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Interviewing
Tips for the Older Job-Seeking Population
Written
by Teena Rose, a certified and published resume writer with Resume
to Referral (http://www.resumebycprw.com)
and author to "Designs & Job-search Strategies for College
Grads" (published by Career Epublications).
Red
Alert
An Over-50 Jobseeker Has Just Entered the Building
A red alert is probably melodramatic, but Im sure jobseekers
in this age bracket probably feel there is one. The bulk of the
job-seeking population is currently facing job-search woes that
the elderly population has been experiencing for years.
In
recent years, Ive seen that over-50 jobseekers have wised
up to the fact that age bias is still existent in Americas
workforce.
Armed with this information, these jobseekers are redesigning their
résumés so that obvious red flags are no longer present.
Employers are finding it more difficult to guesstimate
someones age because these individuals are eliminating older
positions, degree dates, and shaving information from the backend
of their career; information that generally makes a résumé
lengthy and less focused.
With
a targeted and lean résumé, an over-50 jobseeker is
likely to obtain more interviews than with a heavy, all-telling
version.
Other
factors older jobseekers should consider are personal hygiene, attire,
and language skills. A person who takes the time to adequately prepare
a résumé should also take enough time to work on personal
appearance and traits too.
Im certainly not recommending that an individual run out and
get thousands of dollars worth of plastic surgery or spend an insane
amount of money on a new wardrobe. I am, however, recommending that
you take a good look at your appearance. Ask yourself, could a new
hairstyle or an attractive new business suit provide an added edge?
Willingness to change your appearance is solely up to you. Keep
in mind that youll likely be interviewed by someone younger,
so trimming a mustache, wearing a new pair of shoes or shirt, and
using ageless words during the interview, will likely make a substantial
difference.
Interviewers
will ask loaded questions if he or she wants to determine your age.
Watch out for questions, covering age of grandchildren, possible
retirement date, or health status. These questions are considered
illegal; and although theyre not jail-worthy, they will give
him or her the ammunition to make a tainted employment selection.
Contact the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), if you
suspect a company of being age-biased.
Staying
ahead of the technological curve, and representing this in the résumé
and during the interview, will allow you to speak to the interviewer
using acronyms and jargon thats familiar to that person. A
knowledgeable individual, regardless of age, will impress an interviewer
and leave a positive impression.
Keep
a positive mindset and youll appear young and lively. An optimistic
outlook is not always easy, particularly when youve gone on
several interviews that dont result to job offers. Support
and golden age groups provided by county career centers and
sponsored by colleges will provide support, a networking
forum, and employment contacts that will make your job search flow
smoothly.
An
over-50 jobseeker can also benefit from the help of a career coach.
A coach can help identify and resolve employment concerns, as well
as, personal and life issues that may be hindering personal development.
Filling a much-needed gap, career coaching is becoming a crucial
tool for those seeking to career transition and advance even
at the youthful age of 50 or more.
Take
the time to notice red flags in your résumé, concentrate
on your appearance and language skills, and surround yourself with
positive, resourceful professionals. Im a firm believer that
successful people are backed by a team. Its your choice whether
to play the game alone, or arm yourself with skilled players.
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