Sunday, November 17, 2019
Persistent or Annoying
Persistent or Annoying Persistent or Annoying Thereâs a fine line between enthusiastic and just plain irritating. For job seekers eager for feedback, that line can be blurry.When it comes to your job search, thereâs a difference between persistence and pushiness.Or is there? The answer may depend on the job youâre trying to fill.Take âChloe,â a veteran pharmaceutical saleswoman in Florida who is looking to change industries to sell medical devices. It might sound like an easy transition, but in a buyerâs market, recruiters demand specific industry experience. Sheâs been searching aggressively since May and has yet to find anything, but itâs not due to a lack of effort.Recently, Chloe (who asked that her real name not be used) got her hands on the contact information for a hiring manager and sent him a resume. She waited three weeks without a response before she called again and left a few voice messages. Still she heard nothing.Then she approached a recruiter, thinking a professional would have better luck. She t old the recruiter she was interested in the position but never mentioned her previous contact with the company. It wasnât until after she hung up the phone that she realized this could be bad job-search etiquette. Was she obligated to tell the recruiter that she had already applied? What if she wound up getting an offer on her own?âWhen I got off I thought, âOh no, what am I going to do here?â â Chloe said. âI decided to be truthful.â Not that she ever lied, but full disclosure turned out to be the right strategy, she said.âHe appreciated my honesty,â she said. âThe recruiter knew how the manager works and that things need to be brought in front of him.âThe recruiter proved as unsuccessful as Chloe at raising the hiring managerâs attention, but she left the experience confident that her job search needed to be executed aggressively.The aggressive sellChris Zourides, a certified professional resume writer who works with Ladders and specializes in sales, noted that when it comes to the sales job search, the line between enthusiasm and annoyance is blurry.âWhen a company is looking for sales reps, they want somebody with those follow-up skills,â he said.Of course, it is possible that a human-resources manager could mistake your perseverance for stalking.âItâs human nature,â Zourides said. âIf you bug somebody, people do get annoyed ⦠so you have to gauge that case by case.âHe recommends leaving up to four follow-up voicemails over a period of a few weeks before giving up. âIf you donât hear back after four, then itâs a good sign theyâre not interested.âThis donât-take-silence-for-an-answer mentality will be especially useful for Chloe, who has the very daunting task of switching fields within sales.âItâs a challenge,â she said. âThis is a tough move.âEspecially now because all the power is with the employer,â said Greg Alexander, CEO of Sales Benchmark Index and author of Top Grading For Sales. âCa ndidates are switching and not having much success.âBut Chloe is not deterred. Sheâs being realistic about the obstacles sheâs facing.âI could be looking for a year to two years,â she said. âI really have to stay with it (and) persevere.âIn addition to aggressive networking and following-up, Chloe said sheâs considering enrolling in medical-device training programs. The more certifications, she said, the more marketable sheâll be.
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