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Launch Yourself into HR


A group of business people sitting in a row.


Best-selling author Martin Yate, a career coach and former HR professional, answers common reader questions about how to further your career in HR.

Hi, Martin. Your columns have been very helpful. I earned a dual college degree in HR management and marketing and have been working for two years at an accounting firm. I'm wondering how can I start a career in HR? I joined the local SHRM chapter and attended my first meeting about HR law. I apply for HR jobs, but I've only received rejection letters. Would it be appropriate to contact people who have rejected me to ask for their advice on starting a career in HR?—Anonymous 

Yes, you can ask employers why they rejected you, but remember that for legal purposes, employers have to be very careful about what reasons they give for rejecting a candidate.

I think the reason you haven't been able to land a job yet may have to do with the way you are pursuing a particular job, how you position yourself for that job in your resume and perhaps the way you may have handled yourself in any interviews.

I haven't seen your resume, but most of them are pretty honest recitations of all the things applicants feel are important and are proud of.

For some reason, when people write their resumes, they forget about who they are writing for: their potential employer, not themselves. Instead of determining what the employer wants and customizing the resume to that employer's needs, they start off with what they want and what they think is important—neither of which help in the least.

My advice is simple: Identify the job in HR that you can make the strongest argument for on paper and in person, and the one in which you have the greatest odds of success. Then create a resume that speaks to your abilities as they specifically relate to the employer's stated needs. This will turn your resume into an entirely different and far more productive document and will give you a different way of looking at yourself and what you have to offer.

You are making a strategic career shift, rather than a simple job change. As such, I would focus your job search on companies within the accounting and financial professions because understanding how companies in a target profession speak and act brings a valid plus to your candidacy.

It's critical to understand how your target employers prioritize the needs of the job you are after and to identify how, when and where you have developed and applied these skills. During the interview, make a special effort to tie the benefits of your accounting background to any and all of these requirements. Do this and you can turn job interviews into job offers and successfully complete this strategic career move.

The job you land will probably be a step sideways or even slightly backwards in order to realign your professional life with your professional goals. This scares most people but may be a necessary step before you can start climbing the ladder again.

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