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

This is Why Hiring is Really Hard For Employers

This is Why Hiring is Really Hard For Employers
https://traffic.libsyn.com/thevoiceofjobseekers/This_is_Why_Hiring_is_Really_Hard_For_Employers.mp3

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In this episode, Keirsten Greggs, Jack Kelly, and I discuss the hiring challenges and what job seekers and hiring teams do to hurt the process. 

Kristen’s LinkedIn profile

Jack’s LinkedIn profile

Omissions, lies, and deception during the hiring process.

It’s a tight job market, and there’s lots of angst on both sides of the hiring table. 

“…recruiters who are desperate and got to get someone in there. So they tell a tall tale of how wonderful things are, and it doesn’t turn out…”

Job seekers must ask in writing for promises stated during an interview so they can consider them seriously in their negotiation strategies. 

There are so many addendums and so many clauses. Employers have specific legally compliant language that they have to use.

What part will AI play in the hiring process?

What kind of training do hiring managers, recruiters, and interviewers have come into the hiring process?

 

You are more than welcome to join the discussion. Here are three ways you can:

– 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 [email protected]

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 Search Tagged With: Hiring, Interviews

by Mark Anthony Dyson

4 Remedies to Fix Bad Career Advice

4 Remedies to Fix Bad Career Advice by Mark Anthony Dyson

Nothing is worse than bad career advice. It looks like sour advice and tastes like leather, but it’s terrible career advice. If advice received from friends and family sounds like a trick or gimmick, although helpful at times, it cannot be the pattern of your job search. Now and then, an act of boldness will stand out in a deluge of applicants, as long as the cost is minimal in the big picture.

Bad advice is often broad and vague, but they swear by it. Unfortunately, they’ve created echo chambers of people who will validate their claims.

Good advice comes from anyone, too. Career professionals and entrepreneurs don’t own the block on helpful advice.

The best advice has context and is customized to a specific person or people. If you see how our job market is splintered, there are people in tech saying the sky is falling and everyone else saying it’s a hot job market.

But I digress. More on this later.

Context. You, the advice taker, will need to perpetually contextualize career advice.

 

Bad can always be modified and customized to the situation. People are still offering this career advice in 2022. The fix is pretty 2011.

These are my suggestions to remedy outdated  advice:

1. “It’s all about perception, so you are not lying.”

Good hiring managers will sniff out illusions, especially if the resume lacks plausible claims about the experience. If your resume sounds more like a job description, then perception becomes a delusion. The Fix: Stick with the facts. The more measures and metrics a resume offers, the more you stand out.

2. “Just show up! You don’t need a resume!”

Yes, anyone can get an interview without a resume, but showing up without one is a mistake. Do everything you can to show diligence throughout the hiring process. The Fix: It never hurts to have your resume in tow or easily accessible at all times. Don’t treat it like a flyer. Instead, treat it more like a letter of intent.

3. “Just to need to spend some time on Indeed and apply to a bunch of jobs.”

Unemployment would be less than 1% of job search was that easy. The Fix: Try everything! Start networking and conduct informational interviews with the right strategy. You should nurture and foster relationships so you’ll learn to talk to the right people. Isn’t that the goal? It takes time, thought, and patience.

4. Any statement that anyone starts, “All you have to do…”

The Fix: You have my permission to turn their volume down or turn your volume up. You can also turn them off if you can do so without violence. Anyone who follows advice from “All you have to do…” deserves the results it brings (hint: it’s usually disappointing). Feel free to vet all advice you hear, see, or involuntarily ask for.

I’m sure you can think of more bad advice you should ignore. Let me know if you do.

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: Career, Networking Tagged With: Career, Hiring, Resume

by Mark Anthony Dyson

The Black Professional Job Search Experience and Why it’s Different

The Black Professional Job Search Experience and Why it’s Different
https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/thevoiceofjobseekers/thevoiceofjobseekers221.mp3

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It is well documented Black names and culture are differentiating factors before the initial resume vetting process companies conduct is completed. More companies and organizations are focusing on diversifying their workforce. In today’s conversation with Jennifer Tardy, we are dissecting what black professionals may have experienced in their job search and how they could best navigate it.

You are more than welcome to join the discussion. Here are three ways you can:

– 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 [email protected]

Those on the mailing list are offered the chance to participate in the Job Lab. If you want to join us on October 24, the last Job Lab for the year, sign up at the blog.

Show flow:
421 Modern Job Search Tips for 2021 (sign up on the blog)
Reminders of the shows I have on LinkedIn (follow my page)
My YouTube channel
About Jennifer Tardy:
Jennifer is a former full-time recruiter, a career coach, and a diversity recruiter trainer. She spends half of her time with one-on-one career coaching and the other half with companies that want her to train on diversity recruiting.
Discussion highlights:
  • Job seekers shouldn’t be concerned about their ethnicity being revealed on their resume.
  • Jennifer says, “Don’t be concerned, be strategic. Being strategic with anything you reveal in your resume goes beyond race and ethnicity. Every single thing you list in your resume should confirm that you have the knowledge, skills, and abilities to do the job.”
  • Jennifer says she loves to wear bright colored earrings but will refrain from doing so in an interview because that could be distracting. She wants the interviewer to be focused on her words, not the brightly colored earrings. I have worn colorful color ties with a dark-colored suit. It’s OK to bring yourself to work if it’s not a distraction from your work.
  • Ask questions of the employer to find out how they are creating safe spaces for their Black employees to produce, learn, and grow. If you’re asked a biased question or a question that most would deem offensive, it is best to assume positive intent.
  • Jennifer says when her client makes a comment that is inappropriate or asks an inappropriate question, she remains in control by “meeting people where they are by assuming positive intent. “This allows me to put emotion aside and look to call people in as opposed to calling them out.”

I am updating my free e-book entitled, “421 Modern Job Search Tips for 2021.” I plan to release it to my email list on October 30, before everyone else will be alerted on November 13. Want it early? Go to the blog to sign up.

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.

  • Mail
  • |

  • Web
  • |

  • Twitter
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  • Facebook
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  • More Posts(756)

Filed Under: Job Search, unconscious bias Tagged With: Bias, Hiring, Job Search, Unconscious Bias

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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 May 2020, I talked with LinkedIn’s Senior News Editor Andrew Seaman on “#GetHired” Live.”

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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