The Voice of Job Seekers

Mark Anthony Dyson ★ Career Writer ★ Speaker ★ Thinker ★ Award-winning Blog & Podcast! ★ "The Job Scam Report" on Substack! ★ I hack and reimagine the modern job search!

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by Mark Anthony Dyson

14 Essential Tools to Thrive in Today’s Job Market

14 Essential Tools to Thrive in Today’s Job Market

One of the most significant differences between the job market of the past and the job market of today is the need to sell yourself. If you’re on the hunt for a new job, you must not only promote yourself in interviews but to everyone who matters — which, generally speaking, is everyone in your network.

Read: 5 Ways Job Seekers Should Act Like a Consultant

Those who ignore this aspect of the modern job hunt are likely to find themselves stuck in a string of unfulfilling jobs.

You have to think like a marketer if you are to land your dream job.

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Recruiters and hiring managers are always scouring social media for new talent. To catch their attention, you have to promote yourself.

Here are 14 tools, traits, and skills that will help job seekers build and promote their brands — and get the job as a result:

1. Your Purpose

What motivates you? What drives your passion for your work? Your reasons should be your own — not those imparted to you by your mother or a well-meaning professor.

Stop letting clichés direct your career. Find your unique purpose, embrace it, and let it drive you.

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2. An Elevator Pitch

Many people cannot clearly articulate what it is they bring to a team or company. Just as big brands are clear about the value they create for consumers, you must be clear about the value you create for employers. Craft a brief elevator pitch that clearly outlines the value you create for employers — and back it up with metrics that convince the skeptics.

3. Stories

Stories grab people’s attention, and when they are compelling enough, they can win you support. In addition to a high-level elevator pitch, you should prepare a few stories of your value-creation in action.

4. A Blog/Portfolio

Every job seeker should maintain a comprehensive portfolio of their work, whether it takes the form of a blog or something else. This becomes a one-stop shop for people who want to learn more about what you have to offer.

Maintaining a blog or other public site is also a great way to build an audience, establish yourself as a thought leader in your field, and maybe even attract employers.

5. Business Cards

At the minimum, an electronic business card is essential. Every gathering is a networking opportunity with the potential to advance your career. No matter where you go, bring your business cards and be prepared to hand them out. If you don’t have a business card, yet have the Linkedin mobile app, then you can easily use the recently rolled out QR scanner in the search bar of your app.

Read: Every Job Seeker Needs to Act as Their Own Hype Man

6. A List of Target Companies

A list of target employers allows you to conduct your job search in a more precise and purposeful manner. Plus, it allows you to focus your networking on contacts at the companies you’d like to work for.

podcast: Networking is more effective if you build and deepen those relationships long before you need to cash in a referral favor.

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It’s okay for your list of targets to change over time.

7. An Engaging LinkedIn Profile

By now, you know “all-star” status is your goal on LinkedIn. Stay active by commenting on, liking, and sharing content. To stand out against other LinkedIn all-stars in your industry, utilize your recommendations, publications, awards, and volunteer sections whenever possible.

8. Deep Network Relationships

These days, many people seem to value quantity over quality in their networks, but it is the deep relationships that lead to new career opportunities. People with whom you have mutually beneficially, trust-based relationships will remember you when unposted jobs open up. You can then start increasing the ask of your network. This conversation is a good example of the type of information you can benefit from by deepening your network relationships.

9. Powerful References

You want network connections who can speak to your strengths in a compelling way. Stay in touch with your references so that your connections are always warm. Keep them interested in and excited about your career. Share updates so that they can accurately convey the essence of your professional value when the time comes.

10. An Email Newsletter

I facilitate a monthly “Job Lab” in the Ashburn-Wrightwood community in Chicago. One of the regular attendees keeps his connections apprised of his career happenings with an email newsletter. He shares details of his consulting gigs and his insights on relevant topics. This is a powerful way to keep your connections in tune with your efforts.

11. Gratitude

Make sure thank-you notes are part of your strategy — not only for interviewers, but also for references, network contacts, and even the friend who babysat your kids so you could attend a networking event. A nice touch might be using something like the Starbucks app to send $5 digital gift cards right from your phone.

12. Persistence

For people to get to know you as a professional, you’ll need to engage multiple times. Keep at it — but don’t overwhelm your contacts.

You must be there for others, too! You will need to give more than you get, and that’s okay.

