We Are All “Up in the Air”


MV5BMTI3MzYxMTA4NF5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwMDE4ODg3Mg@@._V1._SY317_ Back in the Fall of 2009, when "Up in the Air" was released, I didn't see it, but people told me I should have.  I watched it the other day.  Wow!  It is not just an excellent movie and the most realistic piece of American cinema I've seen since 2005.  It is also a gold mine of occupational themes that hit so close to home, it's unreal.  You know, the subtle truths about corporate existence, which are so familiar to those of us, who have been boiling in that soup their entire lives.  Thank you, Jason Reitman!

Our new economic reality of depressed businesses and desperate people serves as a recognizable background to the personal stories unfolding in front of us.  The uncertainty of survival in the contemporary corporate world is so pervasive, nobody knows what tomorrow shall bring.  "Living in the Now" is not a conscious choice of enlightened individuals anymore.  Whether a CFO or a receptionist, in companies large or small – every wage-dependent person lives one day at a time.

As the matter of fact, George Clooney's character, Ryan Bingham, is sent to large companies.  These companies can still afford to hire an outside firm to conduct the "separation" exercise for them, with fancy folders and severance packages. 

In small business environment, even during the best of times, you wouldn't think of spending money on protecting yourself from the brutal necessity of firing people with whom you worked side by side.  As a CFO/Controller, I've had my share of sitting across the table in a conference room, looking into a person's eyes and delivering the bad news.  I developed my own style as well: do it gently, make them feel better, give them hope…  Some even thank me at the end.  Just doing my job, like Ryan Bingham.

He, actually, works for a small company owned and managed by his boss (Jason Bateman), who (how typical!) changes his mind about the company's direction three times in a few depicted weeks.  Ingeniously, the filmmakers reduce smooth and dashing George Clooney to a powerless subordinate: his entire way of life is about to be changed by his boss's decision and there is nothing he can do about it.  "…Here's the boat?.. Do you want to be in the boat?"  You are either in or out.  You have no choice.  You swallow your pride and you go along.  Just doing your job.

What are we doing?  How do we go on and live with ourselves when we fire someone who is good at his job?  How do we sleep at night after dismissing hundreds of hopefuls' resumes?  And what happens when our own resumes get swept into trash?  Do people feel anything at all?  Those are our hopes that get dismantled.  Do we register the weight of what we do?  I don't know.

Everyone's life is up in the air, with no help coming.  Help ourselves? We can try to stay positive and continue struggling on – that's the best we can do.

 

New Job Hunting Secrets for CFOs and Controllers


All CFOs, Controllers, VP Finance and Financial Directors, especially in small businesses, are involved in recruiting process.  Most of them don't have in-house recruiters and nowadays not too many businesses can afford $25,000-$30,000 headhunters fees.  So, with hiring on one side and testing the market (or in the current economy actively looking) for themselves on the other (plus payroll, benefits, etc. management), their involvement with HR is pretty significant.

However, because they don't work for businesses with thousands of employees and are not professional recruiters, small and mid-size financial execs are not necessarily up to date on the talent-searching technology.  While going through hiring process they are still printing resumes, looking through them manually … – you know the process.  And when the tables turn around and some of these execs are forced to search for new employment themselves, they expect their resumes to receive the same treatment even if they apply for a job in a larger company with its own in-house HR department or reply to a recruitment agency's (such as Robert Half, Michael Page, Source Associates, Forum Group, etc.) ad. 

How could they possibly know, especially if they have been off the market themselves for several years, that today large HR department and recruitment agencies work with automated Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) – software that in its sophistication goes beyond database matching and usually employs cutting edge data-warehousing technologies?

 I know plenty of financial execs who are so proud (rightfully so) of their accomplishments they don't even bother adapting their resumes to the nuances of advertised job requirements and keep sending them out "as is" regardless of the recipients specifications.

Please, do yourself a favor and read this recent article from TheLadders  The 24-Step Modern Resume.  Not only it is incredibly valuable on its own (an eye-opener for uninitiated, really), but in the text you will find links leading to further details and related subjects. 

I also highly recommend The HR Capitalist blog.  It will provide members of financial executive talent brigade with an opportunity to learn what the other side – the hiring professionals – think.  I found particularly fascinating the insights into Social Recruiting and the important place it occupies in today's hiring in Why Social Recruiting Isn't About Having a Corporate Twitter Account

 

Job Search: Cover Letter Advice


Many of my peers make an inexcusable mistake of thinking that a Cover Letter is an artifact: in old times of applying to jobs via mail or fax, it made sense to include one with your resume, but now, when you either click "Apply" button in the job board ad or send an email, it's not needed.  Lazy and wrong!   It is true that the cover letter most likely will not make a difference in the first resume screening.  However, if your resume gets into the second round, a good cover letter will compliment it and make you stand out.

Here is a link to AOL original online article.  It is written by a recruitment professional and has the most concise and comprehensive outline of what must be included in a contemporary cover letter.  You will still need all your talent to find the right words and present yourself in the most impressive way, but it is a good start.

Cover Letter Checklist