|
TEXT 6.1. SO MUCH TO DO, SO LITTLE TIMEDate: 2015-10-07; view: 373. SUMMER JOBS For more information, look in the BUSINESS JOBS box on the RED SHELVES in the CDC. SENIORS - Don't plan a limited job-search strategy. On-campus recruiting, although a popular resource, is not the only road to a job. It is only used by a small sector of employers. The vast number of jobs can be found beyond this one resource. Choose a multi-faceted approach, utilizing as many resources as possible: networking among peers, alumni, and faculty; help-wanted ads, cold calls; on-campus recruitment; and using the career development center for other ideas. It's not too early to begin to look for summer jobs. For recent summer job notices check KCINFO. At the $ prompt type KCINFO. From the first menu select College Student Information, then select Career Development Center/Summer Job Information/New Summer Job Notices. v Read an article about the ways of improving your resume:
The old proverb "all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy" has never been truer than in the 21st century when executives are expected to excel outside the boardroom as well as in it. Thus, enthusiastic and multi-tasking MBA students around the world are devoting themselves to impressive charitable undertakings and serious sporting endeavours, which may help them stand out from the pack when it comes to nailing that dream job. According to Dr Peter McInnes, the director of teaching and learning at the University of Strathclyde's Business School, the work-hard-play-hard ethic which has become such a cliché in the city still rings as true now as it did on 1980s Wall Street. And it is, says McInnes, a good principle for students to follow before they actually reach the workplace, as it helps employers to find the best applicants among the mountains of CVs they get from MBAs each year. "Employers are looking for leadership skills," says McInnes, "and those who are capable of initiating ideas and coordinating others to deliver on extracurricular events are clearly demonstrating this. As a year-long MBA will be time-pressured, delivering on play-hard activities shows the ability to handle extra projects on top of a full workload. This signals that the individual has a strong work ethic, good interpersonal skills and can deliver on their own initiative. What else could you want?" Earlier this year, 13 students from Cranfield School of Management decided to turn marathon running, a decidedly solitary sport, into a team event by running the 2007 London marathon in a sausage dog costume nick-named Posy, which they took turns to wear, crossing the finish line in just under five and a half hours. The runners raised ₤36,000 for charity, a record-breaking figure for Cranfield, and handed over ₤25,000 to the main charity, HearingDogs for Deaf People. Ashridge Business School in Hertfordshire also took a team approach when it entered last year's International Business Schools Regatta on the Solent, finishing second overall out of 17 groups of competitors. Ashridge believes the success shows that the skills it teaches its students - such as the value of looking at problems and challenges in a holistic and systemic fashion - are equally useful when transported out of the office and onto 37ft yachts battered by force nine gales and relentless rain. Last month another sailing regatta, organised by SDA Bocconi, welcomed 21 international teams to Italy. One Ashridge MBA took a slightly lighter approach to his extracurricular achievements by brewing a speciality ale for the occasion of his class's graduation ceremony in May. Johan Spendrups is part of a Swedish brewing dynasty and created MBAle as a reflection of his time in the UK studying at Ashridge. Sprendrups wrote his dissertation on small breweries in the UK and will return home to Sweden to pursue new business opportunities for the family firm. "Who knows," he says, "maybe Ashridge MBAle is the first step in this new career journey." At Paris's ESSEC Business School one student, Thomas Ellis, managed to make a documentary in Asia and a film in Palestine, which was selected for the International Film Festival in Locarno in Switzerland. He is currently in India finishing a film for the France 2 channel. Fellow student Laurence Fischer let off steam after a tough day in the library by karate training - as world champion she needed to keep in shape - and she is channelling her sporting prowess into a career at Nike. Chris Crockford managed to earn his pilot's licence while studying at Lancaster University Management School. These gung ho activities do show you are capable of more than just passing exams, and they should make you a happier and healthier MBA, but Esther Oxenbury, JP Morgan's head of investment banking graduate recruitment, points out that impressive extracurricular activities won't cover up any weak academic spots. "My view," says Oxenbury, "is that extracurricular activities are never going to be why you hire a candidate. What they can do is help differentiate an outstanding candidate from a good candidate. They are incredibly valuable to have on a CV, but I would offer one word of caution - avoid putting things on a CV unless it is a meaningful involvement." v Read about the experiences of young job hunters in Britain (from the book “Understanding Britain” by Karen Hewitt):
|