[wplug-jobs] Tips on conducting a stealth job search

Pat Barron pat at lectroid.com
Fri Jan 9 14:58:08 EST 2015


Be active in the community.  Participate on mailing lists.  Go to 
meetups.  Be ready to help people if you can, if they need help in an 
area that you have expertise in.  In general, make sure people know who 
you are, what you do, where your skills are, and what you're interested in.

It's all about building relationships, it is non-trivial work, and 
requires some investment of time and effort - but it's well worth it.  ;-)

--Pat.

On 1/9/2015 2:47 PM, Zachary Uram wrote:
> Pat that is very interesting. How exactly does one acquire these 
> personal contacts?
>
> Zach
>
> On Fri, Jan 9, 2015 at 12:32 PM, Pat Barron <pat at lectroid.com 
> <mailto:pat at lectroid.com>> wrote:
>
>     The best way I've found to handle this is by personal networking -
>     contacting people you think might have connections in the specific
>     area you want to work in, and making discreet inquiries.  Just be
>     sure to make it clear that you don't want the candidate's identity
>     made widely known.  This is a common kind of situation, and people
>     understand it.
>
>     It's crucial to build connections for this type of search in
>     advance, before such a need arises - that way, you already have
>     people to talk to when the need presents itself, and you don't
>     need to scramble around searching in a situation where time may be
>     a factor.  If you don't already have the appropriate connections
>     before you even start the search, it may already be too late.
>
>     My own experience is that most of the best jobs are found in
>     exactly this way - by personal networking.  The usefulness of
>     searching via things like job postings is often limited.
>     Frequently, either a job posting (particularly one that's been
>     posted for a long time) is looking for the mythical "pink
>     squirrel" that they're probably never going to find (and the
>     current wisdom seems to be that it's better to leave a job
>     unfilled until you find the absolutely "perfect candidate", rather
>     than hiring someone who's smart and could pick up the necessary
>     skills quickly, but doesn't have the exact "pink squirrel" laundry
>     list that's being sought), or else by the time a posting goes up
>     the employer already knows exactly who they're going to hire and
>     there's only a job posting in the first place because the employer
>     has company policy or legal requirements to post the job, but they
>     don't intend to hire (or even interview) anyone who "applies" for
>     it, because it's effectively already filled....
>
>     --Pat.
>
>     On 1/7/2015 1:25 PM, John Lewis wrote:
>
>         Do you have any tips on conducting a successful stealth job
>         search?
>
>         One of the WPLUG board members may want to work closer to a
>         certain
>         hacker space.
>         _______________________________________________
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>
>
>
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>     http://www.wplug.org/mailman/listinfo/wplug-jobs
>
>
>
>
> -- 
> http://www.fidei.org
>
>
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