Contacting Employers by Mail or Phone Banbury
Contacting Employers by Mail or Phone
Contacting Employers by Mail or Phone
As discuused in the article on the hidden job market , it is often worthwhile contacting companies to ask if they have work available. This can be done in person, by telephone, with a mailshot, or with a combination of the three.
How to Organise Your Search
Decide which companies you want to concentrate on, and list them in order of preference. Find out the name of the person who would eventually decide to hire you - you may have to do a little research to discover this.
Create a file on each target company, including annual reports, brochures, and articles of company news. Studying this information will make you a better candidate if you meet with the company.
Contacting by Telephone
One way of finding out if a company has any vacancies that they're not advertising is simply by enquiring by telephone. There are two ways to go about this:
The Wrong Way:
Call a company once, leave your name, phone number and a few personal details then leave it to chance they'll remember you the next time a suitable vacancy comes up.
The Right Way:
By following a targeted, systematic calling method, following up calls on a regular basis.
The System
- Start by researching which organisations to target - the ones who are most likely to have the kind of job opportunities you are looking for.
- You may want to approach the companies further down your preference list first. You need practice and it is better to make your mistakes with companies that are not your main targets. You never get a second chance to make a good first impression.
- Get the name of the right person to speak to. So, for example, if you're in sales, ask for the name of the sales director.
- Keep your call short and to the point, as cold calls can be very irritating especially to someone who is busy. State simply who you are, the name of anyone who may have referred you to them, what you're looking for and whether there's anything suitable for you at the moment.
- If possible, suggest meeting up for an interview within the next week.
- If there are no vacancies at present, find out if the organisation ever has the kind of job opportunities you are targeting.
- End the call by saying thank you. Leave the door open for calling again another time.
- Keep a record of your calls including the name of the person to whom you spoke and any useful information you picked up.
- Give each call a score from 0 to 5, where 5 is a call where the feedback has been encouraging, and 0 is for employers who may have been rude or discouraging, or who say that they never employ in this way. A score of 1 to 4 should be assigned to those companies that only have an occasional demand for talents such as yours.
- Work out a telephone calling routine. You may decide to call your 5's every 8-10 weeks. The lower the number you have rated the company, the longer you will leave it to call them. Zeros won't be contacted again.
- Revise your ratings (upwards or downward...
