🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Thorough preparation—finding suitable job openings, inventorying your own skills, and researching both the employer and the specific job—saves time in drafting and helps you tailor your application materials effectively.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Save the job posting: companies often delete postings once they have enough applicants, so print or save your own copy to use when tailoring your materials.
- Self-inventory overcomes writer's block: brainstorming your skills, accomplishments, and action verbs before drafting helps you avoid feeling you have "nothing to include" or that you are "bragging."
- Research the employer's values and tone: understanding the company's mission, brand, and audience lets you adapt your tone, examples, and level of technicality.
- The job description is your secret weapon: it tells you exactly what the employer wants, so annotate it to identify qualifications you hold, key terms to echo, and gaps to address.
- Common confusion: don't treat preparation as optional—adequate prep time directly reduces headaches during drafting and increases the relevance of your materials.
🔍 Finding a suitable job opening
🔍 Where to search
The excerpt lists multiple resources for job seekers:
- Job boards: sites like Indeed, CareerBuilder, Glassdoor, and Monster for broad searches.
- Specialty job lists: industry-specific sites (e.g., Poached for food service, Idealist for nonprofits, MediaBistro for media).
- Company and government websites: visit the employment section of organizations you admire, or search federal, state, county, and city sites for government postings.
- Your own network: talk to friends, past employers, professors, or use LinkedIn to find openings at companies in your network.
- Your college: visit the placement office or career center and attend job fairs.
The excerpt notes that craigslist postings often lack detail and may come from headhunters rather than direct employers.
💾 Save your own copy
Because companies often delete the job posting once they have received sufficient applicants, it is important that you save your own copy of the document by copying the text and pasting it into a new document, or by saving the webpage.
- You will use this document to tailor your application materials.
- Example: an organization removes the posting after receiving 100 applications; if you didn't save it, you lose the details you need for your cover letter.
🧠 Conducting a self-inventory
🧠 Why do a self-inventory
The excerpt identifies two common hurdles:
- Worrying that you have "nothing valuable to include."
- Worrying that you are "bragging."
Allocating pre-writing time to a self-inventory helps you get over these hurdles by brainstorming your skills, accomplishments, and knowledge before you try to format them.
📝 What to brainstorm
Ask yourself:
- What did you accomplish at work, school, or a volunteer position?
- What skills have you learned?
- What would you tell a friend or family member you were proud of having achieved?
Start writing down key terms and action verbs that describe your experiences and accomplishments; don't worry yet about putting them into résumé format.
🎯 Using action-verb lists
The excerpt recommends browsing a key-term list organized by skill categories (Communication Skills, Creative Skills, Management/Leadership Skills, Helping Skills, Organizational Skills, Financial Skills, etc.).
Process:
- Scan the groupings for key terms related to skills you have or work you have done.
- Write down (1) categories of skills you have and (2) action verbs that describe your skills or work (e.g., analyzed, performed, calculated, advocated).
Example table from the excerpt:
| Communication/People Skills | Creative Skills | Management/Leadership Skills | Helping Skills | Organizational Skills |
|---|
| Collaborated | Combined | Assigned | Aided | Arranged |
| Communicated | Created | Coordinated | Arranged | Categorized |
| Developed | Developed | Decided | Assisted | Distributed |
| Edited | Drew | Improved | Contributed | Organized |
| Incorporated | Illustrated | Led | Cooperated | Recorded |
| Proposed | Planned | Managed | Encouraged | Responded |
| Suggested | Revised | Oversaw | Helped | Updated |
| Synthesized | Shaped | Recommended | Motivated | Tracked |
| Translated | Crafted | Reviewed | Supported | Monitored |
| Facilitated | Conceived | Supervised | Prepared | Synthesized |
| Mediated | Established | Delegated | Bolstered | Adapted |
✅ Verify your information
As you gather information, double-check that it is accurate and current:
- Dates of employment.
- Dates of trainings.
- Lists of activities you have been involved in.
- Academic awards, achievements, and special projects.
Job descriptions or performance reviews from previous jobs can also include key terms to include on your résumé. Ask former coworkers or managers about your significant workplace contributions.
🤝 Partner exercise
The excerpt suggests a ten-minute partner exercise:
- Speaker: describes past work history and experience, especially as it relates to the job at hand.
- Scribe: takes notes, noting key terms, asking detail questions (who, what, when, where, why), and helping identify skills or achievements the speaker may not realize they have (because they assume "everyone can do" them).
- Then switch roles.
🏢 Researching your potential employer
🏢 Why research the employer
It is important to research both the potential employer and the job for which you're applying. Understanding the company helps you adapt your tone, examples, and level of technicality to your audience.
🌐 Where to research
- Company website: look for an "about us" page or "mission statement"; observe how the company describes its goals and values.
- LinkedIn and social media: search for the company's name.
- News articles and press releases: browse for articles about the company or press releases written by the company.
- Your network: speak with friends or colleagues who work for the company.
- Informational interview: call the company to request one.
❓ Questions to answer
Try to answer the following about the company or organization:
- Whom does this company serve?
- Who are this company's partners or competitors?
- What technologies would I use at this company?
- What is the tone of this company's materials (formal, conservative, humorous, "cutting edge," etc.)?
- How would you describe this company's brand?
🔗 Connect with the company
As you research, look for ways to connect:
- What do you admire about the company?
- Where do your values and interests overlap with those of the company?
- What makes this company a good fit for you?
Try to summarize your connection to the company in one sentence. Remember that your potential employer is also your audience.
📋 Researching the potential job
📋 The job description is your secret weapon
The job description is your secret weapon; in this document, you are told what the employer is looking for in a candidate.
Print out the job description and annotate it; get into a conversation with it.
✏️ How to annotate the job description
- Highlight or underline any qualifications that you hold—any skills you have, technologies you've used, etc.
- Make note of any past achievements that relate to any of the preferred qualifications. Example: if the job description seeks a candidate who can diagnose and solve technical problems, write down a specific time in which you did so in a professional or academic setting.
- Circle any key terms you might use in your own materials. Using the same terms as a potential employer demonstrates that you are able to "speak their language."
- Note any questions/uncertainties and any qualifications you do not have, in order to decide what to highlight and what to downplay in your materials (as well as what you need to learn more about).
☁️ Word cloud technique
The excerpt recommends making a word cloud of your job description using a site like www.wordle.net (you cut and paste the text of the job description into a word cloud generator).
A word cloud presents text as a visual display, reorganizing content so that the largest words are those that appear most frequently.
Why it helps:
- A word cloud is a helpful visual tool to identify key terms to use in your résumé and cover letter.
- You might be surprised to find that a "big word" (a commonly repeated key term) is one that you would not automatically associate with the job.
Example: in a children's museum job description word cloud, obvious terms like "museum," "children," "exhibits," and "playing" appear large—but so do "diversity" and "diverse." If you were applying for this job, you would now know to talk about your commitment to diversity or experience working with people from diverse backgrounds.
Don't confuse: the largest words are not necessarily the most obvious job-title words; they reveal what the employer emphasizes most frequently in the posting.