Maintaining your motivation during a job search can become difficult, especially if you are on the hunt for months. You probably start your job search with a ton of enthusiasm as you send out resumes and applications to a lot of employers who have great positions available. However, your motivation could turn to negativity over time if you receive rejection after rejection. It is important to maintain your motivation throughout your job search for several reasons.
Why Employers Hire Motivated People
Employers may prefer motivated workers with fewer skills who are more successful at their jobs as compared to unmotivated employees with exceptional backgrounds. HR managers and recruiters easily determine if you have the right education, job skills and qualifications for a position. However, it is harder to find out how someone stays motivated to work hard on a regular basis.
Showing motivation on a resume is one key to success during a job search. Hiring managers discover if you stayed at one job for a long time or if you hopped around to different jobs every few years. Interviewers may examine your outside interests and former colleagues to determine how you remained engaged in your work and hobbies. It might be hard to show what motivates you when you have an employment gap on your resume. Find ways to show that you remained active during a time when you did not have a job.
Earn More References
Prove you stayed active during your job search by earning more references. Get in touch by perusing social media contacts, calling up former colleagues, connecting with college classmates and hanging out with people you value within your chosen field. Any one of these new contacts could give you a great reference for an upcoming position or even recommend you for a position.
Seek out a mentor who helps you find your career path again. If you already have a mentor, find a second one. Mentors offer a way to motivate you with the right combination of teaching, encouragement and practical advice. Most importantly, mentors give you a positive spin on your career.
Avoiding Negativity
Another good reason to stay motivated during a long job search focuses on avoiding negativity. It's easy to build up negative feelings and bitterness when you receive rejection after rejection. This might build up to depression, which makes it even harder for you to find ways to get out there and keep searching.
All of these negative thoughts come out in a job interview. A potential employer may not hire you simply because your negative attitude builds up over time. Maintain a healthy attitude using several techniques and suggestions that help keep your spirits up when your job prospects seem to falter.
Create Your Ideal Job Description
Find what motivates you by writing down your ultimate job description. This exercise shows what your true passions entail as compared to a job you have to get to pay the bills. Once you create your ideal job description, search for that exact job.
This eliminates any positions that you lack the motivation to keep after you earn a job. Search for people on social media websites that have these exact same positions. Get to know them and see what motivated them to earn their jobs. Any insights from people living your dream are helpful to your own search. These contacts could help you get the career of your dreams.
Put Things on Paper
Commit your career goals to paper and see where they lead you. You may find that your previous career path does not fit with your new goals. Recognizing goals focuses your energy on things you really want to accomplish as opposed to thinking you are stuck in an old way of working. You might find you would rather work with people instead of computers. Writing out your goals could lead you to business ownership, freelancing or a professional degree.
No matter where your new career path leads, finding out what makes you tick lets you stay active during a job search. Maintaining varied activities helps keep your mind away from negativity and focused on the prize.
Help Others
Staying active during a job search offers another key to your motivation. Help others by volunteering some time at a local organization. Your volunteer supervisor vouches for your time, energy and effort when a hiring manager comes calling. This supervisory reference creates proof that you maintained your motivation even without a paying job.
Seek Out Others Like You
No one has to go through a job search alone. If you know others in your situation, start and maintain a support group. Maintaining contact with others who do not have jobs takes the sting out of your own circumstances. Simply realizing that others know how you feel creates a pick me up that others notice.
Succeeding in a job search is as much about your attitude towards finding a new position as compared to your qualifications, skills and experience. All of your good references do not matter if your negativity ruins your chances at a great job. Although it is not ideal, keeping your motivation throughout a job search is one key to finding professional happiness.
Image Courtesy of Stuart Miles at FreeDigitalPhotos.net
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