I got a job!!!! BOO-YOW!

Whether its who you know or not, 2.5 GPA vs 4.0, previous CNA/Tech/LPN experience or none, BSN or ADN - You've got to get out there and make something happen for yourself! Faxing in the good ol' resume just doesn't cut it anymore. Be PROACTIVE. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

I am cheeeesing!!! Because I am officially a nurse. That's right! No longer am I the licensed non-working individual. But I am not here to gloat or rub it in. I wanted to give some tips. They are kind of out-of-the-norm....Very stalker-ish even! Hopefully, these will help you as they did me. Fyi...Try to be discreet at certain times with a few of these rules. Happy hunting!

:yes: :yes:

Check out LinkedIn

This website is not only a networking tool for individuals but for companies as well. You'd be surprised how many CEO's and directors of nursing are on that site.

Stalker angle: many of the big heads keep their overall profiles anonymous. So you may see a title, but no name nor face. In order to override this. Look down to the bottom of the screen. There is a section called: people who viewed this profile, or something like that. Click on one of their names to see their profile. Once you do that, scroll back down again to the same section. The previous profile (that had no name) that you viewed will now appear with a name and (if, available) a picture.

Also, cue in on the groups. Not only was I a member of nursing groups,I also became a member of a recruiter's network group. You get to read all the dirt, do's and don'ts. One recruiter was asking the group on how to do her background checks without contacting the previous jobs. Another was dogging out the interviewee. From their attire to their responses. Are you kidding me??? Why shouldn't we be in on this too???? And the best part....It's all free. Also, they have a jobseeker membership. For like $15/mo or so, they will brand your profile with a gold jobseeker icon. I never used it but this month they are offering a free 30-day trial to use it. So if I were you guys, i'd sign up just flipping because.

Email Contact

Once you've secretly (ha!) bagged your info, use that as your seller when emailing them. How do you do that, you ask? Easy! Go to the website of the company. Look up their contact us info. Somewhere on the overly detailed site, you should see a "@mycompany.org" listed. Most companies have the usernames as their first name. [email protected]. Use that to your advantage. Send an email using two versions. Ex. [email protected], or [email protected]. Its bound to get to them. In your email. Give a brief introduction of yourself. Talk about how you'd be interested in working for their hospital etc etc, attach resume and hit send. The worst that could happen....It gets eaten by their spam folder, or self-deleted. The best...They wonder how in the heck you got their email and forwards your resume to their hiring manager after scrutinizing you by phone. If and when they call, they'll go through the motions and then hit you with that question. When they do ask, here's what you say: oh I was researching how blank hospital recently became a #1 stroke center, etc etc and saw your name and info. Make sure you let it roll off your tongue.

Stalker angle: to score really good brownie points, research their name within the hospital's site and even Google them. I found a majority of my people had open facebook accounts, or were presenters at nursing conventions that I've attended. So for extra bit of measure, I threw in info that we had similarly in common.

Works wonders!!

Post Resume On Job Sites

When you put a resume on job sites, i.e., Monster, CareerBuilder, indeed, etc., update your profile once a week. Just think millions of people like you and me are constantly on the look for jobs. These sites charge employers almost a couple thousand a year to post their ads (yes!!! I've checked. Try uploading an ad as an employer and see what their bill is). Then do you think they actually look at all those 1-500 of 5,000,000 profiles. Of course not! They shave the first 5-10 they see and logout from the rest. So if I upload my profile on Monday, and i'm #3. What's my spot come Thursday? #56,412??? So, once a week, go to your profile and do anything. Re-upload a resume, delete your number and re-add it, add another location to relocate to...Whatever. You make one change, you're automatically put back at the top of the list. I would upload my resume, and my phone wouldn't stop ringing. Then come Wed/Thurs...Silence. I was fooling around and updated something of little importance. All of a sudden, my phone's off the hook again. That's when I figured it out. I told two other friends to do the same, and it happened exactly. So stay on top of those job sites.

