Re: Temporary/Contract work

Subject: Re: Temporary/Contract work
From: Kate Stout <stout -dot- k -at- comcast -dot- net>
To: "TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com>
Date: Thu, 09 Dec 2004 08:47:08 -0500


Here's another way to think about how to present yourself. I've recently gone down the employee to contractor route myself, and here's some of things I've found helpful along the way.

Present skills and buzzword high up in your resume.

For example, it's probably obvious to you that as an experienced tech writer you can interview technical people, create complex documents, edit, design document templates, etc. etc. etc. If I had to guess, I bet you don't call those out in your resume. If you're like I was, you probably still have the chronological format that focuses on the company and jobs you had, rather than a list of skills right up front.

Here's the thing - as a contractor, people are hiring a solution. They want reassurance that you can come in and get going. You're the expert, the gun-for-hire. So your resume should reflect that.

Once I switched my resume around so that I have my skills up front, followed by technology/TLA, then finally some chronology, I started getting a lot more responses.

Scary statistic - First review of resumes is usually not by the team you'll be joining, and each resume is looked at for less than 20 seconds. So get everything that you are trying to market in the upper half of the first page.

Welcome to marketing!
The other two factors are, as people have said, expand your search outside of the Valley and network with others.

I'm in Massachusetts, which is about as bad as the Valley, but I just finished 3 months of work for Sun Microsystems in Menlo Park. Visited the site once to meet people, and did the rest by phone and Internet.

If all of the people you knew have moved on, where have they moved on to? Do they know anyone who needs a writer? There's various networking services out there for you to find people from your past. I'm currently using LinkedIn (www.linkedin.com), and find it helpful.

Good luck

Kate Stout

Kate Stout Consulting
Making it Clear
http://www.katestout.com





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