Advice from IT Recruiters

What to Cut from Your Tech Resume: Experience

Tech professionals don’t have to heed the same 1-page resume rule that most other professionals do. IT recruiters and hiring managers are usually a lot more permissive of longer resumes. This doesn’t mean that you want to submit novellas, though. To land a new job, you need to be able to show some restraint and edit your resume down to something more concise. Here’s how to edit your experience.

Cut anything over 10-ish years.  There are certainly exceptions to this rule, but in general, you won’t need anything over 10 years.  Since technologies change so frequently, you’ll be discussing technologies and skills that may be completely irrelevant to the roles you’re applying to.  Don’t waste space on your resume talking about obsolete technologies you’ve used.  Keep that space open to talk about your more recent jobs!

Focus on the jobs you’ve done in the last 5 years.  This is true for anyone, no matter how much experience you have on your resume.  Technical recruiters sometimes see resumes with equal bullets dedicated to each and every job.  That’s not only unnecessary; it actually may hurt the overall effectiveness of your resume.  Your resume should help a hiring manager imagine you in their open role.  The most recent jobs are likely the ones that have prepared you to do this kind of work.  Detail out what you achieved in your last few roles, the technologies you used, and how you contributed to your team/company.  Giving this kind of crucial information is what helps you land great IT jobs.

Cut any irrelevant experience.  If you worked a job in a completely different industry, don’t worry about adding it into your resume.  You only want it there if you need to account for your career in the last 5 years.  Even then, if you need to have the job on your resume, just list it and the years or months you worked.  IT recruiting agencies would suggest that you never waste bullets on irrelevant experience.

Want to see our open IT jobs?  Follow us on LinkedIn.  We post new jobs daily!

 

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Don’t leave any experience over 10 years on your resume. Photo credit: naturalpastels via Pixabay.

Will Your Next IT Job Come Via Text?

Who do you text?  Friends?  Family?  How about your IT recruiters?  IT staffing firms are texting with job seekers more and more frequently.  Perhaps more surprising is that research says that many candidates are ok with it– and sometimes initiate it themselves.

Why is texting now a mode of communication that IT recruiting companies use? Likely, one of the biggest reasons you might be getting texts from your technical recruiters these days is the prevalence of cell phones and texting. Studies show that not only do nearly all American adults have a cell phone, but most check their cell phone frequently.  Though the numbers vary, Americans can spend between 2 and 5 hours on their cell phones, collectively, over the average day.   Most people break that up into many short sessions, but the amount is still staggering.  It also makes it easy to see why IT recruiting agencies use text to reach out to job seekers: they’re very likely to check the message.

Recruiters aren’t just texting candidates because it’s a reliable way to reach them.  They’re also doing so because candidates are generally ok with it.  Again, numbers vary, but job seekers still tend to see IT recruiters who text as trustworthy professionals (depending on what survey you’re looking at) between rates of 40%-70%.  Perhaps what’s most interesting about this is the fact that these numbers aren’t all within younger demographics.  Job seekers older than millennials also seem to be fine with texts from their recruiters.  Everyone seems to be ok with texting during the job search—both candidates and recruiters alike.

The last reason you might be getting texts from your IT recruiting firms is that sometimes a text just works best for a given situation.  Candidates who can’t pick up the phone during a workday are more likely to respond to a silent text message.  Candidates who are on their way to an interview might need to shoot their recruiters a quick text confirming they made it, asking for directions, or coordinating meeting.  Considering the fact that most text messages are opened at a rate near 100% of the time, it’s not shocking that IT recruiters are now texting with their candidates.  Sometimes a text is just easier– even during your job search!

Want to see our open IT jobs?  Follow us on LinkedIn.  We post new jobs daily!

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Texting with IT recruiters has become more common recently. Photo credit: terimakasih0 via Pixabay.

 

This Language Will Help You Land (More) IT Jobs

If you’re a programmer, you’re probably always looking to improve your skill-set and beef up your resume.  IT staffing firms certainly see programmers who inadvertently limit their job search options by focusing on the same languages, year after year. If you’re thinking about learning a new language soon, a good bet would be Python.  Here’s why Python would be the best investment in your career right now.

It’s useful to a wide range of employers.  IT recruiters find that learning Python widens your job search options because it’s a language that many companies want to use across various industries.  This may be at least partially because it’s free and lowers overhead costs.  Python isn’t just big in the tech space (which is of course huge in itself), though.  It’s also used in hot job sectors like Science, Medicine, Finance (Fintech), Retail, and Entertainment.

