So I have a few things to report:
After uploading my Curriculum Vitae (CV) to a few online recruitment agencies. I have been getting a lot of emails regarding positions, I received quite a bit of praise for my CV but after letting them know I am interested in the roles offered they kind of disappear and I do not hear from them after that.
Initially I was confused on what role exactly I wish to pursue but I had a dream and I was telling a friend in the dream what it is I desire to do so that narrowed it down.
I kind of had a Déjà Vu today when I was speaking to my friend it was almost like a reflection of the dream mentioned above which I had a few days back.
Resistance wise, I feel more motivated and compelled as if it's genuine and from within regarding actually pursuing a role.
The only thing that annoys me is these roles demand enterprise experience, I do not have that but none the less I know that I have the skills and can do what is required. Need to find a way around this, whenever I ask the kind of training that is provided I do not hear from them after that.
Need to update my CV on two recruitment websites and let them know the role I wish to go in to.
I also had a call today about some warehouse job, been there and done that not my thing since I am pursuing a career in IT. When I let the recruitment adviser know he did say to me your "CV is really good and orientated towards that". I was thinking no shit, call me with something relevant next time.
Regarding employers that require professional experience, I found this online:
"Sometimes you just have to say "Yes I do", to get your foot in the door for an interview. If you think you can handle an environment that large, explain it to the interviewer. Worst case scenario leaves you in your current position. When I graduated a few years ago I couldn't find a single IT position that wanted any less than 3 years experience. So I lied to get into the interview, and then told the truth. They gave me 90 days to see if I had what they needed, and now almost 2 years later I've got the experience I was looking for when applying somewhere else. I mean, just because you haven't had to maintain 100+ servers doesn't mean you aren't able to, and I can only imagine that a competent interviewer will understand that. Like I said, you can't really go wrong trying."
After uploading my Curriculum Vitae (CV) to a few online recruitment agencies. I have been getting a lot of emails regarding positions, I received quite a bit of praise for my CV but after letting them know I am interested in the roles offered they kind of disappear and I do not hear from them after that.
Initially I was confused on what role exactly I wish to pursue but I had a dream and I was telling a friend in the dream what it is I desire to do so that narrowed it down.
I kind of had a Déjà Vu today when I was speaking to my friend it was almost like a reflection of the dream mentioned above which I had a few days back.
Resistance wise, I feel more motivated and compelled as if it's genuine and from within regarding actually pursuing a role.
The only thing that annoys me is these roles demand enterprise experience, I do not have that but none the less I know that I have the skills and can do what is required. Need to find a way around this, whenever I ask the kind of training that is provided I do not hear from them after that.
Need to update my CV on two recruitment websites and let them know the role I wish to go in to.
I also had a call today about some warehouse job, been there and done that not my thing since I am pursuing a career in IT. When I let the recruitment adviser know he did say to me your "CV is really good and orientated towards that". I was thinking no shit, call me with something relevant next time.
Regarding employers that require professional experience, I found this online:
"Sometimes you just have to say "Yes I do", to get your foot in the door for an interview. If you think you can handle an environment that large, explain it to the interviewer. Worst case scenario leaves you in your current position. When I graduated a few years ago I couldn't find a single IT position that wanted any less than 3 years experience. So I lied to get into the interview, and then told the truth. They gave me 90 days to see if I had what they needed, and now almost 2 years later I've got the experience I was looking for when applying somewhere else. I mean, just because you haven't had to maintain 100+ servers doesn't mean you aren't able to, and I can only imagine that a competent interviewer will understand that. Like I said, you can't really go wrong trying."