TITLE: Career Search & Job Search is the leading career center in US.

Career Category: Jobs, Career, Resume, Job Search, Career Search, Job Listing, Monster Job, Job Bank

Site Description: Career Search and Job Search offers tips and free resume sample, resume writing, example, cover letter, write resume, resume template format, help, and resume builder. Post resume for free.

Career Topics: Career Builder, Engineering Career, Search, Planning, Links, Test, Information, Change, Education, Job Opportunity, Assessment, Counseling, Career Center, Monster Job, Job Bank, Government Job, California Job, Job Listing Online

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Featured Topics

Going Online: Why Bother?

But Before You Go Online

Stepping Through the Internet Research Process

Frequently Asked Questions About the Online Search Process

Research-Finding Information on Employers, Opportunities, and Options

Job Listings and Recruiting Sites

Networking Through Mailing Lists and Usenet Newsgroups

Posting Your Resume Online

Information Overload: How to Select Only the Right Stuff

Managing Your Time Online

Applying for Positions Advertised on the Internet

Preparing Your Resume for E-Mail

Before Posting Your Resume-Some Things to Consider

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Learning to Swim Before You Surf: How to Find Information on the Internet

There is a method to controlling this madness, and it's not as hard as you

might think. There are actually only two ways to find information online,

and there's only one good way to approach your search:

• Look for information by browsing or searching, or using a combination

of the two.

• Approach your search by moving from general to specific.

Sounds simple, doesn't it? And it is simple! Maybe it's from general sites and

sources to more specific ones, or from general job banks to specific ones targeted

to your location, occupation, or industry, but always think about moving from

general to specific. And as you move along, everything you encounter will let

you browse through things or do a quick search. As the following sections

explain, there are times when browsing is better than searching, and vice versa.

 

BROWSING

When you are unsure of where to start or what to look for, browsing is the way

to go. It's also helpful in cases in which you've already started looking online

but aren't finding what you want. Maybe it's just a matter of "knowing it when

you see it." Browsing is like window shopping or scanning the shelves at the

library or bookstore: you have a basic idea of what you want, but you could use

some suggestions or pointers to move you in the right direction.

Browsing is actually a general "search and scan" process. You use very broad

terms from your keyword list to search Internet libraries or directories for

information and resources on your choice occupations or industries, and then

you scan the resulting list to see what came up. It's like searching the catalog

in your local library: you find a book that looks promising and go to the

correct shelf to pull it, but while there, you look around to see what else might

catch your eye. You don't rely on just the list of links to other sites and

resources; you're more interested in the categories of information produced so

you can scan the shelves and see what you might find. In most cases, you

should start finding information and resources almost immediately, along with

suggestions for more paths to explore. It's highly unlikely that you'll find job

leads immediately, but you can find potential employers, links to industry or

occupational information, or pointers to online resource guides.

Another advantage to browsing is the process of testing your keywords. While

browsing, you are learning which words from your list point you in the right

direction, maybe even giving you better keywords to use. You are also learning

which words don't work as well but might have some promise in certain areas,

and which are taking you in the wrong direction and should be removed from

your list. In any case, it is not a wasted activity.

SEARCHING

Searching comes into play when you have your objectives identified, you've

worked your keyword list and settled on the very best terms defining your

needs and objectives, and you have your resume already prepared. Searching is

like running into the grocery store for a jar of spaghetti sauce with mushrooms

which you know is in aisle three near the front of the store on the bottom

shelf. You run in, grab the sauce, go right to the express checkout with exact

change in hand, and get out again before your favorite song on the radio has

finished playing. Think "tactical search-and-retrieval."

When you are finally ready to search, you are going to use very specific terms

that define your skills, the types of jobs for which you are looking, and the

companies or organizations for which you want to work. You've selected these

words because in previous browse-and-scan sessions, they produced the best

results. This does not mean the largest list of possibilities, but rather the most

specific and best-matched one.

The advantages of searching are speed and accuracy. You can cover more

ground online because you can move faster and with more determination. You

can get in and out of the major job lead banks in 10 minutes or less, you're able

to review loads of information about an employer in preparation for an inter-

view in 20 minutes or less, and you aren't wasting time scanning hundreds of

job leads. Your searches produce a limited number of highly qualified leads and

highly qualified employer lists with very little mismatched "job lead spam."

So, through browsing and searching, you have already begun to move from

general data to specific information. Now you can start expanding this

approach to the online resources needed for your search.

 

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TITLE: Career Search & Job Search is the leading career center in US.

Career Category: Jobs, Career, Resume, Job Search, Career Search, Job Listing, Monster Job, Job Bank

Site Description: Career Search and Job Search offers tips and free resume sample, resume writing, example, cover letter, write resume, resume template format, help, and resume builder. Post resume for free.

Career Topics: Career Builder, Engineering Career, Search, Planning, Links, Test, Information, Change, Education, Job Opportunity, Assessment, Counseling, Career Center, Monster Job, Job Bank, Government Job, California Job, Job Listing Online