Job Search Tip of the Week #35 (2017)
Caressa Moy | August 28, 2017 | 9:00 am
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Manage Your Personal Brand to Boost Your IT Job Search & Career
The Complete A to Z Guide to Personal Branding [INFOGRAPHIC]
Googled yourself lately? You can bet your potential employers have.
Technology is changing the way we recruit and hire. HR professionals and hiring managers are increasingly using social media for screening purposes – and many are finding reasons not to hire job candidates.
However, don’t start deleting your digital identity just yet. Social media doesn’t necessarily sabotage your job search; in fact, when used properly it can supplement your (perfectly formatted) résumé and push your application to the top of the pile.
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Job Search Tip of the Week #31 (2017)
Caressa Moy | July 31, 2017 | 9:00 am
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Beyond LinkedIn: 6 Social Media Sites for IT Pros & Developers
Social networks aren’t just for socializing. Those with a professional and technical focus are helpful for connecting you to people in your field, finding ways to enhance your development skills, and putting you in front of potential employers looking for those skills.
If you’ve posted a professional profile to LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, or Google+, you’re off to a good start. But there are six other sites that every IT and technology professional should check out:
- Spiceworks — Created by an IT pro (Spiceworks co-founder & CEO Scott Abel, a former colleague of Steve Jobs) for other IT pros, this site’s goal is to “provide the tools they need to do their jobs every day” via a free network management app as well as a community of 5 million IT professionals.
- Solaborate — This social and collaboration platform for technology professionals provides tools and services to help increase productivity. Join for free to collaborate and network with other tech pros around IT products and services.
- GitHub — This site, free for open-source projects and starting at $9 per month for private repositories, is a code-hosting site with more than 58 million code repositories. You can participate in “the world’s largest open source community” through OS project collaboration and code review and discussion.
- Stack Overflow — This free Q&A site is a compendium for programmers.
- Slashdot — Founded in 1997, this well-known tech site is a great source for tech-related news (particularly Linux and Open Source issues), and a fantastic way to drive traffic to your own website.
- AngelList — This site started in 2010 as an online introduction board for tech startups seeking seed funding. It’s now the place for startups, angel investors, and job seekers to connect, collaborate, and discover opportunities.