Lodi News-Sentinel

Human connection­s give job seekers a leg up beyond electronic contacts

- By Neal St. Anthony

MINNEAPOLI­S — Human connection­s still rule, even in the digital-saturated era of online job searches, the networking website LinkedIn, and checking out job candidates on Facebook.

“Social media is just a tool to learn about somebody,” said Teresa Daly, a founder and CEO of Navigate Forward, which works with profession­als in search of their next jobs. “Networking is still more important.

That goes whether you’re just trying to meet and stay in touch with folks in your field who one day may serve as a reference or an employer, or you’re in an earnest job search.

“Your time should be spent about 30 percent online and 70 percent networking with people,” Daly said. “Networking for a job is about connecting with the right people in the right positions with the right message. You have to be able to say, ‘Here’s what I’ve done and here’s what I’m looking for.’”

Job candidates still need to have the basic qualificat­ions for the positions they’re seeking. It doesn’t help to network for a financial analyst position if you’re a zoologist and lack the basic skills.

Increasing­ly, applicatio­ns are taken online. And it’s tough to pierce the HR hiring wall — applicants can’t control that. However, job counselors say, networking allows job seekers to set up their own informal groups of contacts who may know somebody or who can help them get the coveted human interview at the company at which they are applying, or another company.

Networks can be woven through informatio­nal interviews, profession­al and trade associatio­ns, asking peer groups if they know anybody at a particular company, or even volunteeri­ng, a way to do some good while you meet people and showcase talent. It may also be smart to take classes or seek a certificat­ion in your area of focus.

It’s imperative that job seekers and others even casually interested first research new careers and companies using online tools, informatio­nal interviews and other means.

Eric Harkins, an executive vice president of Navigate Forward — who has held operations and HR jobs at Target, Best Buy, G&K Services, the Nerdery and other companies — has used networking to advance his career as well as help others.

Harkins recalled that back in 2009, during the Great Recession that claimed millions of American jobs, he was an HR manager at G&K Services, then assisting in letting go hundreds of employees for the uniform-and-laundry company. After that, he was laid off.

He subsequent­ly had a conversati­on with a recruiter at UnitedHeal­th Group. He also mined his network of former colleagues and associates to help him get his resume inside UNH for a variety of jobs. Nothing. Several months later, though, an old acquaintan­ce at Best Buy told him that she was meeting with a hiring manager at the Optum data-analysis unit of UNH. She carried Harkins’ resume and referred him. Harkins got a job he had sought.

"On my first day, my new boss said ‘I wish we had met six months ago,’” Harkins recalled. “I said ‘Me, too. We could have been celebratin­g my sixmonth anniversar­y!’ The point is the more people you know (inside a company where you seek employment) who can walk down the hall and say ‘Hey, I’ve met this guy and he sure seems like a genuine person,’ the better for you. That’s better than LinkedIn.”

Social media has not replaced the power of face-to-face self-marketing through formal and informal networks. And often the spade work of seeking and meeting people must be viewed as a long-term investment. And the best networkers are in the business of helping others land. It’s good for the spirit and builds a bank of personal goodwill.

“Networking for me was never just about (my job) transition,” Harkins said. “I like to meet and I like to help somebody. I just get energy from that. And most people want to help other people.”

Lenny Newman is a veteran CPA and corporate financial manager who left a job as chief financial officer of a private company in 2003 and opened a restaurant business with his wife. They closed the money-losing Camille’s Sidewalk Cafe a half decade ago.

“I went to school on the resume, LinkedIn and networking,” said Newman, 57. “And I have vowed since then that I will never be in a position again where I do not have a robust, active network. Networking is a contact sport. You can’t do it with just a phone and computer.”

Newman met with as many as 10 or 15 contacts, job prospects and casual referrals every week. That helped him land a six-month consulting gig that was extended to a one-year appointmen­t with a familyowne­d business in South Dakota. He commuted Sunday through Friday while his family remained in the Twin Cities. When the South Dakota post ended in 2012, Newman resumed networking as much as possible. Within a few weeks he was contacted by a recruiter for his current company. The recruiter had been referred by an acquaintan­ce, a privatecom­pany CFO in Newman’s network.

 ?? DREAMSTIME/TNS ?? Job counselors say networking allows job seekers to set up their own informal groups of contacts who may know somebody or who can help them get the coveted human interview at the company at which they are applying, or another company.
DREAMSTIME/TNS Job counselors say networking allows job seekers to set up their own informal groups of contacts who may know somebody or who can help them get the coveted human interview at the company at which they are applying, or another company.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States