You might find yourself between jobs because that was what you wanted, and it was your own decision to take a break. Good for you.
But these days, with the world upside down because of COVID, there are many who suddenly find themselves at the wrong place at the wrong time. Their company closed, staff laid-off for cost-saving reasons, or senior positions made redundant. Whatever the reason, you may now face a period where you wake up to job-hunting and no longer to a permanent job.
It’s understandable that some sort of panic sneaks into your life. Every day it feels like your confidence takes a beating and as time goes by it’s slowly disappearing. The stakes will feel high in particular if you support a family.
First advice: When you approach potentials employers or executive search firms, do not come across as too desperate. Do not stalk the hiring manager or recruiter with daily calls and emails. Do not suggest that you are prepared to take a huge salary drop just to get something. Believe me, this is a huge turnoff.
Instead, focus on presenting yourself as you would have done when you were still working. Leave out personal details.
Second advice: I found myself between jobs 20 years ago and found solace in reading several books. The two I still fondly recall are still available:
- John Gray: Mars and Venus Starting Over
- Richard Bolles: What Color Is Your Parachute
Let’s come back to how you present yourself in a Resume and on LinkedIn when you have months or years between two jobs.
First of all, having gaps between jobs are no longer unusual. Gone are the days where you joined a company around the age of 20 and worked through to retirement at 65 – having increasingly bigger and bigger jobs.
In fact, many recruiters will not even notice a gap. By moving the work period from either the left margin or the right margin into the middle and immediately after your title or company, using a font size smaller than the other words and using a gray colour, will almost make it disappear and not attract the same attention if you use any of the margins.
Stop using date and month when you present the employment period. Instead of February 2017 to January 2020, write 2017 to 2020. Say this is your three most recent jobs:
- ABC Company | July 2011 to August 2015
- DEF Company | October 2015 to July 2016
- HIK Company | August 2016 – present
Leave out the DEF of 10 months. This is how you write it in the Resume and LinkedIn:
- ABC Company | 2011 to 2015
- HIK Company | 2016 – present
If you took time off to get your MBA studying full time, if you were a “professional” mom to your children for a while, if you volunteered to work for an NGO, if you worked on ad-hoc projects to help a friend or your children’s school, if you were doing Pro Bono jobs, if you can call yourself an independent consultant because you gave advice to someone – these are all good reasons for a gap. Stay cool, a professional recruiter have bigger things to look at in your professional career.
For more inspiration on the subject, click the link below from TopResume.
If the interviewer grills you about your employment gap or seems to be trying to pry additional information from you, that’s a red flag. Reconsider if this is the type of work culture and individual you want to work with.
Companies should be looking at your resume to see your experience, not scrutinize your career timeline. Of course, looking to see tenure and promotions within a company is key information for recruiters, but getting hung up on dates or excessively analyzing gaps in employment is a bad sign.
via There’s Nothing Wrong With Having a Gap Between Jobs | TopResume