Employers like it because it’s trendy. Python works for so many of the trends employers want to participate in right now.  It’s a language that works for Scrum and Agile development, which technical recruiters find is much more popular than Waterfall.  It’s also a language that works better for open-source technologies, which many innovative, progressive employers want to use.  Lastly, Python is a trendy language among employers because it gets frequent updates.  Employers never see it as a stale, archaic language.

It appeals to programmers, which appeals to employers.  Employers, especially in the tech space where it’s a job seeker’s market, want to pick languages that attract top talent.  Make yourself a more viable job candidate by playing into this trend and adding Python to your arsenal.  Python attracts programmers right now for a few reasons.  Firstly, it’s easy to learn (partially because it’s so readable– it includes English words).  It’s also being taught more and more frequently in universities and colleges.  Secondly, it’s popular among programmers who want an alternative to the highly corporate, controlled .NET, as its open source.  Lastly, IT staffing companies find that Python appeals to programmers because it’s a craftsmen’s language.  It allows programmers to really show off their skills and demonstrate a deep mastery that other, less flexible languages don’t allow.

IT job search advice
Python is trendy with employers right now. Photo credit: 3844328 via Pixabay.

How IT Recruiting Firms Can Help You Relocate

Sometimes you have reasons to move across the country: your spouse or partner got a new job, you want to be closer to family, or maybe you just need a change of scenery. When it’s time to make a huge move like this, getting a new job will be a big piece of the puzzle. To figure out this part of your moving plan, you should seriously consider working with IT staffing companies. In fact, IT recruiting firms are especially helpful with this kind of task. Here are 2 reasons why:

  1. They’re local to the area. Reaching out to IT staffing firms can be a great way to conduct your job search if you’re picking an area that you’re not familiar with. Or perhaps you’re looking at an area that you’re a little familiar with but haven’t been back to in a while. Either way, good IT recruiters will advise you on what jobs can give you a good commute or they can advise you on what part of town you should live in to optimize your options for IT jobs.
  2. They can help you find the job that suits you. Besides knowing the area geographically, IT recruiting agencies know detailed information about the employers in it. They can tell you what technical skill-sets is in-demand in each area so you can build up or tailor your resume. They can also tell you which companies have good reputations as employers (and what companies don’t). This is the kind of information you need to be able to find a job that you can be happy and succeed in. It’s not just about landing any job that will hire you! You want a job that values your skills and experience and has a corporate culture you fit into and enjoy. It can be hard to find this on your own, but luckily you don’t have to. Good IT staffing agencies build strong relationships with local employers. They make it their business to know what technical skills and experiences these employers need, as well as what kind of work environment they offer. You can capitalize on this insight when you build a good relationship with technical recruiters wherever you relocate.

Want to see our open IT jobs?  Follow us on LinkedIn.  We post new jobs daily!

Relocating IT jobs
Moving to a new state or area of the country? Good IT recruiters can help you with that! Photo credit: andreas160578 via Pixabay.

How to Add Volunteering and Community Service to Your Tech Resume

There are sections of your technical resume that are obviously necessary: your technical proficiencies, the jobs you’ve held, your education section, etc. But there are some parts that aren’t so clear. Do you include an objective? Should you include your hobbies? One section that candidates often have questions about, and one that could actually add a lot to your candidacy if done correctly, is volunteering and community service. When is it advantageous to add your volunteer and community service experience to your technical resume? When does it hurt you? How do you add it? Here are some tips from IT recruiters for deciding what you should keep—and cut—from your resume.

Keep: If you’re applying to a job with a non-profit or a company that really values community service and volunteering, then keep it all. (You can ask your technical recruiters about a company’s interest in community service if it’s not obvious.) Show off any relevant experience on your resume to build yourself up as the kind of candidate that fits well into their culture of giving back to the community.

If you’re not applying to a non-profit or company like this, you may still want to keep some of your volunteering experience. IT staffing firms sometimes come across candidates who’ve donated their technical expertise to the community or local organizations by creating web sites, blogs, or other technical projects for free.  This is very relevant to your candidacy. Include it on your resume, especially if the project you worked on could be similar to the work you’d be doing in your target jobs.

Cut: As mentioned above, when you’re applying to companies that aren’t as concerned with volunteer or community service (often these are more corporate employers), then cut that section. Use the space on your resume to build up your candidacy better. Talk about your technical skills and experience. You only get to submit one resume to hiring managers and IT staffing companies. Make sure every single letter, punctuation mark, and space on that resume builds your candidacy. (If talking about your volunteering and community service interests is really important to you, you may find time to discuss it in job interviews– if it’s relevant to the discussion, of course!)

