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Answering interview questions

Track your job search progress

				
Are you someone who has been working the Internet and other 
areas for telecommuting work or home-based businesses? 
Confused, yet not sure what you have done or where you are 
going with it. I have been there and still am sometimes. I 
have worked out some tips and suggestions that can help you 
navigate these waters. 

I have found that one of the most useful things I started 
doing was to keep track of everything I am doing. I use a 
simple spreadsheet, like Excel. And I do mean everything. I 
have one file where I enter all the information from any job 
sites that I join. Information such as the username and 
password I created, what type of job site is it – freelance 
or regular or specialty. The date that I joined and whether 
I posted a resume to the site or filled out their own skill 
assessment list goes in the file too. After about the fourth 
or fifth one joined anyone can be forgetful. Some 
information to keep in mind while doing this, can you 
control what personal information is being viewed by 
employers, do the employers pay a fee to post jobs since 
this can keep a lot of scammers away. 

In another file I keep track of jobs that I have actually 
applied for. Write down the date you sent it in, whether you 
mailed it or emailed or applied directly to the employer's 
site. Don't forget to add in all the contact information 
such as a web site address, the email used to send your 
application, any phone numbers, addresses or person's names 
that were given. This is very important for follow-up 
inquiries. Something that can separate your resume from the 
rest of the batch is to put a little work into it, read 
their web site and mention why you would be a great fit for 
their company or call them to get the hiring managers name 
to personalize your cover letter. 

Another page to add to your job search folder is one for 
classes you have taken. I'm mostly referring to the online 
tutorials that you can find. This is a great way to beef up 
your resume and get some experience and skill in a 
particular area that seems to be a "hot" topic for the 
industry you are targeting in your search. I like to record 
the web address, any username/passwords that I created and 
what the tutorial was about for easy reference. 

If you are looking into affiliate marketing that is another 
page I keep. There are literally hundreds and thousands of 
opportunities out there. Tracking your research lets you 
categorize the various offers that you are interested in and 
by saving all your information that you gave them to join 
like usernames/passwords and emails you can easily see how 
it is going. I especially track how my returns are doing to 
see if it is worth keeping or if it needs to be replaced by 
another potential opportunity. 

A silly thing I overlooked was the use of various keywords 
on the job search engines. I was using like `telecommute' 
and that was it. So of course it was hard to find hits. 
Branching out with other phrases will find you more 
opportunities such as "home-based", "off-site", "virtual 
office", "freelance" and "work-at-home".  

It may also help you to do different things on different 
days. Job-hunting is intense work and there are a lot of 
ways of doing it. Look at doing searches on job boards two 
days a week. Another two or three days spend researching and 
contacting companies that are known to be flex-friendly, 
this one can really pay off as a lot of jobs aren't posted 
on the job boards anyway. 

Keeping multiple copies of your resume is a time saver as 
well. We all have various strengths and emphasizing certain 
areas which target a particular company's job listing will 
improve your chances by focusing their attention on what 
benefits you can bring to their company. And just don't send 
a generic cover letter with a bland statement, I'll mention 
again to at least read some of their company information to 
personalize it and show the hiring person that you spent 
some of your time researching them and that you mean 
business and aren't just throwing your resume out to the 
wind. You will save time in the long run if you keep your 
applications to jobs that you are actually qualified to do.

 



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