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

Your Job Search and My 32 Pound Loss

Your Job Search and My 32 Pound Loss

32 pounds

A lean job search is what everyone wants, but are not willing to pay the price. It is similar to what people expect out of losing weight. Both have simple solutions. It’s the drive to achieve is complicated. Managing the many components is difficult.

Tell someone who asks what did you do to lose weight, and you say cut out sugar and processed food, eat more vegetables, protein, and healthy fats and they will likely ask, “What’s your secret?”

I want to tell the world that I lost 32 pounds since August 2013. I rather tell you that it is fat loss that I’m after, but a tangible and visible gauge is weight loss. I also want to tell you the job search and fitness have similarities you might not have thought of yet. And there’s likely things you won’t accept.

 

The fit issue.

Your job search goal should be like being fit–lean as possible.

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Yes, I know you are looking the best job fit, but I am talking fitness.  For some, it means losing weight, and for others it means regular activity to maintain good health.

Job search could look busy, but lack production. It may lack results. As you would want to lose fat, not muscle. In both cases, it is about fit. You want to fit smaller clothes as a job seeker desires to fit in the right company. Both are tough orders to carry out, but can be done.

What does a lean and fit job search look like?

An unproductive job search means no interviews. No meaningful business conversations (informational interviews). No new friends to connect you or contacts to enlighten you. I see very little interaction with current or former coworkers.

All are signs of a lack of job search effectiveness. Relying on job boards, filling out tons of applications, blindly emailing companies to see if someone will respond, begging contacts on LinkedIn to refer you to jobs (you’ve done this publicly) are unproductive strategies.

Just as looking fit could mean that you are exercising, but is that your only goal – to look fit?  If no one has asked you what your goals are, people reading will assume that fitness means losing weight. It’s an anomaly.  A lot like your job search, you want to look the part.

I’m 53, and the difference between complacency and contentment is a mind shift. Complacency is bad, and contentment is good, when I want it to be that way. Ultimately, when it comes to health, contentment is not good, but it is not the worse. Your job search should have that same shift of mind.

 

The mind shift.

The mind shift I realized that occurred was that I could work out two or three more times a week, and look 10 pounds over the next 2 months. But, I could not sustain working out five times a week to maintain the 10 pounds over the next year. Losing 32 pounds over 10 months takes more patience, but it was something much easier to sustain. It fits my lifestyle.

Your job search should fit your lifestyle. The people you meet, the new information you obtain, and the job you target should complement the lifestyle you desire. Any disruption of that is just not sustainable over a long period. You may need to look for six months or more for a job, especially one that fulfills your expectations because of your degree, certification, experience, or industry’s dissolution or shift.

What does that have to do with your job search?

Oh yeah, the fitness and job search parallels. As a former certified personal trainer, there are several signs of an efficient fitness plan that I notice and relate it so well to the job search. I think that personal training helped me be a good career consultant because the observations, in some ways intersect and are parallel. This would vary in what your fitness goals are as some it’s more aesthetic than it is to improve health benchmarks such as high blood pressure, or lowering cholesterol or blood sugar:

  1. A positive and healthy outlook on life in general that minimizes stress and embraces challenges. If you are overcoming many of the physical challenges, then the mental ones will seem smaller, lighter, and bearable. There is a mental attitude that people find refreshing. People want to know your secret. Small goals or baby steps, like a pound a week, or one more available notch on your belt is comforting and spirit lifting.
  2. Increased mobility and flexibility. You thought I was going to say weight loss, didn’t you. Well, not yet. That’s coming but not as important as this moving and shaking. If you work with a personal trainer, and I mean a good one, you should feel more flexible, pliable, and with an increase quickness (well many times, but not always).
  3. Increased energy. Being able to move without pain or stiffness motivates more movement.
  4. Clothes are fitting differently for the better. Losing weight is the sexiest thing to say, but the difference in the fitting of clothes is the one I appreciate the most.
  5. Losing weight is important, but it doesn’t guarantee good health. I have been down the road of what looks good, as to the goodness I should feel. There is a difference. It is an improvement, but does it address the bigger issue in your life.

