By Kathy  Kristof
College graduation season is set  to launch millions of youthful job  seekers into an already depressed  employment market. If you’re among the  masses, realize that preparation   is key. Here’s what you need to do to get hired.
1. Edit  your profile. Those drunken  party photos might have impressed  your Facebook friends, but now they  could dissuade a prospective  employer from hiring you, says Stephen  Miles, vice chairman of  executive search firm Heidrick & Struggles  and co-author of Your  Career  Game. Recruiters do extensive web searches on people they intend  to  hire, including checking social media sites like Facebook, MySpace   and Twitter. If you’ve posted  compromising photos or a stupid status  update (i.e. Nice day. I  think I’ll call in sick and go to the  beach…) it could cost you a  job. Get rid of it.
2. Do  your homework. Don’t just  figure that you can post a resume  on monster.com  and find work, says Janice Bryant Howroyd, CEO of  staffing company AppleOne. You ought to study all  aspects of your  chosen field and seek information about the companies  doing business in  that area. Go to the company web sites and see if  they’re posting open  positions, too. If you send a resume, tailor it  specifically to the  job you’re seeking, Howroyd suggests.
3. Prepare  to relocate. Live in a  city where the job prospects are  bleak? You can vastly increase your  chance of getting work by seeking  employment in other zip codes. The  folks at job search site Indeed.com   recently came up with a list of the best  and worst cities to find  work.
4. Think  small. Many graduates  focus on big, brand-name companies, but  it’s the smaller and mid-sized  companies that are doing most of the  hiring now, Howroyd says. Taking  jobs that “no one wants” is often an  opportunity that no one else sees,  adds Nathan Bennett, professor of  management at Georgia Tech and the  other co-author of Your Career Game.  A first job is an opportunity to  get experience. The smaller the  company, the thinner the staff, the more  likely you are to learn a wide  array of skills.
5. Set  targets. Set goals every day  for either sending out a set  number of resumes; filling out a set  number of applications or finding a  set number of new opportunities.  Don’t hit the beach until you’ve hit  your goal. You can’t change the job  market, but you can determine how  hard you try. Trying harder than your  peers makes you the one most  likely to get work.
6. Be  persistent. If you go to an  interview and don’t hear from the  employer, follow up with a phone call.  If they gave the job to another  person, don’t be angry — be interested.  Politely ask the hiring manager  if he or she can tell you whether there  was something that the other  person did that particularly impressed  them or something that you did  wrong. If your approach is respectful and  aimed at learning (rather  than second-guessing their actions), they’re  likely to help you better  position yourself for the next interview. And  if they tell you that you  were fine, the other person was just more  qualified, don’t be shy  about asking them to keep you in mind for the  next opportunity. If you  don’t have a job in three or four months, call  again and see if  anything has opened up.
7. Work  your network. Ask your  friends, your parents, your parents’  friends, if they know of anything  that would suit you. Check in with  your college career office and attend  their alumni functions. When  there are hundreds of people applying for a  given job, a personal  referral can make your application stand out.
8. Be a temp.  Some companies may not be willing to  hire permanent full-time staff,  but need help. You can sign up with a  temporary company, like AppleOne,  that will send you out on a daily  basis to these companies. The  benefits: You earn money; you get to know  employers and employers get  to know you.
9. Don’t  despair. It’s a rotten job  market, so it could take time to  get work. And when you do get work, it  may not be the ‘perfect job’  that you envisioned. Keep a good attitude  and don’t let it get to you.  Every job — even a nightmare job — is  experience on your resume and a  potential reference for a new employer.  Do you best no matter where you  end up working, and chances are good  that you’ll get a better job in  no time.
 

 
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