Become A Super Stalker

For those of you desperately wanting to get your dream unit job: icu, or, nicu, dialysis, etc etc. Look up all the possible hospitals/facilities you would like to work with. Call the main number and ask for that specific unit. When transferred, tell the clerk you would like to speak to the manager. (for 1st time calls, call around lunch time. Hopefully, they won't be in the office.) once transferred, hopefully you'll get to the voicemail--detailing their name and the extension you called. Let's say you get the name, but not the extension. Then call the operator and ask for Janice Kay's ext. Try to sound as if you already work there. Pipsqueak voices are not allowed! Or maybe you got the extension, but no name. In that case, call the unit back, not the operator. This time sound kind of bossy. Most people will rattle of the mgr's name thinking you have a complaint. And if you're really lucky, they'll offer to give the direct line. With that info in tow, refer back to #2. Send your strategy email, then you must double back with a phone call. Sometimes, hr is super slow on the hiring process. But the mgr can push them, especially when she sees your resume is just what she's looking for.

Another hint: most nurse managers love new grads. Its the hr that's a blocker to us. Get in with them, and the table could turn in your favor.

Make The HR Assistant/Secretary Your New BFF

The job that I accepted was pretty much due to the hr secretary. I faxed my info over, waited a few days, and then called to confirm she got it. While she was looking to see, I could still hear her chatting to herself and I caught on that she didn't have a southern accent. So I played on that, and she let me know how she was an out-of-towner. After our 5 min conversation about how she adjusted and what brought her there (notice, I made the convo all about her!), I get a call from the chest pain coordinator the next day.

Results: I tested my strategies out, starting from Jan 25th till Feb. 14th (offer acceptance date). Overall, in 3 1/2 weeks, I've had 6 interviews, 6 offers, and selected for 3 residency programs in 2 different cities. Yesterday, I got an email to set up a phone interview for today. All of them are looking for experienced nurses, but still were willing to see me because of my unique, savvy contacting techniques. I start march 14th. They gave me four weeks to relocate and such. And lets just say i'm verrrrrrrrrrrrryyyy appreciative of the pay.

In closing, whether its who you know or not, 2.5 gpa vs 4.0, previous cna/tech/lpn experience or none, BSN or ADN, you've got to get out there and make something happen for yourself! Faxing in the good ol' resume just doesn't cut it anymore. Be proactive. I wish everyone of you the best in your endeavors. We all have worked hard just to get to this point, so its inevitable that our time will come. Some sooner than others.

*doing my happy dance* boo-yow!!!!! *fist pump*

A quick question for you ChicagoRNtoBSN and everyone in this thread, if you get an email back with the "sorry I don't know what you're talking about but everything goes through HR" or "Sorry no new grads check our website for application, good luck" what do you suggest we should do? I got a lot of these and I wonder if I should respond back or just delete it from my mailbox. But at least most of them seemed to be surprised to see my email

any saskatchewan nurses with IV skills out there looking for jobs?

Ive tried some of these strategies and have not been as fortunate as the OP. Ive emailed contacts Ive gained at hospitals I want to work at, and it usually ends with an email from them saying "Ive forwarded your information to so and so" and I never hear back. Im dying to get my foot in the door somewhere but I havent been so lucky...

Specializes in OB/GYN.

Congrats! Great ideas!

I GOT A JOB TOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I followed her suggestions and created a Linked In account, searched for recruiters, DONs, PCDs, at all the hospitals I wanted to work at. Snazzed up my resume and wrote a really great CL w/ an eye catching opening sentence "So&So Hospital is known for their mission in providing high-class patient care and satisfaction." Yup, I researched the hospitals and implemented their "vision" or "mission" statement in my CL.

I used the tricks for the email addresses and verified them on verify-email.org.

