Wednesday, December 18, 2019
How to Pass Employer Screening Requirements
How to Pass Employer Screening RequirementsHow to Pass Employer Screening RequirementsIn a buyers market, the right certifications and credentials can make the difference between an offer and a rejection. Here are tips to determining which ones you need. Just a year ago, a job seeker might have found he had 12 out of the 14 requirements listed for a job posting and applied. He stood a good chance of obtaining an interview and even a job offer.But the faltering economy has filled the job market with candidates who possess all 14 requirements and put the onus on the job seeker to possess the credentials required for the job.In boom times, employers might list a set of certifications on a job posting mora as an aspirational list than a set of firm requirements. It was icing on the cake, said Shane Cox, manager of talent acquisition at Harvard Business Publishing, who spent more than a decade in financial services before switching to publishing.But in bad economies, when there are many q ualified candidates out of work, a list of certifications is one more way for overburdened hiring managers to filter candidates who dont fit the ideal profile.Knowing how recruiters see certifications and credentials and knowing which ones are mandated, which ones are required, which ones are just beneficial and which ones are useless can help you guide your job search or retraining strategy.Required, required and optionalRecruiters look at two categories of hard certifications those mandated by law to perform a job and those not required by law but considered beneficial. They also consider soft credentials, another term for specific work experience.During this recession, Cox said, more candidates are being judged on the basis of soft credentials - those not mandated by law but considered beneficial.Little has changed in certifications required by law, she said. In financial services, for example, job descriptions list the credentials a candidate must have to perform the job legall y, and that hasnt changed, Cox said.In less-regulated industries, by contrast, optional certifications show dedication to continued study and the energy to move ahead, not to mention the additional knowledge or skills involved, according to Sharon Jautz, an HR consultant specializing in online and digital media. However, those certifications once considered a plus are all but required now, Cox said.What does this mean for job seekers weighing the benefits of optional certifications? Priority One is to determine which ones carry the most weight in your industry and specialty (and which are considered all but required), Jautz said. A certification is unlikely to get you onto a short list if the skills involved dont reflect the kind of job for which youre applying.Soft credentialsRecruiters also consider soft credentials your level of experience in specific tasks and responsibilities. Dont be misled by the soft moniker, however demonstrating the level of experience an employer wants fo r a specific task is as important as holding a required credential or certification.But just meeting the volume of years required isnt enough.Its not how long youve been in a job that matters, its what youve been doing there, Cox said.Even if the titles are similar, 10 years experience in a job with significantly different responsibilities from the one youre pursuing wont hold water with discerning employers.Employers really are looking for practical experience they want to know not just what was accomplished by a gruppe you were on, they want to know what you actually did besides leadership, Cox said. They want to see executives who are willing to get their hands dirty.And being able to play just one role doesnt cut it anymore, either.Everyones had to do more with less over the last two or three years, so they cant afford to hire someone who does strategy really well but just does strategy, Cox said.A lot of times, its the details of the project work people did that makes a differ ence. Its the detail that shows what you did on a team and how effective that was, Cox said. When you do that in some specific detail without coming up with a 10-page resume, people will pick you up very quickly.Therefore, your resume must describe how your leadership or strategic skills set the company up for a great result, Cox said, then describe what part of the work you did yourself to make it happen.Generalists vs. specialistsIf you dont have the time or money to invest in hard certifications, there are ways you can beef up your soft credentials while youre on the job. Employers want to see that you have practical experience with many aspects of a position, not just that you led the team and handed off the details, Cox said.Its kind of unfair in some ways, she said. For the last 10 years, weve been looking for specialists now were looking for people who are specialists but also have generalist skills and management skills.Jautz said new technologies, including the Internet, ha ve changed the way businesses work. Employers now expect senior executives to be able to work directly with a variety of digital tools.Rather than just outline a Web-based absatzwirtschaft plan on paper and hand it off to production managers, for example, a marketing executive must demonstrate enough practical understanding of design software, search-engine optimization and other technologies to guide it to completion.You dont have to do all of it yourself, Jautz said, but you have to be up on the technical skills and be able to understand how it gets done in order to do it.
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