday, January 29, at 8:30 pm ET.


QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.

Q1 What are some common interview questions that you have been asked?  Or if you have been part of a search committee, what are some common interview questions that you have asked?

Q2 Give some examples of common interview questions that you have asked or been asked and what the meaning was behind each question.

Q3 Why or why not should common interview questions be used in the hiring process?

Q4 Choose a common interview question and give advice and tips on how to answer it.



PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 8:30 PM ET NEXT MONDAY, JANUARY 22 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Sunday, 21 May 2017

#LISprochat lead-in - topic & questions for Mon May 22 2017

via Flazingo Photos

TOPIC

Dealing with gaps in your resume


Just a reminder Leigh will be hosting the chats for the month of May, Lauren is currently adventuring in England. For the second chat of the month, she's chosen the topic of dealing with resume gaps. Her inspiration is Gaps in Your Resume: Addressing an Interruption in Your Career Path by John Lehner on LIScaeer.com. 

QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.


Q1 Have you ever had to deal with a gap on your resume, please share your experience!

Q2 If asked in an interview, how do you explain a gap on your resume?

Q3 Do you do anything different on your resume to deal with a gap? What do you do?

Q4 What advice do you have for handling a gap on a resume?

PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 9 PM ET MONDAY, MAY 22 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Friday, 7 April 2017

#LISprochat lead-in - topic & questions for Mon Apr 10 2017

TOPIC

Figuring out what is good career advice and what isn't


The chat topic for Monday, April 10, 2017's chat is inspired by first and foremost the end of the last #LISprochat where we sort of started talking about this and I mentioned it would be a good topic for a future chat. For some reading on this topic, head over to Alison Green's advice blog Ask a Manager and check out the Bad Advice tag. Alison's got one of the best career advice websites out there.

QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.


Q1. What's the best advice you ever received, what's the worst?

Q2. What tricks and tips do you have for how you can tell what advice is good or bad? 

Q3. What resources do you use for good advice?

Q4. What are some resources you avoid & tell others to avoid because you know they give bad advice?


PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 9 PM ET MONDAY, MARCH 27 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Friday, 24 March 2017

#LISprochat lead-in - topic & questions for Mon Mar 27 2017

TOPIC

Dealing with setbacks in the job search & on the job


The chat topic for Monday, March 27, 2017's chat is actually inspired by three articles: Moving Forward: How to Overcome a Career Failure by Lindsay Danas Cohen at The Muse; Bouncing Back from Job Loss: The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Job Hunters by Margie Warrell at Forbes, and How I've Learned to Overcome Setbacks in my Life and Career by Chris Winfield at FastCompany. I couldn't just pick one article that had every aspect I was looking to highlight so that's why this topic has three inspirations

QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.


Q1. What are your go-to strategies for dealing with a setback during the job search or on the job?

Q2. How do you make peace with setbacks/failures? What kind of feedback do you look for and where?

Q3. Who are your go-to survivors that you look too for inspiration when you're feeling down from a setback?

Q4. What resources and strategies do you have for dealing with stress after a setback in the job search or on the job?


PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 9 PM ET MONDAY, MARCH 27 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Monday, 19 September 2016

#LISprochat follow-up - How to write good customized cover letters


In case you missed it, on the Monday September 12 we had a #lisprochat session about how to write great, customized cover letters to help you in your job search. As you can see from the above tweet that was posted by someone with experience hiring in libraries during the session, customized cover letters can do a lot to get you noticed. I decided that instead of just doing a Storify of the chat session I'd write a blog post wit tips, examples and resources, sprinkled with a few of the tweets that particularly caught my attention during the chat.

