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Job Search: Bringing your brand to market

Job Search: Bringing your brand to market

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 23 Feb 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

With many companies undergoing restructuring during the economic downturn, IT professionals who have been laid off, and those who fear they may be, are turning to career services to help boost their images. Career Management Coaching.com and IT-Career-Coach.net share their approaches to job search success

The first step towards a successful job hunt is believing in oneself, said Kingsley Tagbo with IT-Career-Coach.net, an O’Fallon, Missouri-based career service, owned by Exacticity Inc., offering consulting and online technical skills training programs.

“It’s a bit of a scary situation out there,” said Tagbo, who has observed a “dramatic increase” in professionals, with varying degrees of experience and backgrounds, seeking his career services. In fact, his business, which caters to global clients, has seen a tenfold increase in unemployed IT professionals.

Tagbo said he finds it important to encourage often deflated IT professionals by pointing out that the IT industry is still hiring despite the overwhelming news of mass company layoffs. Just last week, he said he received about 10 calls from recruiters inquiring as to his candidate base.

The approach Tagbo takes is to focus on skills that are actually in demand. “Don’t just go back to college and pick up the skills,” he said. “You have to do some market research and find out what IT managers are interested in hiring for.”

Tagbo said he helps the client identify those hot skills and puts him or her on a path to learn those skills well “because IT managers are very particular about your technical mastery. You aren’t going to show up for the interview until you are an expert.”

Once those skills are mastered, the candidate must then learn to present that knowledge, often a weak point for techies, said Tagbo.

But a candidate’s skill set, whether acquired recently or over the course of years, must pinpoint a very specific career path, he said, using the example of an IT business analyst being far more focused than a general business analyst. IT managers hire for focused professions, which won’t work for the candidate “if the entire portfolio of skills collected doesn’t give credence to one specific career path.”

Like Batson, Tagbo is also witnessing employed professionals who want to protect themselves against a potential layoff, many choosing to broaden their portfolio and finally get trained on those skills they used to only be curious about.

“Even if the IT industry is still hiring, it has got more competitive,” said Tagbo.










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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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