13. Resilience

You will hear a lot of “nos” and “maybes” throughout your career. Your ability to endure these inevitable rejections will make all the difference.

14. Social Proof

Social proof is an essential part of your personal brand — but you need to make sure you’re posting the receipts where employers can see them. Don’t be afraid to self-promote. That’s the only way to get on people’s radars.

Originally publish at Recruiter.com! 

About Mark Anthony Dyson

I am the "The Voice of Job Seekers!" I offer compassionate career and job search advice as I hack and re-imagine the job search process. You need to be "the prescription to an employer's job description." You must be solution-oriented and work in positions in companies where you are the remedy. Your job search must be a lifestyle, and your career must be in front of you constantly. You can no longer shed your aspirations at the change seasons. There are strengths you have that need constant use and development. Be sure you sign up to download my E-Book, "421 Modern Job Search Tips 2021!" You can find my career advice and work in media outlets such as Forbes, Inc., Fast Company, Harvard Business Review, Glassdoor, and many other outlets.

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Filed Under: Atrributes, Career Management, Job, Job Search Tagged With: job market, Job Search, Jobs

by Mark Anthony Dyson

Layoffs? Did Someone Say Layoffs?

Layoffs? Did Someone Say Layoffs?
http://traffic.libsyn.com/thevoiceofjobseekers/thevoiceofjobseekers179.mp3

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Tis the season for layoffs. You might need a new job search in 2018. As we speak, there are companies putting the final touches on separation agreements and/or severance packages. Well, the talk about departures or the rumored occurrences lately includes Adtalem, AAP, Aetna, AFLAC, Allscripts, Allstate, AIG, Anadarko, Arris, AT&T, ADP, Avaya,  Baker Hughes, Bank of America, Becton Dickinson, Bed Bath & Beyond, Boeing, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Broadcom. Not to mention every company that hired seasonal workers recently. This is why I am welcoming back to the show Tom Spiggle of Spiggle Law.

 

I want to hear from you of how this layoff episode resonates with you.

Here are places you can add to the conversation at large:

  • Call and leave a voicemail at 708-365-9822, or text your comments to the same number
  • Go to TheVoiceofJobSeekers.com, press the “Send Voicemail” button on the right side of your screen and leave a message
  • Send email feedback to mark@thevoiceofjobseekers.com

 

More about Tom: 

Tom Spiggle is a former prosecutor and former Assistant U.S. Attorney. His website also has a very informative blog found at spigglelaw.com  He is regularly quoted in the media in such outlets as the Washington Post, CBS News, and many law journals.

Our discussion today is based on the article on Tom’s article on his blog, ” The Anatomy of a Severance Agreement.” This time of year is often feared for layoffs or departures. The Bureau of Labor Statistics clumps layoffs/departures as separations. Tom has a 6 part series to offer when you sign up with your email address.

Here are some highlights from our layoff show: 

  • Separation agreement – agreeing or wavering the right to sue, could include package with severance, outplacement services, etc  
  • Companies are not legally required to offer a separation package, no obligation
  • Talk to financial advisor to get your ducks in a row
  • If you think you may be laid off, and you have been sexually harassed, now is the time to file before any separation agreement
  • Tom addresses the five components of the severance agreement in more detail: payment, benefits, unemployment, references, and obligations.

Reminder:

I am here for you! Use my contact information above to inquire about individual or group coaching. You can also sign up for my weekly newsletter at the top right of my page. I try to pack as much value in my newsletter to more than 2,000 subscribers as possible.

Grab my updated “118 Job Search Tips for the Modern Job Search in 2018”  here.

You can buy my guides listed here for 99 cents each for the rest of the year! The regular price is $5.00 for most of the guides.

About Mark Anthony Dyson

I am the "The Voice of Job Seekers!" I offer compassionate career and job search advice as I hack and re-imagine the job search process. You need to be "the prescription to an employer's job description." You must be solution-oriented and work in positions in companies where you are the remedy. Your job search must be a lifestyle, and your career must be in front of you constantly. You can no longer shed your aspirations at the change seasons. There are strengths you have that need constant use and development. Be sure you sign up to download my E-Book, "421 Modern Job Search Tips 2021!" You can find my career advice and work in media outlets such as Forbes, Inc., Fast Company, Harvard Business Review, Glassdoor, and many other outlets.