How to Add it: Create one brief, separate, section at the very bottom of your resume. Put it below your education (which will often be the last section). Format your volunteering stints as jobs. If you have information about technical experience, list it in bullets like you would under a job. Keep the language unemotional here, as you would on any other part of your resume. While you might feel passionate about your volunteer activities, keep subjective phrasing out of this section. Simply state your contributions to the organization and highlight how it might strengthen your candidacy.

If the work is especially relevant to any particular roles, you should take advantage of that. As you tailor your resume to the role (ideally candidates tailor their resume to each role their IT staffing firms submit them to), make sure your description of this volunteer experience explicitly highlights the similarities between that and the projected work for the role. Don’t be afraid to really spell it out for hiring managers. They’re skimming many, many resumes. Make yours stand out!

Want to see our open IT jobs?  Follow us on LinkedIn.  We post new jobs daily!

Volunteering on tech resumes
Don’t forget to add your community service experience to your resume when applying to nonprofits. Photo credit: skeeze via Pixabay.

 

Use This Tip in Your Next Tech Job Search

IT staffing companies hear about plenty of secret weapons candidates can pull out when searching for new IT jobs.  Sometimes it’s a great interview question.  Sometimes it’s a suit that makes you feel confident.  Here’s another to add to your arsenal: take the time to show a deep interest in everything about the role that really matters to tech employers.  It’s not just about saying you love the job description.  Hiring managers in tech want to see an interest in 2 particular areas: The corporate culture and the company’s work.  Here’s how to effectively demonstrate interest in both.

Corporate Culture:  Other industries may be catching up to tech in this respect, but corporate culture has been nearly imperative to tech employers for a long time.  With the popularization of Scrum and Agile, it has been even more important.  If you don’t fit into a team on a social level, then collaboration, and thus real success, will be difficult.  So how do you make it apparent that you’re interested in a company’s corporate culture?  Start with research.  Check out their Glassdoor reviews. Talk to your technical recruiters.  Check out their website.  Be able to discuss their corporate culture and come up with questions of your own about it.  Try asking questions like these: It seems like [fill in the blank with relevant soft skills] are necessary for being successful at this company.  Is this true? Are there other soft skills they prize more? What do you love about working at this company?

The company and its products: As an IT professional, it’s obvious you’ll be asking about things like the tech stack, the projects the role is assigned to, etc.  IT recruiting firms find that the candidates who land jobs go a little further, though.  Hiring managers in tech love when candidates are interested in the way the technical workload supports the business.  Demonstrate, for instance, that you’re thinking beyond what you’ll be coding.  You’re thinking about what you’ll be coding and how it can serve the client better.  To show an interest in the business-side of the company, not just its tech side, do some deeper research than just a quick Google search of the company.  Look at their website, but also look at recent news articles.  Ask your IT recruiters if they have any recommended materials to check out.  A good test of the depth of your knowledge is if you can talk about the company in terms of what others say about them, not just what they say about themselves.

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Do your research on the companies you interview. A simple Google search isn’t enough. Photo credit: geralt via Pixabay.

Fix This Mistake on Your Tech Resume

Having a brief, but effective resume is important when you’re looking for new IT jobs.  While most recruiters would say the 1-page rule is less important for IT professionals, it’s still advantageous to create a resume with all the fat trimmed.  Considering how pressed for time most IT recruiters and hiring managers are, you shouldn’t expect a long, leisurely read of your resume.  In fact, sometimes a resume that’s repetitive, full of excessive technical details, or even unnecessary personal information, hobbies, etc can just take you out of the running for a job completely.  This is especially true when you’re entry level.  Technical recruiters expect a shorter resume when you have less than 5 years of experience.  Here’s one of the worst ways IT staffing companies see IT professionals waste space on their resume: advertising for their previous employers.

This mistake is pretty easy to spot.  Many candidates will put a sentence or two under the name of the company on their resume.  They’ll describe the products the company offers, its reputation, most notable awards, etc.  Sometimes this will be integrated into the bullet points under the employer.  Some artful candidates will try to link their own role to this description of the company.  No matter how it’s done, though, this practice is a terrible idea.  Here are two reasons why you’re only hurting yourself and turning out a less-than stellar resume when you do this.

