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Selling Your Life Experience

Selling Your Life Experience

Non-traditional students can get ahead by really selling their life experience.

By Robin Mordfin

March 12, 2009

If you’re a non-traditional student, the time off you’ve taken in your formal education can be an asset to prospective employers. Your life experience gives you several advantages – maturity, professional skills, ambition – that traditional students might lack.

The key to getting the job you want is to make sure that your prospective employer gets the best impression of you. This means emphasizing more than your college education; you have to sell your experience.

A growing number of employers are now looking at the accomplishments of the applicant, not the choices they have made. “We don’t care how old you are or when you decided to learn what you need to get a job here,” says Claudia Hammond, a spokeswoman for IBM in White Plains, NY. “If you come through our recruitment or applications process and have the right qualifications, then we want to hire you.”

So how do non-traditional graduates capitalize on their circumstances? According to Dick Griffith of Lifeworks, a career counseling service in Illinois, it’s all in the way applicants present themselves, both on paper and in person.

Use a functional, rather than chronological resume. List your concrete good points, and be succinct. “You need to be clear about what you do well, and you want to explain that with clear, short, to-the-point examples,” Griffith says. Rehearse your work and life stories, so that your strongest points come out during the interview. Be prepared for questions about your academic and professional choices, so you won’t come across as flustered or defensive. “Even with a good resume, some [job seekers] will walk into an interview and immediately explain to the employer why they shouldn’t be hired,” Griffith says. “I tell my clients to tell the truth, but tell it constructively.”

Network with others in your field and utilize your pre-college relationships. While this is a necessary tool for all job-seekers, non-traditional college graduates have a distinct advantage. They are more likely to have a wide array of contacts from previous jobs and personal acquaintances.

Build up your less obvious strengths. Jaime Saul, a recent Notre Dame graduate, included on her resume her time as a salesperson at Banana Republic, even though it didn’t relate to her career plans. “It turned out that I was really good at it and even won some sales prizes,” Saul says. “That was something else I could use to get a good job. I went into Morgan Stanley and made them see that I’m a hard-working people person who can sell.”

Volunteer work, political activism or community involvement can all demonstrate marketable skills to prospective employers.

Have confidence in your skills and experience. Non-traditional students bring with them maturity and the determination to succeed. They also benefit from having taken the time to know what they want and how best to pursue their goals. Let employers know that you’re prepared to go the extra mile to do a good job. “I’ve hired a lot of people with unconventional pasts,” says Martin Schultz, the former editor of Nashville Magazine. “They are always excellent workers. They are most concerned with getting the job done properly, rather than what is in it for them.”

Remember, you may have been non-traditional as a college student, but as a graduate looking for a job, the unorthodox path you have taken can be one of your greatest strengths.


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  • Max50_photo_user_blank

    lnfrn801

    about 1 month ago

    While you point out maturiy...there is agism..I have read many resume writing articles that recommend to only incluse th epast 10 years of your work history experience. On one interview that appeared to be going well, the 30 ish young HR person asked me when and where did I do my nursing clinical expereince. I informed her that in 1974 I began my nursing career in a major teaching hospital in NYC. Well her eyes grew wide open and she refocused a grin toward the other dept heads eyes. She was obviously looking for a younger nurse to come on board to work the same health insurance company. I was given a "optional" survey to check off my age, gender, race, etc in the name of Equal Employment Opportunity. The same scenario has occured in 2 other interviews. Also, I had a gap in my work history and on well intentioned advice from my job recruiter was told to tell the truth about being a cancer survivor and my recovery time.This also did not go over well. Dead silence happens in the interview and the HR or hiring manager becomes quite uncomfortable hearing about that. So it seems that I will have to go into an interviewed prepared to make up an untrue reason. Why can't we have a gap in our work history after putting 20 or more years. You should be able to take a break for an illness, education advancement or moving. As long as we continue to have someone in their late 20-early 30's who haven't been through a life crisis interview a mature employee this same unfair decision making to not hire them will continue.
    I will never be able to retire so I am in the job market for the long haul. Hr people should be trained to be objective and hire an experienced person with a stellar work ethic and history. In addition, my neighbor is a 25 year old male who started a successful recruitment placement company. He told me that if someone has been out of work for a year or more should not be hired due to becoming rusty. A prime example of discrimination. In this strained economy where people are facing forclosure and bankrupty everyday this young man could start a harmful trend within other compnies. It is apparent that he has not lived through a life crisis so far...it will take one disaster for him to sing another tune and open up windows of opportunity with understanding and compassion for the umeployed that are willing to work and do more than an honest day of work. At 60 years I am feeling that it is the end for me with no hope in sight just bills and boredom mounting daily.