Tips to Get Yourself Noticed With Your Job Application

  • Are you a candidate looking for a job?
  • Have you made all your documents ready just in case?
  • Would you like to have an attractive job application?

If your answer to these questions was affirmative, then worry not as you have reached the right place. Many of us have gone through the worrisome experience of sending off our job applications, only for them to disappear into the never to be found mystic lands again. We get that the little to no response rate to your job application for your best career choice can be frustrating. What’s worse is that you don’t even know what do you lack or the problem is in your job application that it just doesn’t seem to work.
According to statistics presented in a recent study, 75% of resumes are rejected even before they reach the hiring manager. As in they didn’t even meet human eyes and sent off to a virtual trash can. Therefore, it can be a challenge to make your job application noticed and certain ways you can tweak it to move past the ATS that is the applicant tracking system

5 top tips to get your job application noticed

Here are the top five tips that you should follow to make your job application a noticeable one.

Try and get a head start with the resume

After you are done with job searching, a little extra strategy to give you a booster in the application process is to get to know your contacts. The best way to get a head start is to check if you know someone already in the organization you’re applying in. This way, you will have the ease of knowing why your job application got selected or rejected. Chances are if you know someone valuable in the organization prior to getting hired, your hiring process would be faster and deemed a priority based on the acknowledgment.

Add headlines and bullet points

Employers have to go through sometimes hundreds of applications once there is a vacancy available in their organization. So what you can do to speed up their process and, in turn, help them is that add headlines, headings, and bullet points to highlight your qualifications better. It shouldn’t be a full paragraph rather a few phrases and lines bulleted. If your job application would be bold and attractive, chance are it would be eye-catching for employers, and they won’t ignore it under the pile of many.

Be clear and concise with your qualifications

It would be best if you used the correct professional formatting for your resume. Using your most recent qualifications as the first point and then going forward from that. Be aware of prioritizing your skills specific to the job you’re applying for now. It will better help you to be selected as the employer will likely focus on acquiring the talent he needs for the job than all the other additional ones.

Use keywords to beat the bots

If you apply after seeing a job advert online or an advertisement for a job opening in the newspaper, then make sure to read the text thoroughly no matter how short the content of the advert is. Because chances are, you will notice a pattern along the words being used and catch the keywords. Those keyword hen used in your resume will automatically optimize it for better search results and beat the algorithms that may potentially undermine it.

Prioritize your accomplishments

Settling down in a job is an excellent feat, but forgetting your day to day achievements is not the way to go. Therefore, you should keep a record of your daily accomplishments and compile them in your cover letter for promotion by the end of the month.

Conclusion

Get your application noticed and focus on making it the best one among the lot. Apply to a job that fits your skill set, and that may drive your passion. Your success pursuit will follow.

Author: Stella Lincoln

I am Stella Lincoln having a master degree from the University of California, Los Angeles in the subject of marketing. I love to spread the knowledge and wisdom. My focus is to enhance my skills and reduce the gap. You can check my write-ups at my blog; Educator House. Nowadays, I am working in HarperCollins Publishers as a Writing Consultant.