article directory
 
Seven Tips for Finding Summer Jobs
 
Site Menu
 
Site Search


 
HOME » Employment » Job Search » Seven Tips for Finding Summer Jobs

Seven Tips for Finding Summer Jobs


You just bought your first ice scraper of the season last week and your weird neighbors still have their holiday lights wrapped around their chimney.


But it’s not too early to start thinking about summer jobs…especially when you add up the costs of your Spring Break trip, whether you’re heading to Panama City Beach to catch some rays or Branson, Missouri to catch a Dolly Parton impersonator.


Here are a few tips to beat the competition for the choicest summer gigs:


1. Have realistic summer job expectations

Everyone has that one friend with the dream summer job – the one who earns more than you, works less and seemingly possesses an unlimited amount of sick days. (And by sick days, we mean days spent tanning by the pool while reading a copy of US Weekly). It may seem like that friend has won the summer job lottery, and we don’t want to be the fun police, but what is he/she really learning? Even if a summer job may not appear to be the yellow brick road to your dream career, you’d be surprised at what you can take away from the right summer job.


2. Get yourself connected

Just like electronica music fossils Stereo MC’s once proclaimed, now is the time to connect with former bosses, employed friends, and dad’s buddy who owns that Italian restaurant. Networking isn’t just for stuffy dudes in suits anymore.


3. Find out the local “release dates"

Find out when the local high schools and colleges close up for the summer, which will be easy if you’re a student at one of them. Despite our warnings, people will wait to get their summer jobs until the last possible minute. You don’t want to be a vulture picking over the summer job leftovers.


4. Be honest with potential employers

This starts with being honest with yourself. If you’re a proud vegan who isn’t sure you could stand handling meat patties and prime-cut filets all day, then skip the restaurant route. Being honest also includes your initial conversations with potential bosses. Don’t over-commit to the amount of hours you’ll be able to work up front and then back down. Also, don’t claim you posses certain skills and experiences even if you don’t. We know it’s exciting to be on the cusp of landing a job, but the quickest way to crash and burn in your new gig is by fibbing.


5. Don’t be "that guy" or "that girl"

When dozens and dozens of your peers are vying for the same teen jobs and college summer jobs, don’t make it easy for a potential employer to take you out of the running early. From having crass cell phone ring tones blowing up during an interview to dropping off a résumé while wearing a tuxedo T-shirt, the list of these embarrassing faux pas is long. When in doubt, pause, then exercise a little common sense.


6. Take sound advice

Job hunting and workplace clichés are a dime a dozen – see? You’ve probably heard to "dress for the job you want, not the one you have" or to "work outside the box." As annoying as these are to hear, clichés serve a purpose in that there’s usually a meaningful nugget of truth at the core of each. Conversely, the time to serve up clichés is not during a job interview. When speaking with a potential employer, be candid but be careful. Likewise, be yourself but be sure to filter out the just plain weird stuff (your potential employer doesn’t need to know about your boy band fan club), and be one more thing…


7. Buy suntan lotion

A brief public service announcement: It’s always a good idea to have some SPF 30 on hand. Even if you’re not working outside, it will give you one less errand to run once your shift ends and it’s time to hook up with your crew. Plus, no boss likes an employee with third-degree burns.


Start your summer job search now.

Source: http://www.ArticlePros.com/author.php?Mike Ward

More on Employment and Job Search can be found below:

  • How To Search And Apply For a Job in the Union County
  • Finding the Best IT Jobs in Toronto
  • Filling Job Vacancy in Ethiopia
  • Career Search Engines: 3 Hot Career Sites To Help You Land Your Dream Job
  • How To Clear Your Pilot Job Interview?
  • Airline Pilot Jobs
  • How to find a job in economic recession?
  • Work-At-Home Can You Really Make Money?
  • Alumni Networks Help Corporate Recruiters Find the Purple Squirrel
  • Impact of Recession in the UK Job Market
  • 4 Steps to Launching a $100K+ Executive Level Job Search Campaign That Gets You Hired in a Recession
  • Chef Jobs-A promising venture
  • Diversity and Inclusion: Road map to better business performance
  • Uttarakhand IT Jobs, BPO Jobs, Uttaranchal IT Jobs, Haridwar Jobs in IT
  • Coping with Career Change


  • How and When the Modern Executive Should Seek a Job
  • The Dynamics of Management Consulting
  • Nursing: Choosing A Specialty
  • What Is Forensic Nursing?
  • Massage – One Form of Necessary Sports Jobs?
  • An Introduction To Psychiatric Nursing
  • Cover Letters: Sell Your Sizzle Not Your Steak
  • Job Hunting - Computerized Accounts Job in India
  • Learn How You Can Begin A Career as a Radio DJ or Personality.
  • Get That Dream Job
  • Explanation Of Holistic Nursing School
  • Job Networking
  • Job Interviews: What You Should Not Discuss
  • are you sick and tired of being sick and tired
  • European Jobs – Exciting Opportunity

  •  

    Get this article to go

    RSS | JScript | Email | HTML

     

    About the author


    Mike Ward is the Senior Online Editor for SnagAJob.com, America’s largest hourly job website. SnagAJob.com makes it easy to find part-time, full-time and seasonal employment across the country. Start your job search today!
    SnagAJob can be found online at: <a href="http://www.snagajob.com/">http://www.snagajob.com</a>.

    http://www.snagajob.com

     
    Email options
       

    ** Check all that apply **

     

    This article has been accessed 16 times since 2008-04-08.

    _________________