Job Search Tips – 4 Steps to Find a Job on Twitter
Believe it or not, twitter is more than just a place to tell the world what you had for lunch. With over 60 million current users and growing, it’s a perfect place to take your job hunt. By adding to the conversation, twitter can help you:
- Gain credibility in your field
- Build meaningful professional networks quickly and effectively
- Introduce new opportunities and land a job
However just like LinkedIn, simply joining twitter will get you nowhere. You need to develop a well-defined strategy catered specifically to your needs. Here are four easy steps that will get you well on your way and the tools that will help you get there.
1) Create a focused, targeted profile
The first step is creating your presence on twitter. Everything about twitter is short and concise. Your profile needs to say everything important about you in the time it takes to read half a sentence.
#1) Claim your twitter handle. Your goal is to get noticed so use your real name. If your name is taken, use some variation with a professional spin. (example: PR_PeggySue)
#2) Upload a professional head shot. Twitter is about meeting new people who share your passions and interests. Nobody wants to share with a default graphic. (Tip: use the same profile picture across all your social networks).
#3) Write a professional, targeted bio. You only have 160 characters, so make them count. Strip away all the fluff and pinpoint your most important qualities. Why are you on twitter and what are you passionate or knowledgeable about? Include keywords in your profile to help others find and connect with you. (Tip: Don’t forget to link to your personal website or Linkedin profile)
#4) Create your custom background. If you keep your background as default, you are wasting prime real estate. Use TwitterImage to promote your other sites and profiles. The whole point is connecting, so direct your audience to other places where they can actually connect. (example: Dan Schawbel’s profile here http://twitter.com/danschawbel).
2) Build your Network
Once your profile is complete, it’s time to start reaching out for followers.
#1) Follow major players in your industry. Use Twellow to find them. This is a great opportunity to interact with them and put yourself on their radar. They are also phenomenal resources to keep up with industry trends. After responding directly to their tweets a few times, they are likely to follow or even respond to you back, exposing you to their highly valuable audiences.
#2) Search for people who are talking about your industry. Type relevant keywords into the search function and follow people who are talking about them. This is a quick, effective way to build a relevant network. Use Tweepz to search people’s bio for relevant job titles, as well.
3) Add value to your community
This is the most important point to take away. Twitter is a completely open, ongoing conversation. While following people will connect you to valuable, new information, your followers expect the same from you. Before you benefit from your network, you need to establish yourself as a thoughtful, contributing member.
#1) Post helpful, interesting tweets.Most people don’t care what you had for lunch. They are interested in tweets that yield a positive impact on their day. Try posting daily quotes or tips. For example, at @brandyourself, I post daily job search tips since many of my followers are looking for a job.
#2) Link to interesting, relevant information. The best way to establish yourself as a valuable member–or even expert– of your community is to share new, interesting information. Read industry blogs and newsletters and post your favorite articles. Use TwitterFeed and TweetLater to save you time and post them throughout the day.
#3) Answer relevant questions. There is no better way to prove your worth. Take a little time each day to search for questions pertaining to your area of expertise. Type in a specific keyword followed by a question mark to filter results. For example, I type “resume tips ?” to find people looking for help with their resume. This is an excellent way to attract more followers, and establish yourself as an authority in your line of work.
#4) Retweet other people who add value to you. If someone in your network posted something you found helpful, acknowledge it by retweeting it to your followers. This is important for building relationships and it also exposes you to their audience.
#5) Engage your community. Above all else, twitter is a conversation. So ask questions, reply to others using the @ function, and ask for feed back. Just make sure you are part of the conversation.
4) Find a job
Once you build a strong network, you will be surprised at the opportunities 140 characters can bring.
#1) Tweet occasionally about your job search. Be clear exactly what you are looking for and what kind of skills you bring with you. If you have proven yourself as a thoughtful, intelligent individual, your followers will be happy to extend a helping hand. A few retweets brings your profile a long way.
#2) Keep growing your network. Once you build a strong network of followers who like what you have to say, find more. Use tools like twubble to find out who your followers are following. This is a quick way to multiply relevant followers
#3) Search. Use twitter search to look for job openings that were posted. Type in relevant keywords like your job title or desired position. Set up an RSS feed for these keywords using TweetBeep.
#4) Follow accounts that post job listings in your industry. There is no quicker platform to browse or post job listings. More and more companies are posting listings online, looking for socially savvy individuals. Choose aggregators that are geographically/industry specific.
In reality, these are the same tactics used in traditional job hunting, just magnified. Build quality relationships with people in your industry who know and understand your qualifications. For more tips follow us @brandyourself.
5. Manage Your Twitter Efforts at Brand-Yourself.com
Sound like a lot of work? Actually, it’s a lot of fun. And we’ve built a platform for you to manage your entire personal brand online from one central hub. We analyze your Twitter profile and activity, monitor Tweets about your name and suggest new people to connect to nearby in your field. Create your Brand-Yourself account today and see how our tools can help you effectively use Twitter to build your personal brand.
Hi Patrick,
it’s a pretty good how-to. I think it would also make sense to add twitter job search engines to the “Find Job” part. Take a look at jobtweet.de and twitterjobsearch.com
Great post. How about doing a follow up post focusing on the (growing) number of web apps designed to help people find work in a difficult climate? I think people would find that useful.
@alexander Twitter job search can be an effective tool. Even better, it allows you to subscribe to certain keywords or job postings.
@twitterjobfinder: Thanks for the compliment. I like your idea. What web apps are you specifically thinking of. Job search management apps, job boards, etc? If you have seen any web apps I would be happy to research them.
@torben. Thank you very much. I’m not sure what HP is though
I haven't used Twitter to search for a job. I wonder if people would start sending spam job notices, like the one's I get from posting my resume on Monster about 8 years ago. I took my resume down after about a year, but I still get those spam “we have a job for you!” emails. It is very frustrating.
I would highly recommend using Twitter in the job search. It is one of the best ways to find the jobs that aren't posted online and viewable by the public. We have a lot of success stories about job applicants finding jobs through Twitter that they had no idea existed.
Sites like Monster, Careerbuilder and Indeed are simply just boards where they make money if you get the job. It's a great business model for the masses but it doesn't always benefit you to be apart of it.
When using Twitter, follow a lot of people in our industry/expertise and start to interact with them, that's the key aspect.
I would highly recommend using Twitter in the job search. It is one of the best ways to find the jobs that aren't posted online and viewable by the public. We have a lot of success stories about job applicants finding jobs through Twitter that they had no idea existed.
Sites like Monster, Careerbuilder and Indeed are simply just boards where they make money if you get the job. It's a great business model for the masses but it doesn't always benefit you to be apart of it.
When using Twitter, follow a lot of people in our industry/expertise and start to interact with them, that's the key aspect.
These are really great tips! Another thing to capitalize on is the trending topic. This shows that you are in the current events loop; you have an opinion, and you're more likely to appeal to more tweeters.