Just asking for son. He graduates next week.
Really wants to stay in Texas.
Really wants to stay in Texas.
AJ02 said:
Yeah, it's rough out there unless you have a very specific set of skills and you "know"'someone. I graduated from A&M and took a job making $30k/year just so I could get my foot in the door in the career I wanted to be in (buying). But you can quickly leverage that experience to find better and better positions. The beginning just sucks.
Even at the level I'm at now, I still get the auto-rejects on jobs where I have EVERYTHING they're looking for. I signed up for LinkedIn Premium free for a month, and that really seemed to open up the floodgates on opportunities. Has he tried that?
Back when I graduated IDIS, they had a ton of companies come on site for interviews. And most of my job hunt was done through the career center at A&M. Does that not happen anymore?
This is definitely interesting and obviously it works based on what you said.Astroag said:
Here's how I would go about it specifically as it relates to LinkedIn:
1. Quickly build a network on LinkedIn by searching companies and then roles/titles (in both the hiring function hr,talent, etc and the actual function he'd work in)…add the people that are returned. These should hopefully be a mixture of lower/mid/senior level folks. Bonus points if Aggies. This will hopefully start filling his timeline with industry posts that he can engage with (including job posts)
2. When they accept, message them directly saying thanks for the add and he looks forward to working together in the future…stay in touch by commenting on their posts, etc and if he's outgoing ask if the more senior folks would have 10 or 15 minutes for a zoom to talk about their career path and insight on getting into the market
3. When he finds an open role, he should immediately contact a person at the company and message them about his interest saying he'd love to speak to the hiring manager or someone on the team about the role, bringing value, etc. I've gotten actual zooms w hr folks and hiring managers all the way to senior VPs (I'd do it for multiple people folks till I got an answer)
4. Grind grind grind…vary search terms and search everyday. Go to the company website and sign up for job notifications for when new jobs are posted that meet his criteria.
Side note: Many companies will pass a candidate through the screening to an actual phone call if they are referred internally.To that end, I might wait to apply till he get someone on the team, not hr, and see if they will refer him internally (it usually comes w a little money for the employee if candidate is hired)
Best of luck and Gig'em
TheMasterplan said:This is definitely interesting and obviously it works based on what you said.Astroag said:
Here's how I would go about it specifically as it relates to LinkedIn:
1. Quickly build a network on LinkedIn by searching companies and then roles/titles (in both the hiring function hr,talent, etc and the actual function he'd work in)…add the people that are returned. These should hopefully be a mixture of lower/mid/senior level folks. Bonus points if Aggies. This will hopefully start filling his timeline with industry posts that he can engage with (including job posts)
2. When they accept, message them directly saying thanks for the add and he looks forward to working together in the future…stay in touch by commenting on their posts, etc and if he's outgoing ask if the more senior folks would have 10 or 15 minutes for a zoom to talk about their career path and insight on getting into the market
3. When he finds an open role, he should immediately contact a person at the company and message them about his interest saying he'd love to speak to the hiring manager or someone on the team about the role, bringing value, etc. I've gotten actual zooms w hr folks and hiring managers all the way to senior VPs (I'd do it for multiple people folks till I got an answer)
4. Grind grind grind…vary search terms and search everyday. Go to the company website and sign up for job notifications for when new jobs are posted that meet his criteria.
Side note: Many companies will pass a candidate through the screening to an actual phone call if they are referred internally.To that end, I might wait to apply till he get someone on the team, not hr, and see if they will refer him internally (it usually comes w a little money for the employee if candidate is hired)
Best of luck and Gig'em
I have a couple people do this and I've spoken to one on the phone. I'm definitely willing to talk to them but don't put these people in precarious positions like asking them specific question about salary, pay and working hours. Those are HR questions. You could structure the working hour question like, "would this be a good position for someone that wants remote and has a family" and get away with that.
Also, and maybe I'm being too paranoid, I don't necessarily like putting people forward who have just sent me a few linkedin messages and spoken over the phone for 10-15 mins. I have never worked with them, never met/talked to them in person or spent any kind of real time with them. You're sorta putting your own reputation on the line by recommending someone.
However, I'm always keen to give some career advice like I have done in this thread.
TheMasterplan said:
Any update on this? Hope your son is figuring it out.
Was at a career fair recently and apparently looking up companies about what they do isn't even a thing anymore.
If your kid does that at least he'll be a step up.
TheMasterplan said:
Awesome man.
Just out of curiosity for this thread - did he do some basic research about the company before speaking to them at the fair?
I would still suggest going to that young professionals group to help with adult networking. Hard to balance with a new job but do your best.
evestor1 said:
i work in and out of pipemills quite a bit. has he thought of working contract work as an inspector? getting a NACE cert with a degree can get you paid 30-50 per hour depending on the job. 12 hour days.
definitely not the ideal situation, but it would get some experience on the resume.