Tag: Career tips

  • 6 Key Tactics for Advancing Your Career in Targeted Industries: A Meetup Guide!

    6 Key Tactics for Advancing Your Career in Targeted Industries: A Meetup Guide!

    Career fairs are one of many avenues for students to engage with companies and learn about different industries, career routes, and internship opportunities; however, not all vocations are equally represented.

    Villanova University staff identified the need for a discipline-specific recruitment event for civil engineering students to develop deeper interactions between learners and industry partners, so they organized an engineering meetup.

    The career center collaborated with a student organization to provide professional development education to participants while also assisting companies in finding the talent they require more efficiently.

    What’s the need: When organizing typical career fairs, staff saw a disproportionate interest from firms looking for civil engineers compared to the amount of students attending the fair who wanted to be civil engineers.

    “We also noticed that more students were being converted from internships into full-time post-graduate positions prior to the fairs—thereby taking seniors out of the market and reducing our supply of civil engineers seeking full-time employment at the fairs,” explains Maggie Songer, executive director of Villanova’s career center.

    Furthermore, the timing for recruiting and internship hiring was pushing forward, with more organizations shifting the process from the spring semester to early fall.

    Students from other majors were underserved at the career fair due to the large amount of civil engineering businesses looking for a specific type of student.

    To further interact with business partners and enhance equal networking and recruitment possibilities for students, officials decided to host a major-specific career fair for engineering students.

    How it works: In addition to the traditional autumn and spring semester employment fairs, Villanova also hosts a unique event for civil engineering students.

    The first meetup was held in February in partnership with the student organization of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), with 18 employers from various industries and students from all classes in attendance.

    “This focused event provided a more intimate setting for meaningful interactions between students and employers,” Songer said.

    The event included open networking, one-on-one résumé evaluations, and career-guidance meetings between employers and students. These drew a broader spectrum of students, including those who had previously accepted internship and full-time job offers. Students might also get a headshot taken or browse the career closet for professional attire.

    Some of the event’s revenues, collected from employers for participation, were contributed to the ASCE chapter’s professional development fund, which will be used to pay for conference attendance this year.

    The impact: The event reached its goal of engaging a larger number of students interested in civil engineering, but it also encouraged deeper engagement as participants learned about career options. Employers praised the event for meeting their expectations, with 100% responding positively in a follow-up poll.

    Partnering with a student organization also provided chapter members with opportunities for leadership and professional growth, with the executive board making opening and closing speeches and introducing themselves to participating employers, according to Songer.

    A post-event survey revealed that the average survey responder gave the event a nine out of ten (one being poor and ten being extraordinary).

    DIY: For a higher education practitioner considering creating a similar program, Songer offers six pieces of advice:

    • Identify demand. Looking at institutional data, practitioners can analyze trends in employer interest and student career aspirations to see where there is the greatest need for targeted programming, particularly where there is a discrepancy between employers and students.
    • Collaborate with student orgs. Working alongside a student group can help staff leverage the group’s network and student membership to promote the event, but most importantly, it can help develop student leaders. Student-led events and activities resonate better with peers and can foster a sense of community within a discipline and give students hands-on work experience that will benefit their careers later.
    • Emphasize relationship building. In addition to traditional career fairs, programming that prioritizes relationships between students and employers has more meaningful outcomes and can produce mentorship or longer-term connections and advancement. Focused events are better at achieving this goal because they are tailored toward career interests and career pathways.
    • Partner internally. Other groups within the university, such as faculty and administration, can serve as resources for career-focused events. At Villanova, the dean of the college of engineering was the first to identify that the U.S. infrastructure bill was creating a heightened need for engineers. Faculty can also help encourage students to attend and participate in events.
    • Leverage alumni. “When alumni attend recruiting events, they can more easily relate to current students and spark conversations via shared experiences, allowing for students to feel more comfortable and confident while networking,” Songer says. Staff should conduct outreach to alumni to encourage their participation.
    • Solicit feedback and iterate. In trialing something new, staff should continuously solicit feedback from all stakeholders, including students and employers, to assess the program’s effectiveness and identify areas of improvement. This ensures the program is responsive to the current and evolving needs of all parties.
  • Career Advice: Barack Obama’s Career Tip Led to a LinkedIn VP Role for His Speechwriter

    Career Advice: Barack Obama’s Career Tip Led to a LinkedIn VP Role for His Speechwriter

    When Aneesh Raman was Barack Obama’s speechwriter, the president frequently gave the former CNN war correspondent this piece of career advice: “Worry about what you want to do, not who you want to be.”

    Obama’s career exemplifies his slogan. Before was inaugurated in 2009, the United States’ first African American president spent decades working in community organizing and law.

    “He wanted to build communities in a different way,” Raman was quoted as saying by CNBC Make It, “and it led him on his path that led to this moment where he became president.”

    That is why, rather than focusing on your dream title, Raman suggests first considering the influence you want to create through your profession and then polishing the abilities required to achieve it.

    Raman’s counsel has took him from drafting Obama’s speeches from 2011 to 2013, collaborating with NGOs as Facebook’s head of economic impact, and co-authoring multiple books.

    As a vice president, he now oversees LinkedIn’s Opportunity Project, which aims to create a more dynamic and equal global job market.

    Your twenties and thirties are for learning skills

    Using Obama’s slogan for job success, Raman urges those in their twenties and early thirties to forego titles entirely and focus on skill development before concentrating in their mid-thirties.

    Raman believes that this paradigm is the “safest” approach to think about a long-term career since it allows you to control all of those levers vs job title. You might aspire to be a vice president somewhere, but you have no influence over anything, and that job may not exist in 20 years.”

    Don’t worry if your job path appears erratic on paper. Raman suggests taking a “squiggly line” strategy, in which your career isn’t quite linear but has a connected thread.

    “My job titles as a career don’t make sense,” he added, “but my skills across the board are storytelling and coalition building” around economic opportunity.

    Here’s his framework for long-term professional success:

    Ages 20 to 35

    Raman advised that now is the moment to discover what you’re passionate about, what you’re good at, and what you want to improve. Determine whether specific professions or employers will assist you in acquiring the necessary skills.

    Ages 35 to 45 

    Now it’s time to put your unique skill set to work on an issue of expertise, whether it’s in a specialized profession like health care or something larger, like Raman’s emphasis on “economic opportunity.”

    Ages 45+

    Raman believes that only at the age of 45 should you consider the impact you wish to have on your organization and the globe. After all, Obama was 47 when he assumed the presidency, making him one of the country’s youngest leaders.

    ‘Worry about learning, not your next job’

    Obama is not the first leader to advise ambitious individuals to quit worrying about their next job title. Shaid Shah, the worldwide president of Mars Food & Nutrition, has previously stated to Fortune that “career success is more than just hierarchy.”

    “It’s about gaining the experiences you need to realize your ambition, to discover what makes you happy, what makes you tick, and what motivates you to get out of bed every day,” added Shah, who worked his way up from sales director to the head of Mars Food & Nutrition.

    You’re more inclined to choose roles that get you closer to where you want to be in the long run, rather than taking what appears to be a promotion on paper right now.

    Pret’s CEO told Fortune that staying grounded and not dreaming too large is key to success.

    “I’ve watched people that have been so fixated on the next role that they really take their eye off the job they’re doing,” Pano Christou told the audience. “My philosophy has always been if you do a great job, people will notice you.”

    By focused on excelling at his current work and being the best in his cohort, he was quickly promoted (from shop floor manager to CEO). “If you work hard and put your head down, things can happen.”