Tips & Examples


How important is a customized cover letter in earning you an interview spot? Well, here's some perspective from another library hiring manager in last week's #lisprochat:

Now granted that is just one hiring manager's perspective, but the body of writing on the topic (as you'll see if you check out the resources below) says that this is the prevailing attitude, so don't take the chance. Write a customized letter. Here are my top 5 tips for how to go about doing that:

  1. Don't worry if you can't find the hiring manager's name(s): Seriously, it's not important or expected that you address the hiring manager(s) by name in your letter. You just want a professional, respectful salutation. Examples that work: Dear Hiring Manager / Dear Hiring Committee / Dear [Insert Hiring Manager's Job Title Here]
  2. Be sure to answer this question - "Why should the hiring manager be excited to hire you?": Writing a cover letter doesn't have to be rocket science, your whole purpose in a cover letter is to explain why you specifically would excel at this specific job. How do you do this? Use the job posting to pull out some of the main responsibilities and construct a narrative that highlights your best accomplishments in these areas.
  3. Avoid cliched statements: If you're putting statements like "I am the most qualified candidate for this position..." or any variants of that - these statements make you sound cocky and out of touch because you literally have no way of backing them up. Some things you can say instead: "My experience and background in x and y make me a strong candidate because..." or "I feel that my background makes me a strong candidate for joining your team because of x and y" or something along those lines.
  4. Make the content unique: The information you include in your cover letter should not also be found in your resume, don't repeat yourself like that. You want to use your best and strongest and most relevant accomplishments in the cover letter. Your cover letter is to flesh out what's in your resume and really show the employer how what you have done can apply to them. What's the best way to do that? Well my trick is to look at each point of the job posting and try to figure out if I have 3 related accomplishments. From those 3 I take the strongest and highlight it in my cover letter and then the other 2 are on my resume to support that first one. There are other ways to do it of course, but that's my tip for you.
  5. Remember to make it readable: What I mean by readable is, don't make it overly formal. Inject your own personality and writing style otherwise you run the risk of coming off as robotic and not genuine. This is your first chance to introduce an employer to your unique voice so make the most of that. How? Well like I said, use your personal writing style, for example, in my writing I have been known to throw in asides in parenthesis, I've also happened to do that in a few cover letters and then been complimented on those cover letters (your mileage may vary on that, but that's the point, it's all down to the individual). The best example of how to do this I can give you is to link to a great, personality filled cover letter that someone submitted at Ask a Manager: "here's another example of a great cover letter."

Resources


Here are some of my preferred resources for tips on writing really great cover letters that will help you make it to the interview stage.

  1. Ask a Manager The thing that I like best about Alison Green's advice is that she's no nonsense. She gets right to the point and she's very specific. This is legit advice from someone who has many, many years of hiring experience and still actively hires people. She definitely knows what she's talking about. I've been using her advice since 2010 and she's never steered me wrong.
  2. Open Cover Letters What makes Open Cover Letters really interesting as a source of advice is that you're getting to see real cover letters that library and information professionals have used. Not just any cover letters either, but cover letters that resulted in the applicant getting to the interview stage. There are letters for all sorts of different specialties within the LIS industry on this site.
  3. The Daily Muse Unlike Alison Green you're not getting tips directly from a hiring manager on The Daily Muse but what you are getting is well researched pieces from Freelance writers who specialize in career related writing. This is a site that puts out a lot of content and in my experience I've always found it to be good quality advice that jives with stuff I'm seeing on places like Ask a Manager and Evil HR Lady.
  4. The Savvy Intern This is a blog whose target audience is current students and recent grads who are looking to get their first professional job, the title really should be the giveaway on that. I started following the blog when I was in Library school but I continue to follow it because their content, especially as it relates to job applications is usually still pretty on point and still just as useful for someone applying to their fifth job as much as their first so I've been known to share their content on my Twitter and Facebook feeds. In fact our cover letter #lisprochat last week was inspired by them.

When I asked in #lisprochat what people used as their go to resources for advice on writing cover letters we got a few more sources not listed above:

One caveat to remember when using Job Centers and other people, always double check their advice. Not all job centers give good advice and not all people know what they're talking about. If you can get someone who has experience hiring, or someone with experience researching the topic of writing cover letters that's probably a good person to ask for advice.

Now, on that note - go forth and write great cover letters! Good luck job seekers!