A great job search may have similar characteristics in its own way:

  • A positive outlook and how you handle stress increases your attractiveness to employers. Being friendly is an easy way to show positivity and personality. It has to be intentional, and with everyone in your current environment. If you pick and choose, it will be a turn-off to someone.
  • You’re mobile and flexible. It’s tough not to carry baggage from one job to the next.  You don’t reconcile and resolve differences and dirty laundry from your former employer, it’s likely you’ll smuggle in your issues for everyone to run from. When your baggage is minimal and light, then you’ll feel the freedom as it becomes a career asset. Deal with the baggage and feel the emotional weight lighten. Your job search will be easier and find purpose and focus.
  • Calls for interviews will energize you. You feel productive and useful, and more than ever motivated to ready yourself to close the deal.
  • More money is nice, but fulfillment is greater, sexier, physically tangible, and it’s something everyone wants the most. But it is a trap of meaningless self-worth gauge if money is the focus.
  • Forget fast results. Rapid responses to your application or resume doesn’t guarantee a fulfilling opportunity. In fact, you should be more suspicious if it is. Ask more questions and use “why” and “no” as a filter.
  • Dealing with debt will also lift the weight from your search. It is a very painful process, but a needed one. It will purge the desperation out of your current situation.
      I can help you with your mind shift and your job search. I’ll even throw in some fitness suggestions. What is keeping you from yielding meaningful results? Let me know. By the way, there is a part two coming up in a couple of weeks.

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: Job Search

by Mark Anthony Dyson

Words That Empower Your Job Search

Words That Empower Your Job Search

Your job search is ignited by the use of power words, or extinguished by the lack of the right words. What you say and how you say it what an employer has from a resume or cover letter to decide if  they want to talk to you.

On the infographic “word choice” section, adjectives that are frequently use are not the descriptive. The dictionary and thesaurus are great tools to help you with meaning and finding words that are more discriptive. Or you can use Grammarly, a spell checker that can help you find words that give your job search a competitive advantage.

The extreme you want to avoid is using words that are unfamiliar to the reader or flowery language that may confuse your intent in communicating attributes essential to the job.  Since this blog is a Grammarly affiliate, it is important that I mention how I believe in their products and information. The below infographic demonstrates what every resume writer and career coach should tell you: language and strategic use matters to employers.

Without the appropriate related words that describe what you have accomplished, your job search will be a boat without a motor or rudder. The tips in this infographic is not only useful for your cover letter and resume, but also your LinkedIn profile, your professional blog, or writing comments on other blogs related to your industry.

 

 

 

Grammarly Celebrity Twitter Mistakes

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: Uncategorized Tagged With: Grammarly, Job Search

by Mark Anthony Dyson

The Canada Job Hunt, and Can You Ignore Facebook for Your Job Search

The Canada Job Hunt, and Can You Ignore Facebook for Your Job Search
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Many ways of writing a resume is principally the same for foreign countries like Canada, but you should become familiar with the culture. Are you using Facebook for your job search when there are about 8 million jobs are found? Those are our topics today in another “can’t miss” episode!

daisywright

Daisy Wright (@CareerTips2Go) is founder of  The Wright Career Solution, and the author of No Canadian Experience, Eh? A Career Success Guide for New Immigrants,” first-of-its kind book dedicated to skilled professionals moving to, or are already in Canada and finding it difficult to navigate the Canadian job search landscape. Her work has been featured in several renowned resume and career books such as Interview Magic, Expert Resumes for Baby Boomers, Same-Day Resume, No-Nonsense Cover Letters, the Quick Resume and Cover Letter Guide, Resumes for the Rest of Us and No-Nonsense Job Interviews.
Here a few of the highlights of our discussion:
  • Understanding the differences in culture and the job search approach to the job market in Canada. Canadians are much more reserved in sharing accomplishments, as Americans and more comfortable with bragging about themselves
  • Recent laws in Canada resulted in changes of how employers may not use a lack of Canadian experience against an immigrant
  • There are spelling differences that will likely not be used against a foreigner (e.g. U.S. spell ‘behavior” versus Canada spells as “behaviour.”)
  • Daisy offers some resources and websites that people can check out for job openings

joshuawaldman

Joshua Waldman (@JoshuaWaldman) is the founder of Career Enlightenment, and the author of the best selling book, Job Searching with Social Media For Dummies. He is frequently quoted by Forbes, Mashable for advice on using social media to find jobs. He is also a speaker that has given more than 100 talks and trainings to organizations such as University of Southern California,  Texas Christian University, and DeVry University.
Here a few of the highlights of our discussion:
  • Facebook cannot be ignored in using it to connect with other job seekers and employers. Facebook has posted more than eight million jobs and has a billion plus users
  • Many of the apps that Facebook once advertised are gone and it is up to the user to connect through updates, introductions
  • Hashtags are a very effective use that Joshua discovered in experimenting. Listen to how he started using hashtags and how it increased his reach by five times of any of his posts

Please don’t forget to leave an honest review in iTunes, so the show can increase its visibility. And don’t forget to sign up for the updates. I will be increasing them to bi-weekly instead of every six weeks, so you don’t want to miss any of them.

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: Uncategorized Tagged With: Facebook, international job search, Job Hunt, Job Search

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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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