Getting hired even when you’re not qualified is one of the most important skills to have if you want to keep your work life interesting. Because if you are always taking jobs you’re qualified for, then your learning curve is really flat, and your work life is really boring.
So here are three ways to get hired when you’re not qualified for the job.
1. Create a project from a different arena that interests you.
One reason my resume is so varied is that I have always done two things at once so that I can switch up as soon as my learning curve flattens. For example, when I was playing professional beach volleyball, I was also writing stories every day. So I was ready to go to grad school as soon as I got tired of volleyball.
In grad school, I didn’t have to write–the writing was done. This was when the Internet was emerging as a mainstream tool, and I realized that my writing was perfect for the Internet. So I took all my printed out pages to the computer science lab and asked one of the professors to teach me HTML.
I wrote my master’s thesis in HTML. I might have been the first English graduate student in the whole country to do that. It got me a job managing the web site for a Fortune 100 company, even though I had almost no marketing or technical experience.
2. Take responsibility for your own education.
In my new job, I spent the next six months reading whatever I could about the Internet. I read about advertising and copywriting, I read about programming, I read about everything. I had no idea where I would fit in the Internet industry, but I knew I had to learn about it to succeed in my new job as Internet maven.
I also talked with a wide range of people in my job, so I could learn from them. My next job was being the interface between the IT department and the marketing department. They were not communicating well. How did I know how to communicate with IT people? I have no idea, except that I had read so indiscriminately that I actually sounded knowledgeable about IT issues, especially for someone who went to graduate school for English literature.
3. Just apply.
I have not always had jobs I loved. I was at an advertising agency, and I was really, really not suited for the work. So I was unhappy and desperate to get out, and I started sending my resume out in sort-of indiscriminate ways.
This is a bad job-hunt tactic, and I don’t recommend it, but one of the side benefits was that I sent my resume to jobs where I did not meet the requirements. For example, the job I got had a description that included “MBA required.”
How did that happen? Most of the time the manager or HR person writing the job descriptions has little idea what they really want or need. So write a good cover letter about why you’re a good fit, and ignore the part about qualifications you don’t have. Talk about your track record for delivering what they want.
If you can do that, then you can apply. And doing that makes you are a better candidate, better than they know they need.
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Penelope
This article is actually very beneficial. I admire the effort you used up posting this document. I would like to become a nurse, do you have any strategy where I could get details about nurse incomes, career points and what is the basis. Any thought where I could get this data?
Posted by RN Description on May 30, 2011 at 10:29 am | permalink |
One number one problem is fear of not being good enough and being intimidated. I’m working on it.
Posted by My-Tien on July 26, 2011 at 9:19 pm | permalink |
Penelope, you are working for yourself. Congratulations!
If you can no longer afford to work on commission or by contract, how are you going to get a job with a corporation or non-profit? Let’s assume you are 48 years of age, single, and raising a child completely solo. There is no assistance what so ever.
Let’s assume your background says: Risk taker (entrepreneur), highly educated, hold multiple professional licenses, make decisions easily, and rarely under scrutiny of a supervisor (entrepreneur responsibilities).
This is typically where the resume and skills get #86. Age discrimination for a woman is fact after 38. If a company doesn’t respond, then they cannot be sued; if they hire than the corporate insurance costs rise due to age.
There are factors in your message that do not apply to the experience and independent professional. These factors can be assumed by Human Resources, and threatening. Additionally, HR knows you know your worth.
Thus, let us talk about realistic situations and not quaint maneuvers.
Posted by Anonymous on November 15, 2011 at 6:02 am | permalink |
Such a good advice…I realy needed it right now…send me links to your other blog through my email.thanks.
And check out my website.It also has a lot of knowledge wealth which we can share.
Thanks
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Posted by Liquid Sildenafil Citrate Dosage on December 19, 2012 at 6:00 pm | permalink |
After reading this article I got me a job that I am completly unqualified for. I lack the basic tools and skill set to accomplish my job adequetly and still maintain my postion.
Thanks Penelope
Posted by Eric French on March 19, 2013 at 10:14 am | permalink |
Nice blog here! Also your website loads up very fast!
What web host are you using? Can I get your affiliate link to your host?
I wish my website loaded up as quickly as yours
lol
Posted by Pure Leverage Blog on April 18, 2013 at 9:21 pm | permalink |