IT Managers' Higher-Level Job-Search Needs Are Addressed in New Book
WESTPORT, Conn., March 4 -- IT managers seeking an edge in today's job market will find it in Debugging Your Information Technology® Job Search: A Compass to Winning the Management Position You Really Want (Elegant Fix Press). Janice Weinberg wrote it after concluding that the advice found in books written for general audiences inadequately addressed computer professionals' needs, and that books written for IT readers were primarily geared toward non-managerial personnel.
Weinberg is uniquely qualified to advise IT managers on job-search strategies:
-- IBM and GE computer background: systems programming, strategic
planning, marketing, sales management
-- Former adjunct faculty member of GE's Management Development Institute
-- Founder of Career Solutions, which serves an international clientele
Readers seeking information technology management jobs, including director, CIO and CTO positions, will learn how to craft resumes consistent with their level. Specifically:
-- Why including a technical skills section listing platforms, processes
and software can undermine a manager's ability to generate interviews
-- Why mentioning certain responsibilities and strengths can downgrade
your image - and how to know which ones to omit
-- 20 IT-specific questions to mine your experience for accomplishments
-- Guidance in transforming bland project statements - e.g., "Developed a
CRM application," "Consolidated three data centers," "Reorganized the
IT department for greater productivity" - into compelling
accomplishments that convey a higher-level image
-- Samples of IT manager resumes and cover letters
-- Tips for IT professionals targeting their first managerial position
Job-hunters disappointed with their results from using IT job boards, IT recruiters and networking will learn:
-- How to easily identify employers meeting their geographic, industry,
size, and other criteria
-- How they can significantly expand their employment opportunities if
they possess a particular non-technical capability
-- Novel ways to find unadvertised jobs
-- How to identify companies more likely to have openings during a
recession
-- How to capitalize on the fact that many new hires don't stay in their
jobs very long
-- How to use the telephone to negotiate an interview, with a script
demonstrating how an IT manager should deal with an executive's
objections
Readers will learn novel ideas and practical suggestions for promoting themselves as they participate in each employer's IT recruitment process, including:
-- Vital information to obtain when you receive an interview invitation -
and how to use it
-- Important documents to bring to an IT management interview
-- The one document that anyone seeking an IT marketing or product
development job must bring to an interview
-- Why the mini-biographical response most people give to "Tell me about
yourself" is a wasted opportunity
-- Four alternative responses to "What compensation are you seeking?" and
how to determine which to use
-- A strategy for giving an original, impressive response to virtually
any interview question - instead of the canned answers most people
give
-- How to skillfully deal with not having an educational credential that
competing candidates possess
-- How job-hunters unintentionally make interviewers feel uncomfortable,
including a common mistake at the end of an interview
-- Samples of the kinds of thank-you letters that can elevate an IT
management candidate to the top of the slate
-- Why many candidates fail to convert the second interview into an offer
-- How to determine whether a reason for rejection is valid
-- A strategy that can get you an offer after you've been rejected
Weinberg's previous book, Debugging Your Information Technology® Career, features 20 fields that allow computer professionals seeking a change from traditional IT career paths to leverage - rather than waste - the investment in their education and experience.
CONTACT:
Larry Brauner
mediarelations@braunersolutions.com
845-356-4218