Career Change
5 Job Search Tips for Veterans
According to a May 2010 BLS report, there were 22 million veterans among the civilian population in 2009—and they're just as likely to be unemployed, despite the skills they developed over their years of service. In a lot of cases, the problem is that a career in the military doesn't necessarily prepare someone for the job search process in the civilian world. Here are five ways that veterans can get an edge and get hired:
Assess Your Strengths
Before you sit down to write a resume, the first thing you need is to understand how the talents, skills, and abilities from your military career relate to business and industry. And there will be plenty: military personnel develop traits beneficial to commercial enterprises because they are held to high standards of performance and operations.
Military personnel make excellent leaders, once given a specific task: they are decisive, resourceful, and tremendous team players; and they perform well under pressure.
Explain Yourself
Civilian employers are not always familiar with military lingo, which can give veterans a serious disadvantage in the job seeking process—especially if you have to get your resume past an automated screener that's only set up to catch common corporate jargon.
While typical jobs in the military and corporate worlds may have very different titles, many of the underlying skill-sets are similar. Bridging the divide between your experiences and those employers are looking for may well be as simple as taking the time to browse some job ads and absorb the kind of language you find there. The major challenge is in correlating different assignments to private sector roles, including financial planning and analysis, operations management, purchasing, human resource management, systems administration, and administrative support.
Additionally, those in the civilian world often have little idea of where in the hierarchy a military rank falls—everything below General or Admiral is pretty much a mystery! As such, you may find yourself being offered positions that carry significantly less responsibility than you're used to. You can counter that by including specific examples in your resume ("managed a workgroup of 25," or "controlled a $7 million budget"). Sometimes, however, you just have to take whatever is open; the good news there is that your skills and experience should help you to stand out, meaning promotions should follow.
Dealing with Image Problems
Let's face it: there are certain pre-existing notions about the military that will be difficult to counter. Like the interviewers who are convinced that transitioning candidates are good at following orders from above, but not much else. Or those who think vets are unlikely to care about profits because they're used to operating in an environment where costs don't matter.
Unfortunately, there's little you can do about those perceptions until you get to the interview stage: at that point you'll have the opportunity to talk about your ability to work on your own initiative or identify cost-savings.
The Education Question
How does a degree from the USAF Academy stack up against one from a typical four-year college? If you can't articulate an answer, the chances are the typical employer won't be able to either. Again, this is something that you may just have to bide our time on and work on explaining if and when you get an opportunity at the interview stage. Resume real estate is generally precious enough that you don't want to attempt a full account of your educational experience on there, but if you did something that is likely to have a bearing in you day to day job functionality, then by all means mention it.
Narrow the Odds
Most of the problems listed above come down to a single factor: a disconnect between the military and civilian worlds. However, there are some companies out there that are dedicated to hiring veterans and know exactly what value to place on someone's military service. Finding out what companies those are is a great place to start your post-military career search.
Firms like Microsoft, Boeing, Booz Allen Hamilton and Wal-Mart are all examples of firms that are known for their military-friendly hiring practices. By doing your research before you apply, you can make informed decisions about company culture, typical salary ranges, and even find insider advice on what it takes to get hired there. The bottom line: you can significantly improve your chances of being hired by knowing the playing field.
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great tips!
thank you for the article! video on the related topic - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cdh2ZB5BKrI may be interesting for those looking fo a job as well.
Veterans - deserve all the help we can give them
This has been a very sore topic for me. Why? These men and women gave up their lives to serve in the armed forces and 90 percent of them are now struggling to make ends meet. Sorry, but we all need to do better! I know personally I could never do what they did. The sad part is that a lot of them have permanent injuries - injuries that need to be addressed and helped with. I hear horror stories of vets not being able to get the medical or financial help they need. Thank you for writing this article and I hope it helps in some small way. Career Counseling http://www.rockportinstitute.com
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