Tips for Employed Job Seekers
John
Rossheim, Monster Senior Contributing Writer
When searching for a new job, dealing with prospective employers
is stressful enough: the numerous rejections before you get to yes, grueling
interviews, tense salary negotiations and more. But add the almost universal
need to conceal your job search -- especially the interviews -- from your present
employer, and the result distracts many job seekers from preparing for interviews and even conducting them properly.
We asked several experts how to
mitigate the troubles of the professional who must protect his current job
while interviewing for a new one. The toughest challenges fall into three
categories: scheduling interviews into and around the workday, dressing to impress without setting off alarms at work and
finding excuses for those mysterious "appointments."
Scheduling
Interviews
The best strategy for
scheduling job interviews is to set expectations with your prospects about the
limits work places on your availability while remaining as flexible as
possible. "Tell the recruiter or prospective employer early on about your
hours of availability for phone calls," advises Lindsay Olson, a partner
and recruiter with Paradigm Staffing in New York City.
Many initial screening
interviews are conducted by phone. Tight schedules notwithstanding, it's
critical to your present employment security to avoid doing phone interviews while the boss might be listening from
the other side of the partition.
"Schedule your calls;
don't try to do them on the fly," says Karen Loebbaka, director of
recruiting for venture capital firm Bay Partners in Cupertino, California.
Even communicating with the
prospective employer to arrange the interview can be problematic. "You've
got to be creative -- maybe take your lunch hour from 1 to 2," when more
managers at the prospective employer are likely to be back at their desks to
take your call, says Melanie Szlucha, a job interview coach in Norwalk,
Connecticut.
Some impatient employers and
recruiters may not be satisfied with the once-a-day email habit of job seekers
who wisely want to avoid their work computers. "Get Web service for your
cellphone, or get a BlackBerry," recommends Olson. "Ten dollars a
month for Web access is a small price to pay."
Pulling
a Clark Kent
You know the drill: You work in
a khakis or jeans office, but you've got to wear a suit to a lunch interview.
If you need to pull a Clark Kent, plan what will serve as your phone booth in
advance.
"I've changed my clothes
in my car in a deserted parking lot," says Szlucha. "You can also use
hotel or library restrooms." But the restroom of the coffee shop nearest
the office is a bad place to dress up incognito.
Another tactic is to create a
diversion with decoy dress-up days. "Start wearing dress clothes to work
one or two days a week," says Szlucha. You may receive suspicious glances
and knowing remarks at first, but the reaction likely will fade over time.
You can reduce the risk of
raising suspicions by not dressing up more than necessary for a particular interview.
"Call the receptionist or someone in HR and ask what's the dress
code," advises Szlucha. "For your interview, go one level up from
there."
Making
Excuses
Now to face your biggest
cold-sweat moment this side of the interview: communicating your workday
absence to the boss.
Some observers advise
unforthcoming honesty. "You need to maintain a very straightforward
approach," says Brenda Greene, author of You've Got the Interview: Now What? "If anyone questions you, say you
have an appointment. The less explaining you do, the less you'll have to cover
up."
But if your employer corners
you to ask about your "appointment," deception can be justified, some
believe. "One should tell the truth when at all possible," says
Michael Hoffman, director of the Center for Business Ethics at Bentley College.
"But it depends on the situation and environment you're working in. If you
see no alternative, you may be forced to tell less than the whole truth."
Sometimes telling the truth
would cause a greater harm, says Hoffman. "So it might be that saying you
have a doctor's appointment is ethically permissible," he says.
The bottom line, Olson says:
"Once you get to the point in your career where you need to make a change,
there's nothing you can do about the need to lead a double life."
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