The Focused Job Search
We continually see recruiters and hiring managers urging job candidates to evaluate themselves and what they¡¯re looking for. Hell, Heck, we tell job candidates to do that ourselves. People who work with candidates in any capacity want them to conduct a focused job search:
¡°Get FOCUSED: What specific occupational field, what level within that field, and what industry (or industries) of choice are you targeting?¡The employers in your industry (or industries) of choice are your target audience, rather than any employer anywhere!¡± (From Career Goddess)
One of the major problems with job boards, though, is that they don¡¯t allow for focused job searches. Candidates can¡¯t always hone in on specific companies or even specific types of jobs. Instead, they¡¯re inundated with every job opening that might match a single keyword in their resume or that falls within their broad search parameters.
An effective Plan B job search should give you the best opportunity to find the right company and the right job for you. It should also allow you to avoid having to deal with companies and positions that hold no interest for you. Unfortunately, this doesn¡¯t seem to be the case on most boards these days, and messages on job openings have become their own kind of spam:
¡°Post your resume to these boards, and you¡¯ll be added to the Job of the Hour club. After you get tired of emails about jobs selling insurance and delivering pizzas you will discover that you can¡¯t opt out of an email list you did not sign up for in the first place.¡± (From Job Matchbox)
The Plan B search should be a targeted one. Candidates should be able to gather information and receive job opening notifications from companies they¡¯re truly interested in. They shouldn¡¯t have to waste their time looking through countless openings or getting hassled by businesses that they want nothing to do with.