There's a wealth of information about job hunting out there, I'd say take in as much as you can. A few important (IMO) things to focus on:So I could use a little help. My brother was "terminated" last week and is now on a job hunt. To give a little back story, my brother and I have worked in the Shipping department of a company started by our uncle for about 5 years now. Started doing a few things here and there, then part time and eventually full time right before he sold the company. After 3 years of new management, ups and downs, and eventually no work at all in the shop, they let go of half of the workforce in an afternoon, including my brother.
This has been our only job and our Uncle just said to come in so no experience with interviews or the act of searching for a job. My brother has been working on his resume and is starting to apply to jobs on Indeed but I think he's a little lost (I know I will be!). Are there any tips I could give him or ways to keep him encouraged?
I appreciate any help, I think I'll be needing myself soon enough anyway!
- Sign up for LinkedIn if you're not already and turn on the "let recruiters find me" setting on the jobs page. Indeed seems pretty good too.
- How to format your resume. Especially if it's a little thin, there are ways to focus on the positives and minimize the fact that you have relatively low experience.
- What questions to anticipate during interviews. A lot of interviewers use the same or similar questions so look 'em up and be prepared to answer them.
- What questions to ask at interviews. You need to always be ready to ask questions at a job interview. It's a perfect opportunity for you to learn more about the position/company and for you to sneak in a little more about yourself by asking about an area you have experience in.
Overall remember that interviewing is like everything else - you get a little better at it every time you do it. Good luck to both of you!