Tuesday, November 12, 2019
How to Choose Your Job References
How to Choose Your Job References How to Choose Your Job References How do you pick the directors, coworkers and direct reports to be your job references?A job reference must be more than just someone willing to shower you with praise. Recruiters and hiring managers are looking for someone who can speak to your performance and impact on the team; someone who was in a position to rely on your performance and offer a glimpse of how you will perform in the future.The most effective references are from someone with whom youâve worked: a former director, co-worker or somebody youâve supervised, said Mary Schumacher, a certified professional resume writer who works with Ladders. Others to consider include vendors, customers or those with whom youâve worked at a volunteer organization. Make sure only to include references who understand why you left the company and who will say good things about you, your leadership, and your performance, she said.Before including a reference on a referral list, ask the person in advance to be a verbal reference (as o pposed to writing a reference letter), Schumacher said. Bear in mind that âsome companies or organizations have policies against saying a lot about a former employee except for dates of employment, salary, etc.,â she said.Another hurdle is identifying references who no longer work at the company where they supervised you or worked at companies that no longer exist. In such a case, itâs âdifficult to track down a former boss or co-worker, especially as people move around,â Schumacher said. She suggests obtaining a written letter of recommendation from the company and a former boss when you leave and keeping it on hand for the future. âThe letters donât carry as much credibility as a telephone conversation, but itâs better than nothing if you canât find a person.âIf a prospective employer requests your references, make sure to give them a heads-up that someone might call and coach them on items to highlight from your past work, Schumacher said. Just as important: M ake sure to thank them for their efforts on your behalf.Director, friend and direct reportDan Dorotik, also a certified professional resume writer who works with Ladders resume-writing service, formats his clientsâ reference summaries into two columns. In the left column, he lists the email addresses, work phone numbers and titles in âReference Information.â In a right-hand column, he then gives one- to two-sentence descriptions of the relationship between the job seeker and the reference, including the information the reference can verify about the job seeker.Alternatively, Dorotik lists a testimonial from the reference in the right column, which he said can be an excerpt from a letter of recommendation, an e-mail or another source.âThis presentation of references is much more effective, as it provides further insight into the candidate-reference relationship,â he said. âMany job seekers do not use this type of reference summary, so those who do position themselves abov e the competition.â
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