Jobs, Jobs in  - EmploymentCrossing.comJob Aggregators - EmploymentCrossing.com

     

Forgot Your Password?    Remember Me

TRY IT NOW!

Job Seekers  Employers
How We Help You  |  Why We're Not Free
The Most  Jobs Anywhere — EmploymentCrossing
Compelling Daily Job Search Advice from the CEO of EmploymentCrossing

How to Get Hired Where There Is Not Even an Opening
By Harrison Barnes  Follow Me on Twitter
For some reason, almost every week (sometimes more than once a week) venture capitalists and private equity companies call me to talk about the various businesses I am involved in. I used to talk to them quite formally, the way average people like me talk to doctors, lawyers and bankers. I assumed (wrongly so), that I needed to be a little bit guarded, not share too much information and such. Do not ask me why I thought this way. I think it probably has something to do with the fact that when they call, they say something like the following:

”Hi. I’m from a private equity firm. We manage a fund of over two billion dollars and are looking for investments.”

I do not know about you, but when someone calls and tells you they have two billion dollars to spend, it makes me a little nervous. I just cannot communicate effectively. Nevertheless, I have been taking these phone calls for years and am now far more interested in speaking with these guys. I have probably done over 50+ phone calls with them in the past few years and they have become a focus of intense interest for me.  These guys are fascinating to me because they have penetrating insights into “hot” businesses and where the economy is going.

Most of the private equity players out there are really smart guys with great educations. They also really know business and their entire job is to identify businesses that are likely to increase and grow rapidly. They basically want to put money into a business that is growing and then ‘’sell off” their portion of the business when it starts to ‘’slow down”. Typically, these investors will focus on industries and individual companies that are poised for massive growth.

In my opinion, if you are trying to decide what sort of company to work for, you’d be smart taking a look at what the most successful and profitable private equity companies are doing. They are very good at putting their money to work in the industries, companies and geographic locations where there is a cycle of expansion occurring.

Expansion cycles are good because they breed ”inefficiencies”. Inefficiencies are good because they create opportunity. When there are inefficiencies, companies (and people) tend to not watch their money as carefully.

When I was starting my legal career I applied for jobs in the following areas: Detroit, Los Angeles and New York. In New York City I got so many interviews I could not believe it. I was taking trip after trip there to meet with law firms. I also got a lot of interviews in Los Angeles. When I went into these interviews I was treated very well and found employers eager and excited to hire. They were not that critical, did not ask a lot of questions about my grades and were eager to make offers.

Detroit, on the other hand, was a different story. At the particular time I was interviewing, the Detroit market had been contracting for years. The interviews with the firms there were not as easy to come by. Firms were much less likely to make offers easily. The big firms in the city had not been growing for years and had been shrinking for a long time. In simplistic terms: There was not a lot of opportunity. The big law firms in Detroit were looking for reasons not to hire you as opposed to looking for reasons to hire you.

I realized early on that working in Detroit was not a good long-term prospect for me. The Los Angeles legal market was growing at the time and so that is where I went. The market was so ”hot” at that point in time that law firms were making me offers during interviews, paying ‘’signing bonuses” and so forth—it was far different than the sort of thing you would ever see in Detroit at the time.

If you are going to succeed in your career to your full potential … seek out geographic locations, industries and companies that are booming. It makes all the difference.

When I was in college, I was close friends with a girl who went to school in another state. She shared a dorm building with a friend of mine growing up. My friend was good at science and had majored in a science-related discipline that was very much in demand at the time. He had done a very average job in college. I think he had around a 2.0 grade point average. The issue was that he did a ton of drugs. One day she called me:

”He has been sitting in a chair for 36 hours staring at a wall in the student commons and he has not moved. He is on really bad acid … No one can get him to move.”

I never thought that much would come of this guy. By his senior year of college he could scarcely form a sentence- he had done so many drugs. Nevertheless, due to this ”unique” science-related major he received tons of job offers and ended up doing very well. Most of the better students and others in his class were searching for jobs months after he graduated and was earning an incredible living. He is still doing well to this day.

What did this guy do that was so smart? He chose a major (and obscure one) where there was a ton of demand. There was so much demand that all he needed was a pulse to get a job.

The basic cycle of a business involves a company coming out with a product or service and either succeeding, or failing. When the company succeeds it can succeed in multiple ways. On the one hand it may grow slowly. On the other hand, the company may ”take off” and experience explosive growth. You want to go where there is ”explosive growth.”
  • Individual companies can experience explosive growth
  • Geographic regions can experience explosive growth
  • Certain industries can experience explosive growth
Companies that experience ”explosive growth” generally are able to do so due to the fact that they are not facing lots of competition and are doing things in a way that is competitively different from others. This allows the company to generate ”windfall profits” for some time and the leadership of the company, the company’s employees and others generally fall under the spell that the ‘’sun will shine forever.”

