further random questions from the newly-unemployed
Warren E. Agin
wea at swiggartagin.com
Mon Nov 18 08:57:36 EST 2002
A little off the topic, but several years ago I prepared a powerpoint
presentation called "Job Hunting and Your Finances." It goes through some of
the things to think about after a layoff. I've attached a copy.
Strangly enough, I prepared this for a presentation to a BCS networking
group, but BCS shut down days before I was supposed to give the talk.
-Warren Agin
----- Original Message -----
From: "Robert L Krawitz" <rlk at alum.mit.edu>
To: <bill at horne.net>
Cc: <discuss at blu.org>
Sent: Sunday, November 17, 2002 5:37 PM
Subject: Re: further random questions from the newly-unemployed
> From: "Bill Horne" <bill at horne.net>
> Date: Sun, 17 Nov 2002 17:21:07 -0500
>
> Well, I'll jump back in, briefly.
>
> 1. Ordered lists
> A. It's a PITA to do ordered and/or bulleted lists in text. In
> the first place, the placement of tabs must be calculated
> so as to ensure that none of the lines autowraps into the
> gutter.
> B. You don't know what the recipient's tab stops are set to, nor
> their line wrap.
> C. Getting your cover letter to stand out shouldn't involve
> doing ASCII art.
>
> It's easy, then: limit your lines to 72 characters, and use spaces
> rather than tabs. I usually do bullets this:
>
> * Here's a top level bullet.
>
> Here's the explanatory text. As you can see, I've indented this all
> of two spaces, and auto fill mode in emacs limits my lines to 72
> characters.
>
> + I personally like to do sub-bullets like this. The indentation
> stays light, but it's still easy to see the organization.
>
> While a proportional font will *slightly* mess this up, it's going to
> be very minor. If you have that many bullets that this is going to
> look clunky, then you simply have too many bullets for a cover
> letter. IMHO the cover letter should consist of paragraphs rather
> than bullets, anyway.
>
> 2. Readability
> A. Many of the respondents feel that hiring managers use
> non-HTML-capable email programs, and I don't think
> that's a productive assumption.
>
> I'm speaking as a hiring manager myself. While I won't say that all
> hiring managers do this, some do. But even that's neither here nor
> there because...
>
> 1. The cover letter almost always goes to HR before
> the hiring manager, and HR doesn't know that
> "plain text" exists.
>
> Our HR organization explicitly prefers that resumes be entered into
> our job site in text (in fact, we only permit on-line submission as
> ASCII text). Our resume system is set up for plain text.
>
> B. HTML rendering engines do make allowances for paragraph
> leading, margin matching, and justification that
> just can't be done in plain text. I want my cover
> letter to stand out, but not be so unusual as to be
> offputting.
>
> I don't think I've yet seen a cover letter that really "stands out" in
> a positive way. If it's going to, it's going to stand out by being
> concise yet compelling. Neatly formatted ASCII isn't going to make a
> difference; demonstrating to me why you're special does.
>
> C. Readability is in the eye of the beholder. If someone has
> been clicking through dozens of HTML-formatted emails,
> and then comes upon mine in plain-text, it will look
> drab by comparison.
>
> Of course, if you hit that hiring manager that uses a console-based
> mail reader, your HTML-formatted email *is* going to stand out --
> badly. At least use both text and HTML. Likewise for the resume; if
> you must send it in Word format, also send it in text format. PDF may
> be a better choice than Word, anyway.
>
> 3. Compatibility
> A. Like it or don't, M$ products are the corporate standard -
> why else would we submit a r)Bésumé in MS Word format? -
>
> WHICH Word format?
>
> B. Whatever one might be used to in the Unix world, one must
> get past the HR process to be able to use it. Ergo, HTML.
>
> See above regarding HR policies.
> _______________________________________________
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>
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