Helpful Hints
Today I don my Emily Post hat and discuss proper
etiquette on the Internet, or Netiquette.
"Please," "Thank you," business
attire, waiting to be invited to sit at an interview, impeccably
presented resumes, and other customs have separated the polite from
the rude and often the winners from the losers in a job search.
We have all learned to extend a hand for a firm handshake, to smile
appropriately but not too much, and to sit forward in our chair,
leaning
slightly and making eye contact.
What, then, has changed?
Our learnings have been geared to in-person interviews,
U.S. mail communications, and telephone protocols. Yet today much
communication and interaction is conducted on the Internet. Although
there are many advantages of Internet communications and e-mail
in particular, one disadvantage is the lack of face-to-face or even
voice-to-voice interaction. It is easy to misinterpret the tone
or implication inherent in some messages, whether receiving or sending.
Read on as we alert you to the pitfalls and provide pointers to
keep you appropriate and successful in your Internet Job Search.
1. Understand style
implications. When posting your resume or responding to an
online job ad, use the normal arrangement of upper- and lower case
letters. Do not use ALL CAPS! All caps are the electronic equivalent
of shouting at the recipient. It is rude as well as hard to read.
2. Use e-mail appropriately.
When requested to send a resume in text only or ASCII, be sure to
do that. If you don't know how to reformat your resume into the
requested mode, find out. You may want to impress the recipient
by the formatting of your resume, but in the electronic environment,
the recipient could care less. The hiring agent wants data in a
form that can be easily converted to whatever database he or she
might be using. Also, according to Wayne Gonyea, principal of the
resume distribution service, ResumeXPRESS!, word processing programs
like WordPerfect contain hidden commands that cause some strange
results in databases. If you don't know how to save and send a file
as text only, find out. Give the hiring agent what he asks for.
Occasionally you will be asked to submit a resume
as a Word document. Plan ahead and have your resume saved as both
a text only file ( .txt) and as a Word file ( .doc ). Again, if
you don't know how, ask someone at Kinko's. If you are asked to
send the resume by copying and pasting it into the body of an e-mail
message, learn how to do that. Many recipients don't want to take
the extra time to download and open files. That extra time may not
seem like much to you, but multiple it by the 100 resumes that the
hiring agent receives each day.
3. Don't send multiple
copies. When you have an opportunity to submit a resume via
e-mail, do not send the resume multiple times. Once is sufficient.
If changes are made to the resume, sending one update is acceptable,
with a note identifying the resume as updated. Resubmitting a resume
after 90 days is acceptable.
Multiple or repeated resumes clog up the hiring
agent's e-mail and database. Remember the delete key is easy to
use. Don't give the hiring agent a reason to do so.
4. Practice safe e-mailing.
Make sure that your virus protection is current. Sending a potential
employer or hiring agent a computer virus is not going to help your
candidacy.
5. Respond appropriately.
When you locate a job ad on the web that asks you to respond by
U.S. mail, don't look around for a back door such as sending the
resume to the webmaster. If the company wanted the webmaster to
receive the resume, it would have directed you accordingly. You
can try to beat the system, but hiring agents know how they want
to receive resumes.
6. Follow instructions.
When you are asked to submit a resume, don't refer the hiring agent
to your web resume. Most of the time the person contacting you is
not the person who will make the hiring decision and, second, the
hiring agent does not have the time to surf the net looking for
resumes. Web resumes are pretty. If you want one, get one. However,
they won't really do you any good.
7. Be specific.
Your resume online should contain an objective and identify the
position that you seek. A general resume that allows the hiring
agent to try to find a position to fit your skills and experience
is a waste of your time and theirs.
8. Avoid cover letters.
Cover letters should be omitted unless they contain some specific
information that is not included in your resume. If you want to
include one, keep it short, to the point, and factual. Hype will
kill your candidacy.
9. Do unto others.
As in any social situation, treat others as you would like to be
treated,
follow the rules, and more doors will open for you.