Job Search Strategies
6
Answers
Helping startups go from chaos to clarity
Have you had someone review your cv and asked then to be brutally honest? If not, start with chatGPT and ask it to be brutal. Focus on what you achieved at each job and what you did. Right not the job market is not great so contact as many recruit agents are you can and get to the top of their list. This is better than applying to roles.
Answered 9 days ago
Clarity Expert
I am working in Corporate over a decade and having switched jobs myself succesfully, I would suggest couple of approaches:
1. Check on linkedin and spot mutual connections and ask them for referrals ( Invest in Linkedin premium ).
2. Reach out to Business heads / HR recruiters / leaders
3. Polish your resume well and make it look presentable. Use automated resume makers which will help.
Answered 9 days ago
Multilingual expert translator with proven skills.
Hello! Thanks for your question—this is a very common challenge, and I’m here to help you fix it step-by-step.
Here are the best first steps you should take to improve your job application success and start getting positive responses:
1. Revise and tailor your resume and cover letter:
Make sure each application is customized to the specific job description. Use keywords from the job posting, highlight relevant skills, and keep it clear and professional.
2. Optimize your LinkedIn profile:
Recruiters often check your LinkedIn before contacting you. Ensure your profile is complete, uses a professional photo, highlights your achievements, and matches your resume.
3. Apply to the right jobs:
Focus on roles that closely match your experience and skills. Applying widely without targeting can reduce your chances.
4. Follow up politely:
If you haven’t heard back within 1-2 weeks, send a brief, polite follow-up email to express continued interest.
5. Improve your networking:
Sometimes, applying blindly is less effective. Try to connect with people inside the company or industry and ask for referrals or advice.
6. Prepare for interviews:
Use the waiting time to research common interview questions and practice your answers confidently.
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If you want, I can help you review your resume, LinkedIn profile, and cover letters or guide you on how to network effectively to increase your chances.
Feel free to book a call to discuss your specific situation in detail!
Answered 9 days ago
Offensive Security | Pentest | CEH | AZ 500
I’ve worked with quite a few professionals facing this, and honestly — it’s more common than you think. Here are the first steps I recommend:
1. Audit your resume — not just for formatting, but for messaging. Are you telling a clear story of impact, not just responsibilities? Focus on results, metrics, and transformation.
2. Tailor every application. A generic resume will almost always get ignored. Align keywords from the job post and make your cover note specific to the company’s pain points.
3. Build relationships before you apply. Reach out on LinkedIn, comment on posts, join industry groups. Applications coming from a warm contact or referral get way more attention than cold ones.
4. Get brutally honest feedback. Ask someone in your domain (or me, if you’d like) to review your resume or your online presence and point out gaps.
And finally — don’t just focus on quantity. Applying to 10 roles with high personalization beats sending 100 blind resumes.
Happy to help you map this more clearly if needed. Sometimes it just takes a few focused shifts to start getting traction.
Answered 9 days ago
Marketing Consultant & Career Coach
1. Rewrite your resume connecting what you did to business outcomes and Leadership/Management verbs. And remember you only have 6 seconds to make an impression, make the top of your marketing materials count.
2. Audit your LinkedIn by doing a Listening Tour. Adapt to what the job market needs in your specialty. Define your audience (CEO? CMO? Board?) and what matters to them and reframe your marketing materials.
3. Go multi-channel, beyond application. Get in touch with 3 contacts, minimum. Stay relevant and data-driven with cold outreach and virtual/in-person social interactions. Develop other marketing materials outside your ATS resume and LinkedIn profile.
4. Start sounding like a consultant. Get involved in the brands you admire. That means, be targeted. Manage your time and dedicate it mostly to your target companies. Shift from asking for a job to offering value. Be memorable, for the right reasons.
You need 1 positioning strategy that makes people say: “We have to talk to this person.”
Answered 3 days ago