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Filed Under: Job, layoffs Tagged With: layoff, separations, severance

by Mark Anthony Dyson

Job Interviewing Best Practices (PODCAST)

Job Interviewing Best Practices (PODCAST)
http://traffic.libsyn.com/thevoiceofjobseekers/Episode15TVOJSMelCooley.mp3

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Melissa Cooley

Melissa Cooley, of MelissaCooley.com, is a Certified Resume Writer, Interview Coach, Career Consultant, Blogger, and a contributor to the career book, Nourish Your Career. Her blog, The Job Quest, equips job seekers with tools needed for a successful job search and job interview. Melissa is also a friend and this recorded conversation is the first time we have talked person-to-person since connecting online for the last four years. Her insight into coaching job seekers is worth modeling because she goes beyond the surface practices. That is what made it easy to ask her to share her knowledge in this area. If you want to read a post from her blog that demonstrates her insight, read “3 REASONS WHY YOU STILL NEED TO DO INTERVIEW PREP. (YES, EVEN IF YOU ARE A “SHOO-IN.”).”

Job interviewing is a skill requiring more practice than 95% of job seekers are willing to do. If it is hard to spotlight your best attributes, then your interviewing skills have equal to or less value than your resume.

One of the questions I ask Melissa is what are a few of the techniques she uses to prepare job seekers for the job interview. She cited a technique from Dr. Lynn Joseph, creator of the Job Loss Recovery Program. Melissa says that by visualizing interview success as part of the preparation really has helped a few of the clients she coached.

We also tackled some of the areas job seekers are challenged with such as, communication, networking, and deciding if it is appropriate to go to an interview sick.

I am slightly embarrassed that I flubbed her introduction. My attempt was to roll out the red carpet, but instead, the carpet was spotty in one place. Otherwise, I think this serves the job seeker community well and has advice that is worth putting into practice.

 

Here is a partial transcript:

Mark Anthony Dyson: And we appreciate you joining us back here at The Voice of Job Seekers, we thank everybody who is downloading the podcast. Hopefully, you are getting great value out of what we are sharing. Amongst all of the guest we have, today I have a very special guest. A few years ago I stumbled upon Melissa Cooley of MelissaCooley.com and she has a blog called JobQuest and I was really intrigued that her blog was a whole lot better than what I was writing at the time. Nevertheless, she reached out to me in conversation and then from that point on I think for 3 or 4 years we always had the conversation.  We have shared each other’s content and we have shared a few to follow lists. Most of all, what’s important about Melissa is that she is a resume writer also co-author of  “Nourishing Your Career.” Welcome, Melissa and thank you for joining in.    

 

Interview

Melissa Cooley: Thank you for having me, Mark.
 
Mark Anthony Dyson: This is really great because Melissa is actually a friend that I talk to her all of the time so we are going to be pretty comfortable in talking to each other and it won’t be the standard interrogation that I may perform at times. We are going to try to make this engaging and involving if you guys want to comment feel free to comment on the blog or you can send me a voicemail on my site. I have a “send a voicemail” or “use your microphone” on your computer and leave a comment or a question as well. Melissa, please tell us a little bit about yourself.
 
Melissa Cooley: I started up the JobQuest about 4 years now. It’s something that just came about because I had a loved one that was laid off during the recession and I was helping him with getting his resume together, helping him with networking, giving him tips on interviewing, and everything that goes into that. During that time, I got on to twitter and started to talk to some more career professionals that really liked what I was saying and the question that kept coming up, What do you do? They liked some of the ideas I had and my writing in some of the blogs that I had written early on. The fact that the question kept coming up with the career professionals and they were really interested in what I had to say got me thinking that I should try to do something with this. So that’s where all of this came about just because of helping that one person in my Life with his issues and it kind of blossomed from there now I have my practice. Working with people in whatever aspect of their career management that they need. Whether it be personal branding, interview prep, or being able to clearly articulate their value and resume or cover letter and all of that type of stuff. Now it has been almost 2 years that I have been certified as a resume writer through Career Directors International and that is something that gives a bit of assurance to people who are interested in working with me that I really do know what I am talking about.  
 
