CareerSuccess #JobSearchTips #DreamJob
🎉🌟 I DID IT 🌟🎉
Hey everyone! I just wanted to share some exciting news – I quit my toxic job two weeks ago and today I received an offer for a better paying position at a great company with lots of growth potential. Here’s how I made it happen and how you can too:
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Research is Key: I studied the new company inside and out, which really impressed the interviewers. Make sure you know the ins and outs of the company you’re applying to.
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Create an "I Love Me" Binder: Document all your qualifications, projects, and experiences in one place. Bring it to interviews to showcase your skills and achievements – it really makes a difference!
- Dream Career Upgrade: I’m beyond thrilled about this opportunity. The new company is innovative, has great benefits, good hours, and amazing people.
So if you’re feeling stuck in a job you hate, remember that there’s always a possibility for positive change. Work hard, stay prepared, and keep your eyes open for new opportunities. You never know what might come your way! 🌟🚀
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
congratulations!!
What is your job?
Same here. Did all the background legwork. Read the entire website, online reviews, and anything else I could find. Checked out their top competitors online and even ran analytics on their content via Ubbersuggest.
I re-read through the job post (I saved a copy of it to my desktop) before the interview and prepped 10 interview questions that spanned everything from how the team for the role works together, cross-functional collaboration with other teams, workload, and more.
I didn’t bother asking the obvious: perks, benefits, pay, etc. I reserved those questions for after I received the offer.
I stopped asking about pay and benefits because after 18 months of interviews for different roles, I found most interviewers don’t have that information anyway. (Or they won’t say). When I did ask, I often didn’t make it to the next panel interview. So I stopped and reserved those questions for the deciding moment.
Most job posts already cover the benefits, and you can do a salary search via Glassdoor to get an idea of the range of negotiating (higher end if you’re in a metropolitan city, lower end if you’re in a small town or more rural, somewhere in the middle if you’renot in a large city but have a ton of experience).
Congratulations!!! Lovely to see some success on this sub as well ❤️
Congrats 🎉🎉🎉