Regions that experience explosive growth are similar. In the ”Wild West”, for example, if you were one of the few businesses in a geographic region selling something you could mark up the price and be virtually assured of making good profits. This is happening in regions of the United States all the time where there is growth—due to an industry, demographic trends, or otherwise.

When things are good, companies and the people making hiring decisions inside of them do not give hiring a lot of thought. I have hired people I met at dinner, people who were recommended by friends and family and others — without much regard to whether we had a job opening at all. I just knew that the person had certain skills and could contribute to the overall efforts of the company. That was when things were ”on the up” and explosive growth was occurring.

It is like this with lots of companies. When things are good and the company is ”on the way up” the company does not closely scrutinize a lot of its hiring. It is this way with all companies.

”Back in the day” executives in the largest automotive companies had fancy wood paneled dining rooms where they were served gourmet foods and so forth daily. That soon went away as the industry started contracting under pressure. Companies like Google currently have cafeterias that are free and are so ”fat” that they even allow employees to spend part of their work time on independent projects.

One of the most interesting things you can and should be doing in your job search is going after companies that are on this ”explosive growth” trend. They will often hire you without giving it much thought—even if they do not have openings. It is the same thing with booming geographic areas and industries—you can often get hired even if there are no openings at a particular company just by ‘’showing up.”

I am going to tell you a job search secret I should not be telling you—but if you’ve read this far you deserve to learn it. If you see a company with a lot of openings proportional to its size—this means things are going very well there. It is the same thing with industries and geographic locations—a ton of openings mean some good stuff is going on. For example, if you see a small city somewhere and there are a ton of openings, then that city is growing.

Apply to companies that are growing fast—even if they do not have openings for you. This is a ”contrarian strategy” but I have seen it work more times than I can count. Call them, email them and do whatever you have to do. Companies that are ”on the way up” will often hire you even if they do not have openings. You need to find places, companies and industries on the way up.

Related posts:
  1. You Always Need a Back Up Plan



To your success,

Harrison Barnes

Click here to read more of such interesting articles from our CEO Harrison Barnes.

Tell us what you're thinking...

Comments (required)




Subscribe

Enter your email address and start getting daily inspirational advice from Harrison Barnes.

Email:      



New Jobs This Week
657,927
Jobs Added Today
167,178
JOB SEARCH

Keyword Search:



Browse Jobs by Location / Zip:

 






+ Advanced Search     + Search Tips
+ Browse Jobs
   JOBS NEAR YOU

  + International Jobs + Work At Home Jobs
  + UK Jobs + Canada Jobs

New search feature using US map. + click here
Looking for a new job in your city? + click here
  TOP 5 JOB SEARCHES
  TODAY'S FEATURED JOB
Assistant Director of Admissions #11039
United States-CA-Berkeley
Responsibilities Review and evaluate complex admission
cases; prepare strategy and design for recruitment
programs; Represent the Berkeley MBA prog...

Click to Apply for - EmploymentCrossing.com
Most Recent Articles
What's the Recession? Where's the Recession?
If you go through industry reports thoroughly there are certain things in the current recession that do not match up. While joblessness continues to grow and the earning situation of the average American employee remains unstable, certain businesses continue to show record profits across sectors throughout the recession. While the reasons may vary ...
Recent Articles:

Search All Articles

   GO 
FREE NEWSLETTER
+
A CHANCE TO WIN A NEW BMW
BMW - EmploymentCrossing.com
"The Job Researcher" is a weekly newsletter that's absolutely jam packed with jobs, career advice, stories, webinars and more. PLUS, a chance to win a new 2010 BMW 328i sedan in Employment Research Institute's annual car giveaway.
 SIGN UP NOW
*Your Email:  
Sign Up on - EmploymentCrossing.com
Only EmploymentCrossing researches and consolidates every job opening it can find and puts all of the job openings it locates in one place.

  • We research and collect job openings from tens of thousands of employer, association, newspaper classified, government, public interest, job board and other websites and post them on our site.
  • EmploymentCrossing has vastly more job openings than any other job board because we actually go out and research jobs instead of just posting jobs employers pay us to post.
EmploymentCrossing Job Search
Add to iGoogle
  CAREER CONNECT  (From Our Career Blogs)
Whatever you can conceive and believe, you can achieve.
Submit GET FREE
JOB ALERTS
BE THE FIRST TO KNOW
Learn about jobs before everyone else does. Studies prove the first people to apply to jobs are the most likely to get them. Sign up for job alerts today BMW - EmploymentCrossing.comand be entered to win a new BMW!
What is EmploymentCrossing?
Who Else Is Ready to Never Have to Worry About Recessions and the Job Market Again?
Why Job Boards Are Evil!
Blow Away Your Competition with EmploymentCrossing
Get More Employers to Respond to Your Applications and Hire You
Why You Are Not Aware of 95% of the Jobs Out There
Why EmploymentCrossing's Marketing Problem is Good For You
Why It is Important to See Every Job Site There is
Private Versus Public Job Boards
Why You Need to Manage Your Job Search in One Place
Who Else Wants Their Phone Ringing Off the Hook With Quality Job Interviews?
Do Not Use Another Job Board Until You Read This
UNCENSORED REVIEWS!