Mark Anthony Dyson: It’s interesting you should mention that and for that to stand out and we just had a show a couple of weeks ago with Bridget Wiede Brooks. We talked a lot about how valuable having someone who is a certified resume writer is to the actual person and how they can get into depth and get the value out of the person because of the training and the information they may have. Whoever gets serviced by you will definitely get some of the best information out there including different trends and different ways and not being a one trick pony in writing resumes and that’s pretty important. It’s very interesting when I have different practitioners on we always tend to talk about what people are doing and what we are seeing in our practices. Today since we are talking about interviewing and resume writing we will probably weave in and out of our discussion. What are you experiencing as far as people seeking your expertise for interview coaching?
Melissa Cooley: I’m finding a lot of people who sometimes come to me because they feel like they have gotten themselves to the door of they are at the interview and then something happens it all seems to fall apart but they aren’t able to seal the deal and they come to me saying I don’t know what’s happening what the disconnect is and just being able to do mock interviews its part of what I do and I’m able to hear how they are answering questions. Of course, there are questions that are pretty unexpected such as tell me about yourself, the greatest strengths and weaknesses, and more of getting into the behavior questions which people have a hard time responding to because they haven’t actually thought about how their experiences relate to the future and how they can fully articulate the value in what they can bring by what they have done and that’s a lot of times where they have been having problems and things kind of fall apart.
 
Mark Anthony Dyson: You are discerning where people are disconnecting is there a particular pattern that people where they are coming apart at other than the regular questions? You mentioned the behavioral aspect of it. What are some of the behavioral questions you find people are stumbling across and failing to connect with the hire manager?
 
Melissa Cooley: Sometimes it’s a matter of being clear about their role in something. This is particular for women but I’ve seen it go for both genders, of not taking enough ownership in a project especially a role in a leadership. More often in women, just because women are building a community where it’s all about us and not necessarily the I and that can be a hard thing because it doesn’t necessarily give a full picture to the people making the decision about the role they may have played in let’s say developing the project or managing the outcomes. Sometimes people don’t give themselves enough full credit for the value that they bring or enough credit for what they do.
 
Mark Anthony Dyson: Women are having a hard time bragging about themselves?
 
Melissa Cooley: Yes, we were always taught not to brag and that is an impolite thing to do. However, you have to be comfortable with talking about the things you have done. If you pull back and try to deflect with the group then the person won’t be giving themselves enough credit for what they have done and the people who are interviewing you and may not have that knowledge about you won’t fully understand the value you brought to the project. 

What you say or do in an interview matters 

The power in your words can affect your chances to impress and perhaps disqualify you from job candidacy. Melissa and I created this video to emphasize the words and terms (and the context) are more important than showing up. These are absolutely the wrong kinds of things to say in a job interview. Can you get away with any of these things? Rarely. In most cases, NO! It’s all about professionalism and the value you bring to a company.

Be sure you sign up for our newsletter found near the top right in the blue box. Join more than 1,100 subscribers about what goes on behing the scenes and other job search tips not mentioned in the show!

About Mark Anthony Dyson

I am the "The Voice of Job Seekers!" I offer compassionate career and job search advice as I hack and re-imagine the job search process. You need to be "the prescription to an employer's job description." You must be solution-oriented and work in positions in companies where you are the remedy. Your job search must be a lifestyle, and your career must be in front of you constantly. You can no longer shed your aspirations at the change seasons. There are strengths you have that need constant use and development. Be sure you sign up to download my E-Book, "421 Modern Job Search Tips 2021!" You can find my career advice and work in media outlets such as Forbes, Inc., Fast Company, Harvard Business Review, Glassdoor, and many other outlets.

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Filed Under: Interview, Job Tagged With: Job Interview

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I moderated a panel on Wealth Management for executives by Black Enterprise Magazine in October 2023 in Miami.

I was interviewed on Scripps News show, “The Why!” 4/13/2023

I talked with John Tarnoff and Kerry Hannon of “The Second Act” podcast about job searching after 50 in October 2022.

I was on “The Career Confidante” podcast to talk about “boomerang employees” and “job fishing” in June 2022.

Making Job Search a Lifestyle With “Dr. Dawn Graham on Careers,” SiriusXM Ch. 132, Wharton School of Business May 2021

In October 2025, I was interviewed by Nafo Savo, of Marketplace Tech, National Public Radio show

Beverly Jones, host of the NPR podcast “Jazzed About Work,” invited me back to talk job scams, job search trends, and AI tools in April 2024

WOUB Digital · Episode 183 : Job search expert Mark Dyson says beware of scams, know AI & keep learning

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