  1. You’re losing space to boost your own candidacy. Especially when it comes to the text and bullets under the employer, this is the time to showcase your skills and achievements.  Bullets under a job should help an employer picture you as a new and valuable asset to their team.  When you waste even a sentence describing what your previous employer did, their awards, etc, it’s a shame.  That sentence could have been more proof that you are an excellent catch for employers!  When you’re entry level, you’re wasting even more precious space.  Considering how short IT recruiting firms expect your resume to be, every sentence becomes all the more valuable.  Even if you’re not entry level, you’re potentially losing a recruiter or hiring manager’s interest.  When a hiring manager comes across information about the company, not the candidate, they may just start skimming the resume.  Keep their attention by making sure every bullet point under each job is something they want and need to know, not something they could look up on the web or a Fortune 500 company directory!
  1. You look less professional, if not naïve and entry level. Like most resume mistakes, this one can lead IT staffing firms and hiring managers to assume that you are pretty entry level or don’t have a firm grasp of professional norms.  Considering how much responsibility tech professionals often get (as most of their work is so mission critical and imperative for the success of the company) it’s important you look completely professional and trustworthy.

Don’t let a small mistake like this potentially mar your candidacy.  Delete those lines advertising your former employer.  Replace them with achievements, contributions to your team, and the kinds of skills that will excite your potential employers.

Want to see our open IT jobs?  Follow us on LinkedIn.  We post new jobs daily!

IT resume mistakes
Want to make sure your resume doesn’t wind up in the trash bin? Start by not advertising for former employers. Photo credit: Ramdlon via Pixabay.

 

Don’t Decide It’s Your ‘Dream IT Job’ Until You Interview

Sometimes job seekers will come across postings for IT jobs that seem perfect. The employer might offer ideal tech stacks, amazing perks, or remote work options.  Candidates will fall in love, declare it’s their dream job, pin their hopes on it, and sometimes focus solely on applying to that job.  It’s ok to know what you want, but don’t fall into the ‘Dream Job’ trap. IT recruiters would caution against deciding any tech job is your dream job, just based on a job posting.  Here’s why:

1. The job may become different than what is posted.  There are a few reasons why IT staffing firms see this happen.  A company may change its tech stack, the projects it’s hiring for, or the job description of the role itself.  Sometimes these changes occur as a company is interviewing candidates. This means the job you interview for might require different skills than the one you applied to or asked your IT recruiters to submit you to.  If you have decided a job is your ‘dream job’ before the interview, you’d be sorely disappointed by this change; you may have even put your job search on hold to focus on this job.  Be open to new opportunities, let your technical recruiters submit you for roles, but don’t label any of them your ‘dream job’ until after the interview!

2. You don’t know what the culture of the company and team is like until you interview.  While this wasn’t always the case, fitting into the corporate culture is becoming very important in tech roles.  With the increasing emphasis on innovation and teamwork, Scrum and Agile are becoming the development methodologies that most tech teams operate on.  If you don’t fit into the culture, you won’t be able to do your job well, especially on a Scrum or Agile team.  So wait to decide if a job is your ‘dream job’ until after you interview and meet the team.  You have to like them as much as the work—if not more!

3. The job description may be the same currently, but technologies or job descriptions could change in the near future.  Companies go through development changes all the time, and IT recruiting agencies find that sometimes they’re helping a company hire somebody who must have two sets of skills: one for the current projects, and one for projects the company will be pursuing in the future.  Your interviewer may be upfront about this, or you may want to ask some questions yourself.  You can ask in the interview if the company plans to adopt any new programming languages, development methods, etc.  It’s important that before you decide an IT job is your dream job, you get a sense of what the job is now, and what it will be in the future.

Want to see our open IT jobs?  Follow us on LinkedIn.  We post new jobs daily!

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Don’t set your heart on the job until you know if it’s exactly what you want. Photo credit: Ana_J via Pixabay.

 

Can Your Parents or Spouse Call Employers for You During Your Tech Job Search?

Occasionally IT recruiters and hiring managers get calls or emails about jobs from a strange place: a job seeker’s spouse or parents.  IT recruiting agencies and employers will get everything from initial inquiries, follow up calls or emails, actual job applications from an IT professional’s wife, mother, boyfriend, etc.  While it may seem like this is a just a supportive gesture from a loved one, it can actually hamper one’s job search, if not a candidate’s reputation.  Here’s why you need to make sure you are the point of contact for your own job search—as well as what your family members can do to help with your job search effectively.

Having your parents, spouse, etc reach out to employers and IT staffing firms on your behalf makes you look less professional and/or unmotivated.  As with most other elements of the job search, there are basic expectations about who speaks for you.  Professional norms dictate that either you or your technical recruiters submit your applications, follow-ups, inquiries, etc.  Anything else will be confusing and make it look like you aren’t aware of this (and thus probably other) professional norms.  Hiring managers might assume that if you have your parent or spouse call on your behalf, then you aren’t ready to participate in the workforce because you just don’t understand how to interact with employers.