Andrew , Columbus, GA

The best part about EmploymentCrossing is the simplicity of the site. It is a very user friendly website.

Richard , Baltimore, MD

The number of jobs listed on EmploymentCrossing is great. I appreciate the efforts that are taken to ensure the accuracy and validity of all jobs.

Stacey , Deltona, Fl

The jobs are divided according to the different locations which makes the search simpler.

+ More success stories
+ Share your success story with us
HOW WE WORK

Watch Our Latest Video!

HOW WE WORK - EmploymentCrossing.com
See Every Job We Can Find on the Internet!
Unlike other sites, EmploymentCrossing works for you and does not charge employers to post jobs and actually goes out and researches jobs for you. The jobs you see are the jobs we find for you and not the ones employers are paying us to post.
To compare EmploymentCrossing with other job sites
Click here on - EmploymentCrossing.com
USEFUL LINKS

A Message from Our Founder

Press Releases

Add EmploymentCrossing to My Favorites
Top 101 Reasons to Sign Up for EmploymentCrossing
Reason 39: EmploymentCrossing monitors more than 250,000 employer websites for jobs. How long would that take you?
  Click here for 100 more reasons  
EmploymentCrossing has the most advanced job-search engine. Period.
Tell Us What You Think   
EmploymentCrossing answers:
Why can't I just use a free method to look for a job?
+ Click here for answer
Free Webinar by Harrison Barnes
See Your Connection with Others and Not the Differences

Thursday, September 2, 2010 at 1:00 PM PDT.
Today at EmploymentCrossing

167,178 - Jobs found in last 24 Hours 657,927 - Jobs found in last 7 Days 2,382,454 - Total Jobs Found
Leading Employers Tell a Friend!
Follow EmploymentCrossing.com on Twitter Be a Fan of EmploymentCrossing on Facebook - EmploymentCrossing.com
Your privacy is guaranteed. We will never give out, lease, or sell your personal information. Whitelist EmploymentCrossing
Sign Up  |   About Us  |   History  |   Our Mission  |   Refer A Friend  |   Terms of Use  |   Privacy  |   Post a Job Opening  |   Job-Opening FAQ  |   Testimonials  |   Career Articles

The EmploymentCrossing Guarantee  |   Crossing Sites  |   Browse Jobs  |   Benefits of Working with EmploymentCrossing  |   Site Map

Career Advice  |   Resume Service  |   Resume Distribution Service  |   Post Resume  |   Job Search Course
In a different but related profession? We can help! Explore our related sites:
100KCrossing | AccountingCrossing | AccountManagementCrossing | ActuarialCrossing | AdminCrossing | AdvertisingCrossing | AerospaceCrossing | AgriculturalCrossing | ArchitectureCrossing | Attorney Resume | AuditorCrossing | AutomotiveCrossing | AviationCrossing | BCG Attorney Search | BilingualCrossing | BiotechCrossing | BlueCollarCrossing | BusinessAnalystCrossing | BusinessDevelopmentCrossing | CallCenterCrossing | ChefCrossing | CivilEngineeringCrossing | CLevelCrossing | ClinicalResearchCrossing | ComplianceCrossing | ComputerAidedDesignCrossing | ConstructionCrossing | ConsultingCrossing | ContractManagementCrossing | CounselingCrossing | CPlusPlusCrossing | CustomerServiceCrossing | DBACrossing | DentalCrossing | DesigningCrossing | DiversityCrossing | DotNetCrossing | ECommerceCrossing | EdFed | EditingCrossing | EducationCrossing | EmploymentAuthority | EnergyCrossing | EngineeringCrossing | EntryLevelCrossing | EnvironmentalCrossing | EnvironmentalSafetyHealthCrossing | SAPCrossing | ExecCrossing | FacilitiesCrossing | FinancialServicesCrossing | FoodServicesCrossing | FundraisingCrossing | GISCrossing | GovernmentCrossing | Graduate School Loans | HealthcareCrossing | HelpDeskCrossing | HospitalityCrossing | Hound | HRCrossing | HVACCrossing | InformationTechnologyCrossing | InsurCrossing | IntellectualPropertyCrossing | InternshipCrossing | J2EECrossing | JD2B | JDJournal | JournalismCrossing | Judged | LawCrossing | Law Firm Staff | Law School Loan Report | Law School Loans | Legal Authority | Legal Authority Financial | LogisticsCrossing | ManagerCrossing | ManufacturingCrossing | MarketingCrossing | MediaJobCrossing | Medical School Loans | MilitaryCrossing | NursingCrossing | OccupationalTherapyCrossing | OperationsCrossing | PartTimeCrossing | PharmaceuticalCrossing | PhysicalSecurityCrossing | PhysicalTherapyCrossing | PlanningCrossing | PostdoctoralFellowCrossing | PRCrossing | ResumeApple | ProcurementCrossing | ProductManagerCrossing | ProjectManagementCrossing | PublicInterestCrossing | PublishingCrossing | PurchasingCrossing | QAQCCrossing | RadioCrossing | RealEstateAndLandCrossing | Recruit Attorney | RecruitingCrossing | ResearchingCrossing | RetailCrossing | SciencesCrossing | ScientistCrossing | SellingCrossing | SQLCrossing | TeenagerCrossing | TelecomCrossing | TradingCrossing | TrainingCrossing | TransportationCrossing | TravelingCrossing | TruckingCrossing | TVCrossing | UnderwritingCrossing | VeterinaryCrossing | VolunteerCrossing | WorkAtHomeCrossing | WritingCrossing