I got 2 emails back from one hospital from the DONs saying that they are happy that I'm interested and I should apply online, yada, yada, yada. Wrote them back thanking them for their response. Then BOOM the 30th I got a call from a recruiter at their hospital! Coincidence?! I think not!!! Especially since I applied at this hospital 2 months prior with no call backs. Had a phone interview w/ the nurse recruiter. I really let my charismatic personality shine. She told me she would send me resume to the PCD and I would her back within the week. BOOM!!

The VERY next morning I got a call back from her to set up an interview. Interviewed for the Total Joint Replacement Unit on Med/Surg on December 2nd. The interview went great. I met with the recruiter and we discussed benefits, interviewed with the PCD, had a panel interview with the nurses on the unit after the unit tour. Again, I let my sparkling personality shine and really pressed about my passion for patient care and team work. Met with the PCD again who said she wanted to hire me and would like me to continue in the hiring process. Did a drug screen that day and another phone interview the following monday.

Then I got my official "You're Hired" call yesterday!! I start orientation on Jan. 9 making $10 more than I make now. I got my 12s on the night shift PLUS they are willing to work around my schedule w/ church and give me Thursday & Saturday nights off. And the HUGE plus is they want me to pursue my BSN and will pay 100% if I go to George Mason. What?!?!?! The only thing is the require a 2 year contract after my 90 days, but I'm totally ok with that! They told me I can transfer to different units if it doesn't work out. So ecstatic!! Happy Dance!!!

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I have been searching for an RN job for about a month now and have had NO CALL BACKS..nothing...nadda...ziltch! Making me question my decision to quit my well paying job as a Systems Analyst for nursing. It is indeed EXTREMELY frustrating trying to find that first RN job...no one wants to hire an inexperienced nurse...at least not this time of the year. I even moved from a small town to the city thinking i would have better luck at finding that first job...guess the joke is on me!:anbd:

Now here I sit day after day applying for jobs and within minutes getting the thanks but no thanks emails. What's the point of even applying ?!?!?!

I had to take a crappy call center job that pays practically nothing just to support my daughter and I. I barely make enough to pay my bills and Christmas this year will consist of literally no gifts for anyone. Oh and my awesome student loans are coming due in less than 60 days...gee I am so damn glad I chose to be a nurse!

If there are lessons to be learned in any of this experience....I wish someone would share so I can see the light at the end of this tunnel.

dont give up. Keep trying. Apply in departments that you wouldn't normally apply. Go to hospitals, clinics etc and ask around for what department needs help. You don't have to disclose that you are a nurse looking for a job. However, it may help. It is much easier to impress in person than over the phone or internet. Always look your best and dress to impress. Goodluck

Congrats and these are great tips!!

Specializes in Patient Care Technician/ EMT.

awesome...love the borderline stalkerish strategy. Gonna keep these tips handy. TY.

good tips! however i just got what KUJOMONSTER got, "ill forward it to so and so..." and thats it....

glad to hear new grads that got jobs, makes it seem more possible for those of us who have been searching for some time

chicagorntobsn: (for some reason i can't reply through pm)

thank you soooo much! my cover letter is so generic, even i myself think it is really boring. so i will definitely work on improving it, thanks for your tips! it makes so much sense to actually put down the skills i have done during clinical. i have a few more qstions if you dont mind?in my cover letter should i : -- include future plans for bsn (i graduated adn) although i didnt' enroll yet?

- reasons for employment gaps? (i didn't work throughout nursing school because i wanted to concentrate mainly on school)

- include a not-so-glamorous gpa? mine was 2.93 including pre-requisites (eek!)

i think i might post a new thread on this too. thank so much for your input!

SushiRN - SO happy for you! What a great story!

Can you explain what you did when you sent the emails? Did you just attach the CL and resume, or did you paste the CL in and send that directly to the DON?

Did you add the DONs and PCDs as network connections on LinkedIn or just use that to verify names and positions?

Did you use Monster or another job site to search for jobs?