Alexanderr
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Right, guys, so in theme with some previous threads of mine like 'You're Running the Wrong Life Strategy' I decided to take my own advice.
For some background, I just moved into a new city, and I'm looking for a job. Specifically for something service or catering related, since I know I like social contact.
Now here's what I could've done. I could've spent hours over-analyzing my CV, trying to perfect it, then several hours more applying online to several places on Indeed, worrying about my motivation letter and whether it's genuine. Whilst probably not landing a single one of those jobs.
But here's what I chose to do. I merely updated my CV to reflect my most recent working experience, printed out 5 of them, decided on which area might contain lots of interesting places to work at, went there, walked around until I found some place I could imagine myself working at, went in, and did my pitch. Comfortably direct. Tell a very little bit about myself, my motivation and why this place. Ask if they're taking anybody, and suggest leaving my CV. Smile. Done.
Did that 5 times. Of course, some places weren't actively looking but some said they'd consider me. Now, I can't say it's been a success yet because I just did it today without word back yet, but odds are I land at least one job, at a place I've already seen in person, having already interacted with the manager there, and already having a taste for what the place is like.
I've got orders of magnitude more information about my compatibility with that place than I ever would've had from reading their job description and looking the places up on Google.
That's what this is about. Action is the highest bandwidth form of information. Doing badly beats thinking perfectly, always.
But here's the real kicker. This isn't just about the job search. It's about what the strategy does to you. I'm now a person who knows I can do things other people would hesitate to do. I'm a person who can take initiative to get places. This'll come in handy whenever you see a nice girl you'd like to ask out, some unlisted internship, or some opportunity that wasn't advertised. This is how you get the "how did he get that?" moments in life.
Best part? It gets easier. Every single time you do it, it gets easier. I was pretty nervous first time I walked in, slightly less nervous the 2nd time, even less the 3rd, and by the 4th and 5th it felt like almost routine. This was all in the span of 30 mins.
For some background, I just moved into a new city, and I'm looking for a job. Specifically for something service or catering related, since I know I like social contact.
Now here's what I could've done. I could've spent hours over-analyzing my CV, trying to perfect it, then several hours more applying online to several places on Indeed, worrying about my motivation letter and whether it's genuine. Whilst probably not landing a single one of those jobs.
But here's what I chose to do. I merely updated my CV to reflect my most recent working experience, printed out 5 of them, decided on which area might contain lots of interesting places to work at, went there, walked around until I found some place I could imagine myself working at, went in, and did my pitch. Comfortably direct. Tell a very little bit about myself, my motivation and why this place. Ask if they're taking anybody, and suggest leaving my CV. Smile. Done.
Did that 5 times. Of course, some places weren't actively looking but some said they'd consider me. Now, I can't say it's been a success yet because I just did it today without word back yet, but odds are I land at least one job, at a place I've already seen in person, having already interacted with the manager there, and already having a taste for what the place is like.
I've got orders of magnitude more information about my compatibility with that place than I ever would've had from reading their job description and looking the places up on Google.
That's what this is about. Action is the highest bandwidth form of information. Doing badly beats thinking perfectly, always.
But here's the real kicker. This isn't just about the job search. It's about what the strategy does to you. I'm now a person who knows I can do things other people would hesitate to do. I'm a person who can take initiative to get places. This'll come in handy whenever you see a nice girl you'd like to ask out, some unlisted internship, or some opportunity that wasn't advertised. This is how you get the "how did he get that?" moments in life.
Best part? It gets easier. Every single time you do it, it gets easier. I was pretty nervous first time I walked in, slightly less nervous the 2nd time, even less the 3rd, and by the 4th and 5th it felt like almost routine. This was all in the span of 30 mins.