Saturday, November 16, 2019
Three Things to Do About Your Employment Gap
Three Things to Do About Your Employment Gap Three Things to Do About Your Employment Gap Iâm bringing up the survey today because one statistic in particular kind of bothers me: when asked âwhat is the best way for candidates to handle gaps in employment on a resumé, 57 percent of the organizations surveyed replied that âcandidates should neither emphasize nor hide gapes in employment.â Sure, indecision is a terrible bane for leaders, but when it comes to letting jobseekers know what youâre looking for? Go ahead, be indecisive. Donât give anyone a straight answer. Better yet, give them a we-can-neither-confirm-nor-deny-style non-answer. What Iâm saying is: this is a total cop-out, and as such it leaves jobseekers hanging. They know what they shouldnât do (donât hide, but also donât emphasize), but they donât know what they should do. Not content to accept this nonsense, I wanted to supplement the SHRM report with some information that jobseekers could actually use. I canât draw from personal experience - Iâm young enough that I havenât really even had time for an employment gap yet - so I did some digging, and hereâs what I came up with: 1.) You did good things while you took time off, so share them ⦠Itâs not mind-blowing, life-altering advice, and chances are that youâve heard it already, but thatâs precisely why it merits revisiting: itâs easy to let good counsel sink into the oblivion of cliché. We have to rescue it from time to time. Oddly enough, I think this column from The Northwest Indiana and Illinois Times (of all places) puts it best: âBut in many instances, there were several activities done during [the gap] that can provide relevant experience to the job target.â Well, maybe itâs not syntactically the best, but itâs the best in terms of concise expression of the idea: during your gap time, you likely did things that count as experience. Play that up. Did you volunteer somewhere? What sort of duties did you perform? What sort of responsibilities did you have? What sort of skills did you learn or hone? Even more quotidian tasks can be spun into valuable experiences. To quote the Times again: âNegotiating with health insurance companies and Medicare can provide opportunities for skills that were previously missing.â So, when you breach the subject of your gap time with a potential employer, focus on what you did, not on what you werenât doing (i.e., âworking,â in the strictest sense of the word). 2.) ⦠but your resumé isnât the place for explanations. Forbes staff writer Jacquelyn Smith wrote a pretty comprehensive article on the subject of red flags in resumés. Smith quotes professional resumé writer Ann Baehr as saying that âbad news or red flags should never be addressed in a resumé.â Your resumé is for documenting your skills and experiences, so stay focused on those. But itâs customary to include start and end dates on your resumé, so how can you avoid addressing the gap? Some people recommend using years only, instead of the traditional month/year combination, when disclosing employment dates in order to minimize the appearance of gaps that lasted for a few months. But remember: youâre not looking to hide the gap; youâre just looking to make it subtler, so donât think this move gives you a free pass to lie to the interviewer. You should address the gap in your cover letter or during your interview. Of course, regardless of where and when you bring up your gap, you shouldnât linger over it - e.g., donât send the interviewer a lengthy email about it, and donât dedicate half your cover letter to the subject. 3.) Itâs okay to practice the truth. Honesty is perhaps the single most pervasive idea in conversations about employment gaps: no matter whom you ask, theyâll tell you that you should absolutely, positively, never ever lie. But just because you should tell the truth, that doesnât mean you should sail unprepared into the interview. As recruiting firm WinterWyman points out, itâs a good idea to ârefine your story.â Theyâre not talking about engaging in revisionist history or altering the details. They simply mean that you need to âget comfortable telling your story.â Practice delivering the story in a quick, direct, authoritative way. Whittle it down to the necessary details. Know the story like the back of your hand, so that you donât stumble or seem foolish when your interviewer (inevitably) asks you about the gap.Master the art of closing deals and making placements. Take our Recruiter Certification Program today. We're SHRM certified. Learn at your own pace during this 12-week program. Access over 20 courses. Great for those who want to break into recruiting, or recruiters who want to further their career. Like this article? We also offer tons of free eBooks on career and recruiting topics - check out Get a Better Job the Right Way and Why It Matters Who Does Your Recruiting. document.write('[Read more '); in Resume Tips]
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