Concert Calendar
New Releases
Artist of the Week
CD Reviews
Classic Hits Links
Listen Now
Join the Workforce
Promotions
JC & the U-Man
All Around Town
Singles Connection
Air Personalities
Contact Info
Advertise With Us
Great Outdoors Clubs / Venues
St. Louis Attractions
Career Channel
Autoworld
Traffic
Job Fairs
 
How to make the best of job fairs

 
In many cities and local communities this is career fair season. While these events often seem fruitless, job seekers who understand how "work" career fairs use these events as powerful networking sessions leading to interviews with future employers. If you are considering attending a job fair soon, you'll get more out of the event by following a few rules.

The first rule is to plan ahead. Know ahead of time which companies will attend the event. Decide which employers you are interested in contacting. Visit their websites to read their open job positions. For employers of primary interest, do extra research to acquaint your self with them. The basics are enough: local, national or global; headquarters, branch or subsidiary; industry lifecycle (growing or declining) and how many employees locally. If you've done your homework, you'll feel much more confident during the event to speak intelligently with company reps. Take an employer list with you to make sure you don't miss any important connections.

Secondly, you should prepare a 30-second presentation. Since you know which employers you're interested in and their job openings, prepared to communicate your qualifications in a 30-second presentation, or "elevator speech." It shouldn't sound canned or contrived, but it should include a few selling points that catch the rep's attention for a few minutes.

A 30-second presentation is not difficult to develop. You can reduce your resume to selling points that fit on a 3X5 card. Use that information to answer the all-important question-"why should I be interested in considering you a candidate for a position with my company?" You should role play your speech with a friend, or by yourself while driving, or in front of a mirror until your "speech" sounds and feels natural.

Your main objective is to secure an after-event interview time before you leave the booth. Don't be afraid to ask for the interview. Weather you've secured an interview or not, don't leave the booth without speaking with someone and picking up their business card. After the event, use the business cards to re-establish contact and suggest an interview where appropriate. This is no time to be shy. Follow-up contact will put you on top of the candidate pile.

It is advantageous to avoid the crowd. Arrive early or late, but avoid the noon-to-4:00 crowd. If possible, come early before reps are bored, tired and hungry. Another reason to avoid peak times: crowds can be intimidating. It's much easier to talk yourself out of approaching important employer contacts when other job seekers surround them.

Most importantly, make sure your resume is in top-notch condition. Does it grab the reader's attention? Does it communicate your best accomplishments? Does it sell you as a top candidate? Have several persons proof read it. Most employers will want to store your resume in a computerized database. Since you'll be distributing your resume in hard copy, make sure it is in scannable form. No fancy fonts, graphics or elaborate bullets.

It's a fact that the best jobs go to those with the best job-search skills. Knowing how to make the most out of career fairs is a valuable skill that can cut weeks, event months off your job search. What does that equate in potential earnings for you?

For a list of upcoming job fairs in your area see www.americanjobfairs.com.

 
« Return to Previous Page

On the Web:
 ·  Watch A Video
 
Career Content ©2003 The Employment Channel




Copyright© 2001-2003 Emmis Interactive/St. Louis. All Rights Reserved.
Home  Contact Us  Privacy Policy  Copyright Policy   Terms of Use