Posts Tagged ‘jobs’

How to Make Recruitment Agencies Work for You

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

There are two different ways that you can use recruitment agencies to find your ideal job. This article explores how you can find your ideal job without wasting too much of your precious time.

Most people have experienced the recruitment agency black hole. This is when you register with an agency, fill out every form that they ask you to complete and attend a lengthy interview with a recruitment consultant. Then you hear nothing.

It is so frustrating when this happens because you have been led to believe that you will be flooded with interview offers as soon as you register. It makes you less likely to believe in recruitment agencies and more likely to ‘go it yourself’ in the future.

There are two different ways to use recruitment agencies to find your ideal job. They are as follows:

1) Register with as many recruitment agencies as possible and wait for them to get back to you when a job opportunity appears

2) Register with one or two carefully selected recruitment agencies that specialise in your particular job sector and get to know at least one of the recruitment consultants within that agency as well as possible

Unfortunately most people go for number one. This means that they are only told about jobs that are particularly hard to fill.

So how do you make sure that you are told about they key jobs as soon as they become available? Simple. You need to be KNOWN by recruitment consultants in your industry. Whenever they receive a new job requirement from one of their clients, you need to be the first person on the recruitment consultant’s mind.

In order to be one of the first people to be informed about an excellent new job opportunity you need to initially carefully select one industry specialist bespoke recruitment agency. You then need to meet one of their senior industry specialist consultants face-to-face to explain your specific requirements.

However, in addition to meeting the specialist recruitment consultant face-to-face, you also have to stay in touch. Consultants browse through thousands of CV’s (Resumes) every month, so if you don’t phone them every two weeks then there’s a good chance that they’ll forget about you. Another star candidate will have risen to the surface by then and you will be a historical statistic.

The mantra for dealing with recruitment agencies is

Stay in touch

Stay in touch

Stay in touch

Don’t rely on the automated candidate finding systems that each agency has. Unless you form a personal relationship with one of the consultants, constantly asking them about new opportunities then the chances are than you won’t even find out about top jobs that are available.

Good luck with finding your ideal job in the near future!

David Bain is a consultant to http://www.UteachRecruitment.com – a specialist UK teaching jobs recruitment agency. U Teach Recruitment is based in Coatbridge, Scotland and brings schools and teachers together from all over the UK. Teachers for most teaching subjects are required. Visit Uteach Recruitment to search for UK teaching jobs today.

The Most Common Complaints about Translation Services

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Within past years modern electronic communication has created extensive business opportunities for freelance translators. They are able to reach clients from all over the world and perform their jobs at their own convenience. It appears to be a dream profession, but yet so many translators report that it’s challenging to keep their previous clients, and that the number of clients they served has diminished. One would like to know why this takes place.

First of all, one need to be aware that nowadays there is a great competition on the market, and clients are very selective. So how do I make sure that clients will return to me, not to my competitor? There are clients who constantly need translation services, and they actually prefer to use the same translator for many different projects. They will only cooperate with you again if they were satisfied with your previous services. It is also to your advantage to be familiar with complains the clients have made about translation services in the past. The most common ones are:

1. The project was not finished on time.
2. The translator demonstrated poor language skills: grammar, spelling, punctuation, omitted words, etc.
3. The translator misunderstood the formation of the translation project. He/she used different font, style. He/she did not translate the images. He/she did not include tables, etc.
4. The translator showed poor communication skills. He/she was not flexible enough. He/she has never notified when a problem occurred during the translation process.
5. The translator was hard to reach at his/her office. He/she did not provide adequate mailing address and all the documents kept returning to the sender.
6. The translator turned out to be not reliable. He/she assured he/she knew the dialect of the language but did not demonstrate this skill. He/she advertised himself/herself as a legal translator but never certified his/her work. When returning the project he/she did not include the original seal. He/she never corrected his/her previous mistakes even though he/she promised to do so.

7. The translator was not culturally sensitive. He/she presented himself/herself as a native speaker but did not know all the aspects of the culture.
8. The translator never returned money. He/she admitted that the translation was poorly done and promised to recompense but never did.
9. The translator did not respond well to constrictive criticism.

In order to stand out from the competition, and have your previous clients come back to you, one ought to perform self -evaluation after each translation project. Be critical about your skills and ask your clients for feedbacks. Even the negative ones might provide you with another perspectives and ideas on how to improve your skills and develop your professional growth. Sometimes constrictive criticism leads to a positive change. And positive feedbacks guarantee good promotion, trust among clients, and more projects. Good luck.

The author Marian Marcinkowski is the President of VerbumSoft. He is the owner of http://www.translatorsbase.com and http://www.directfreelance.com
Translatorsbase.com it is a global provider in translation solutions, providing translation services via network of professional freelance translators and translation agencies located around the world.
Directfreelance.com it is a directory of freelance professionals searchable by category, specialization and location. Freelancers can find here jobs posted on daily basis.

Interview Questions, the Recruiters Guide

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

It can be as simple as to write down your questions.
Keep the same questions for each candidate that comes through the door.

The main object as an employer or recruitment consultant is to compare people. Their individual answers and responses to a pre-selected list of questions. This will help select the right person for the job. By changing the questions from person to person will make it more difficult. Okay! Some times in an interview there is an opportunity to work with people and follow a line of job related questioning/information to get the full picture of the prospective employee. However, basically try and keep to a single format.

Some obvious questions to ask would be:
“What do you know about our company?
What do you know about the job or the position?
What is your previous experience?
How do you deal with conflict or difficult situations?
Give examples of working under pressure.
What attracts you to this job?
Why did you leave your previous job? “

These are all generally good questions to ask. There are many more. Books and information can be found all over the net on this topic. In many cases, free information.

As recruitment professional the objective is to end up getting good responses from the candidates with very answer. This makes the job of evaluating who is the best an easier process.

A final recommendation is to always do a reference check on the short list. If the candidates have not supplies at least two previous employers to contact ask if they can supply their previous employers and if they do not I mind to be contacted. This strategy is very powerful. As a recruiter “you” are getting a third party testimonial. That’s value! Somebody giving an honest opinion; however, again, when you phone make sure there are only 2 to 6 questions. Don’t ask the previous employer unfair questions or wasting their time.

For simple to digest information related to the interview questions and job sites, try http://www.job-advertising-advisor.com/

I hope you found this article interesting. Len Coles

Len Coles has worked within the employment field for over 20 years. Understanding people and how they react at an interview, what question to as, and how to assess them can be learnt over time or from someone that has the knowledge. Gain from this knowledge go to http://www.job-advertising-advisor.com/ where there is a very helpful resource.