Want to Focus Your Job Search on a Different Geographic Area?
Akron Jobs  |  Albuquerque Jobs  |  Anaheim Jobs  |  Anchorage Jobs  |  Arlington Jobs  |  Atlanta Jobs  |  Aurora Jobs  |  Austin Jobs  |  Babylon Jobs  |  Bakersfield Jobs  |  Baltimore Jobs  |  Baton Rouge Jobs  |  Birmingham Jobs  |  Boston Jobs  |  Buffalo Jobs  |  Chandler Jobs  |  Charlotte Jobs  |  Chesapeake Jobs  |  Chicago Jobs  |  Chula Vista Jobs  |  Cincinnati Jobs  |  Cleveland Jobs  |  Colorado Springs Jobs  |  Columbus Jobs  |  Corpus Christi Jobs  |  Dallas Jobs  |  Denver Jobs  |  Detroit Jobs  |  Durham Jobs  |  El Paso Jobs  |  Fort Wayne Jobs  |  Fort Worth Jobs  |  Fresno Jobs  |  Garland Jobs  |  Greensboro Jobs  |  Henderson Jobs  |  Hialeah Jobs  |  Honolulu Jobs  |  Houston Jobs  |  Indianapolis Jobs  |  Islip Jobs  |  Jacksonville Jobs  |  Jersey City Jobs  |  Kansas City Jobs  |  Laredo Jobs  |  Las Vegas Jobs  |  Lexington Jobs  |  Lincoln Jobs  |  Long Beach Jobs  |  Los Angeles Jobs  |  Louisville Jobs  |  Lubbock Jobs  |  Memphis Jobs  |  Mesa Jobs  |  Miami Jobs  |  Milwaukee Jobs  |  Minneapolis Jobs  |  Nashville Jobs  |  Newark Jobs  |  New Orleans Jobs  |  New York Jobs  |  Norfolk Jobs  |  North Hempstead Jobs  |  Oakland Jobs  |  Oklahoma Jobs  |  Omaha Jobs  |  Orlando Jobs  |  Oyster Bay Jobs  |  Philadelphia Jobs  |  Phoenix Jobs  |  Pittsburgh Jobs  |  Plano Jobs  |  Portland Jobs  |  Raleigh Jobs  |  Reno Jobs  |  Riverside Jobs  |  Rochester Jobs  |  Sacramento Jobs  |  San Antonio Jobs  |  San Diego Jobs  |  San Francisco Jobs  |  San Jose Jobs  |  Santa Ana Jobs  |  Scottsdale Jobs  |  Seattle Jobs  |  Saint Louis Jobs  |  Stockton Jobs  |  Saint Paul Jobs  |  Saint Petersburg Jobs  |  Tampa Jobs  |  Toledo Jobs  |  Tucson Jobs  |  Tulsa Jobs  |  Virginia Beach Jobs  |  Washington DC Jobs  |  Wichita Jobs  |  Winston-Salem Jobs
Employment Research Institute
EmploymentCrossing - #1 Job Aggregation and Private Job-Opening Research Service — The Most Quality Jobs Anywhere
EmploymentCrossing is the first job consolidation service in the employment industry to seek to include every job that exists and not charge employers to post jobs on its site.

EmploymentCrossing uses sophisticated technology and manual work to comb employer websites and other job boards for jobs and bring them all to its site.