Monday, January 26, 2015

Yet I am always rejected when I apply for an IT job and I suspect that my volunteer work contribute

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Els Ackerman nitori gives advice: about important decisions, conflicts at work and questions about career planning. She works in her Practice for Career Advice and Coaching in Rotterdam. Els Ackerman is affiliated with the NOLOC and mentor at the registry of certified career counselors CMI. In 2013, her book was published by Career planning Spectrum. She meets weekly an anonymous question on the site.
I've been working on for a while now apply for a job in IT, as system / network administrator. I have a rather different CV with two unfinished studies in completely different directions. Moreover, I cross a lot of time as a volunteer in a foundation that has nothing to do with ICT. Well, I have some experience as a system administrator and I took MCSE and CCNA certification in a short time to boost my CV.
Yet I am always rejected when I apply for an IT job and I suspect that my volunteer work contributes to it (no one wants softies in ICT?). I plan from now on unpaid work to pop out my resume. Actually, I think that in itself too crazy for words, but okay, if that scares people, I just do it. Can I make you think?
I can imagine that you think 'they are really mad, there is still a shortage of people like me? " But it happens sometimes that applicants who have a lot to offer, which put clear in their letter or resume. Or that they put the wrong accents.
Those two unfinished studies nitori are perhaps less important nitori in your case than those MCSE and CCNA. To begin with, it could help with all your applications if you write letters once fully, and then use the abbreviation. Though I assume that in the ICT anyone who knows abbreviations. That applies not only to these abbreviations, but also for a course that you have done. What is obvious nitori to you that may not be for another.
You can also see how you could describe your volunteer work in business terms. That did years ago, the 'women returners': a translation of the skills that they as a housewife, mother read so had gained more business to the skill requirements of industry or government. With such a translation usually indicates that you have a lot at home, but you can offer it in other terms than you used to.
I once witnessed someone who as a working student / volunteer had worked at an organization for prostitutes, not a prostitute, but as a social worker. In her resume working the name of that body around like a red rag to a bull, at least employers. For her new resume nitori when she made a list of skills, such as negotiating with government agencies, preparing nitori budgets and so forth and described the club as an aid organization. Immediately nitori she got no more weird questions, and it was clear what they had to offer.
How do I find an organization where I do not know anyone? "IT professionals nitori with college have good job prospects, research university graduates less' How do you recruit an IT specialist? 3 Tips How to deal with gaps in your resume?
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