Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

On your mark:

Career experts offer upcoming grads job-search advice

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As the Class of 2022 prepares to leave campus, we asked some of our career experts to share their tips on a successful entry into the job market.

“Use your career services office. They are there to assist you, offer advice and cultivate relations through employers and alumni connection­s they regularly work with. Don’t underestim­ate the power of their network to assist you. It’s not what you know but who you know (or who they may know). Once you’ve landed, let your alma mater know about your success. They’ll be eager to add your name to their database of recent graduate hires. When you can, become an alumni mentor to others at your alma mater and pay it forward.”

– John Hyde, Dean of Career Services, New York Institute of Technology

“Never underestim­ate the power of your personal network. You begin building this network as an incoming college freshman with your professors, employers and mentors through profession­al internship­s. Actively engage with members of your network through personal relationsh­ips, LinkedIn or online communitie­s to help with job interview prep. They can help you assess what the person making hiring decisions wants to know —and how you can best articulate the value of your knowledge, skills and experience to land the job.”

– Carolina Martín, executive director of Students Rising Above, San Francisco

“Worry less about making the right decisions in your career and worry more about making your decisions right. When you graduate, you tend to think you need to have a long-range plan of where you are trying to get to, but what you don’t realize is that in order to maximize your potential, it has to be a long and winding road. Sometimes the opportunit­ies from left field that feel like they are taking you off track are actually the ones that open up new doors

that you never even knew were there. Take the pressure off yourself to have it all mapped out. Instead, be relentless­ly open to opportunit­ies.”

– Sarah Robb O’Hagan, CEO, Flywheel Sports, New York

“Approach the job search like you would dating. It would be strange to have a dating profile that says ‘I am willing to date anyone who will date me’ but you would be surprised to see how often students approach the job search saying ‘I’ll do anything.’ Likewise, applying to 200 jobs with the same resume is like sending out a generic message to everyone on a dating site and hoping someone likes you. Instead, get to know more about the organizati­ons you are pursuing, and show a genuine interest in them by building relationsh­ips with people who work there.”

– Andrea Tider, Career Counselor, Lubin School of Business, Pace University, New York

“Choose what makes your heart beat the fastest: We all have aspects of our lives that fill us with more passion and joy than others. If you take the time to reflect on those aspects and can find a way to infuse what you love into your job, it won’t feel like work. Consider the types of things in your daily life that bring you the most excitement, and look for those qualities when evaluating job opportunit­ies. There are no right or wrong answers, there are only personal passions to be pursued.”

– Brad Smith, CEO, Intuit, Mountain View, California

“Develop a digital portfolio. Employers want to see that a candidate has the skills needed to be successful in their company. Graduates can showcase these skills by creating a digital portfolio. These online portfolios catalog achievemen­ts by providing a space for users to aggregate all digital evidence of what they have created, achieved and mastered.”

– Michael Hansen, CEO, Cengage, Boston

“As much as people around you may want you to succeed, no one else but you is responsibl­e for creating your own definition of success. So, as you look toward the future, don’t allow yourself to be hemmed in by the rules that others live by. It may take courage to break apart from the pack and you may sometimes make the wrong call but living the life you were born to live will sometimes require bending the rules and other times, it will require being brave enough to break them entirely.”

– Margie Warrell, leadership coach and author of “Make Your Mark”

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