Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Resume amp; Career Advice Do Pain Letters Work
Resume amp; Career Advice Do Pain Letters Work Q: I wanted to know what your take is on âpain letters.â I have been reading up on career advice, and I ran across an article that recommended junking cover letters and resumes for âpain letters.â Should I try it? A: Iâd advise against them. When Iâve received them, theyâre generally cringingly off-base and sound like they were written by someone who will be all flash and no substance. For people who donât know what a pain letter is, itâs a concept being pushed by at least one career writer â" who happens to be selling a whole job search system based on it â" where the idea is to send a letter through the postal mail to a hiring manager, outlining a problem you think the employer is experiencing (the âpainâ) and how you can solve it. In other words, itâs a cover letter but with lots of added salesiness and a serious dose of presumption. Read More: Why do companies wait so long to contact candidates for interviews? I say that because it requires you to guess at what the hiring managerâs problems are, which can be hard to do from the outside and carries a high risk of coming across as insulting or uninformed or both. It is true that you should frame your application in terms of what the hiring manager needs, but you donât need to go guessing at what problems she may or may not have. The main problem she has that you need to speak to is âI need someone to perform this job well, and preferably excel at it.â Itâs really not more complicated than that. As for the whole postal mail thing, it will at best annoy most hiring managers (who now have to figure out how to get your materials into the electronic application system that you decided not to use, canât easily forward your stuff to anyone else, etc.) and make them wonder if youâre a technophobe whoâs out of touch with how this stuff works and/or someone who cares not for instructions, and at worst may actually get your materials tossed. The thing that this âpain letterâ advice and so much like it ignores is this: Applying for a job doesnât require gimmicks to stand out and be noticed. The way you stand out is by having a resume that shows a strong track record of getting results in the areas that theyâre hiring for, writing a compelling cover letter that explains why youâd excel at the role as theyâve laid it out, and being friendly, responsive, and enthusiastic. Thatâs not anything you can sell as a system and itâs not especially exciting ⦠but it works consistently. Read More: Should I go around HR and apply with the hiring manager directly? Q: Can my employer revoke my bonus after a direct deposit into my bank account? Can my employer revoke my bonuses after theyâre deposited into my account if I put in my notice soon after?This will really help me figure out notice timing! A: They shouldnât â" once earned, that money is yours â" but it is possible for an employer to revoke a direct deposit (within a limited period of time â" I believe itâs five days, but youâd want to verify that with your bank) and take that money back. Generally they can only do this to correct mistakes (such as if they accidentally overpaid you); they couldnât do it to, say, recover money for property of theirs that you took on your way out the door. But theoretically, an unscrupulous company could say that the bonus was a mistaken payment, and then youâd have a mess on your hands. If you want to be really safe, wait until a couple of weeks have gone by, or transfer most of the money in that account to an account at a different bank. Read More: Does âweâll keep your resume on fileâ really mean anything? These questions are adapted from ones that originally appeared on Ask a Manager. Some have been edited for length.
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