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Assessing Your Skills
What Makes You Different from All the Others?
Carole Martin – www.interviewcoach.com
Make yourself stand out from the competition. The
three skills categories.
Put the 3 P's of marketing to work for you.
Gina had recently been laid off after working as
a marketing manager in a high tech company for the past five years. She was
distracted as she walked through the aisles of the supermarket. She was thinking
about ways to market herself into a new job. She stood in front of the cereal
selection, overwhelmed by the number of brands to choose from -- more than 100
varieties.
Suddenly, it dawned on her: This must be what
it's like for hiring managers to look at all those resumes received in answer to
ads and postings. How do they choose? What do they look for? How does one get
selected? How can I make my product stand out?
The Packaging
The packaging on the cereal box is certainly the
start. Eye-catching colors and descriptive words will draw attention -- low fat,
energy boosting, added vitamins -- all the things consumers are looking for. But
what are employers looking for? The words you choose will be key. Using words
that will interest the companies will grab their attention.
The Ingredients
The list of ingredients -- the skills you have to
offer -- is also important. Gina couldn't wait to get home and write down her
skills and what made her unique to the position. She had a new slant to explore.
She remembered reading in a book that skills can
be grouped into three categories:
Skills learned through past experience and
education (knowledge-based skills). Skills you bring with you to any job
(transferable or portable skills).
Personal traits, the things that make you who you are.
The Assessment Tool
Gina divided a piece of paper into three columns
and labeled them with "previous experience," "portable skills" and
"personality," the three P's of marketing.
In the "previous experience" column she wrote:
Marketing knowledge
Communications skills
Vendor management
Press and industry relations
Web channel marketing
Product development
Computer skills
Under "portable skills" she wrote:
Customer focus
Communications
Writing skills
Very organized
Good at coordinating
Team leader
Problem solving
Project management
Excellent follow-through
Good with budgets and numbers
Time management
In the "personality column" she wrote:
Self-starter
Independent
Friendly
Well-organized
Quick learner
Good judgment
Good attitude
Creative
Analytical
Flexible
Good sense of humor
Goal-directed
When she was finished, she sat back and checked
the list over. She was surprised at how easily the list had come together. By
dividing the skills, the task became manageable.
Trying to look at everything at once is like
looking at those cereal boxes.
Getting words on paper is one of the most
difficult steps of putting your "ingredients" list together. This is a good
exercise for anyone beginning the search process, or as a periodic check or
inventory. Gina can now use the list to put together her resume, write a summary
statement or compose a personal statement. The skills will be the foundation of
the strategy she will use to sell herself. She still has some work to do before
she can take her product to market, but she certainly has made a good start.
Carole Martin is a thoroughbred interview
coach. Celebrated author, trainer, and mentor, Carole can give you
interviewing tips like no one else can. Her workbook, "Interview Fitness
Training - A Workout With the Interview Coach," has sold thousands of
copies world-wide and she has just released her latest book, "Boost Your
Interview IQ." Knock'em Dead - Get the
Job! Sign Up to Receive Free Weekly Interview Tips from Carole Martin,
The Interview Coach at
www.interviewcoach.com
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