Besides making you look unprofessional, a call or email from your parent or spouse will make you seem unmotivated.  IT recruiting companies and hiring managers want you to make these calls and emails because you’re ultimately invested in landing new IT jobs.  If somebody else is calling for you, it could look like you’re not interested enough to do it yourself.  Especially in tech, where a passion for the work, the company, the team, or some combination of all of these is so imperative, you don’t want to present yourself as possibly disinterested in your own candidacy.  Show you care about the jobs you’re applying to (or discussing with your recruiters) by making all calls and emails yourself.  Don’t ask your spouse, parents, etc to do it for you.

Having your spouse or parents reach out to employers and IT recruiters on your behalf could ruin your reputation.  The tech field can be a small place.  Between the popularity of LinkedIn (which can help connect all hiring managers to each other) and the small number of qualified IT professionals who move around to similar jobs and companies, your reputation can be paramount. It’s very easy for a manager to do a back-door reference on you or for IT staffing companies to blackball you.  Thus if you continually make a mistake, like having your parents call on your behalf about your job application, many people might hear about it.  Even if you find a job now, you’ll likely be looking for one in the future.  Don’t hurt your chances of finding IT jobs by becoming known as the unprofessional candidate who outsources their job search to the wife, husband, parents, etc.

What can a spouse, parent, or family member do to successfully help you with your job search?  IT staffing agencies suggest that you tell well-meaning loved ones to help by doing a few things behind the scenes.  A parent or spouse can find and send you jobs to apply to (while not completing the application themselves!), suggest companies you may want to apply to, or find IT recruiting firms you might want to work with.  They can also help write  your resumes and cover letters or practice for interviewers.  Of course, as the candidate, you will have to be your own advocate. Employers and recruiters should speak with you and only you.  But that doesn’t mean that your loved ones can’t help prepare you to interact with employers and recruiters.  In fact, it’s often encouraged, especially when it comes to interview preparation!

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Tell your spouse to hold off on calling that recruiter for you! Photo credit: JESHOOTS via Pixabay.

Recent Grads, Are You Making This Job Search Mistake?

Summer and early fall are popular times for recent grads to look for IT jobs.  If you’re a recent grad embarking on your first (or maybe second, third, etc) job search, here’s one mistake that can hurt your prospects: keeping your student email address.  Why does keeping that .edu address hurt your chances of landing tech jobs?  Here are a few reasons technical recruiters suggest you get a new, professional email address.

You’re making yourself look less professional and hirable. Unless your school email address tells the world that you went to an Ivy League school, you don’t want to keep it.  (Though this is certainly debatable for a few reasons, too!) Now that you’re an IT professional, not a student, you will want your email address to reflect this change.  Since tech roles are usually high stakes, hiring managers need to be able to hire candidates they trust.  (Even arguably entry-level tech roles like Help Desk are imperative—a company (or organization, school, etc) cannot run if its computers are broken!)  In addition to appearing trustworthy, you want to merit your salary expectations.  Because so many tech roles are imperative to a business’s success, managers will pay higher salaries than other roles.  IT staffing companies find that making a bad hire is a much bigger financial cost in the tech field!

You’re limiting your options. Though there are some employers that seek out recent grads for tech roles, this isn’t the case with a vast majority.  Hiring new grads, especially for such crucial roles, requires more resources and the right set-up.  To hire new grads and have them be successful, companies need to have good training and mentorship programs,  a pace of business that can accommodate mistakes or employees who are still learning, and a centralized tech team (if not the whole company).  Small companies or companies with a lot of spread-out employees often can’t handle hiring new grads.  They need to hire candidates on whom they can rely to hit the ground running, be self-motivated, and get work done with little supervision.  While your resume obviously helps to sell you as the best candidate, an email address can still hurt you.  You don’t want an employer to glance at your resume, note the school address, and automatically toss your resume in the ‘no’ pile.

Your school address may eventually cut you off from important professional contacts. School email addresses are often only available for a finite amount of time after you graduate.  Perhaps they’re shut off after six months, a year, two years, etc.  You don’t want to rely on an email address that may just shut off at some unexpected point.  Even if it’s a year or two later, you might be hurting your job search.  IT recruiting firms may decide to check back in with you after a few months, a year, etc to see if you’re interested in a role.  If your email address has been shut off, you’ll never get that message!

Want to see our open IT jobs?  Follow us on LinkedIn.  We post new jobs daily!

Recent grad job search tips
Is your email address still a ‘.edu?’ Photo credit: StockSnap via Pixabay.