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Index » Careers & Employment » Jobs & Employment Fields
 

For Job-Hunters: How to Find a Contact Name Inside a Target Company

 

Career experts always say, "Don't send your resume to the Human Resources department, where it will get lost in the shuffle - send it to an individual person in the company." Well, great - but how do you actually do that? It's not so easy to pin down a name for a person who could actually read your resume or pass it on to the hiring manager. Here are ten tips to get you going.

1) Look on the company website, under About Us. There should be Management Bios section. Either the VP/leader of the function youre interested in (e.g. Marketing or Engineering) or the VP/leader of HR is a great person to call or write to. Both of those people should be listed on the website (although a lot of the time, the head of HR is not shown in the Management Bios, because HR is often a second-class citizen, function-wise, sad to say). If the company is enormous - say 10,000 employees are more - the very lofty manager whose bio is on the website may be too lofty to do you much good, unless you are interested in an executive position. If thats true, you need a closer-to-the-action person who will not pitch your resume (hopefully) immediately upon receipt.

2) Use LinkedIn (www.linkedin.com), searching on the target company name, to find people who work there OR who used to work there OR who do business with the company now. Make contact with one of these folks (via a mutual LinkedIn connection) to express your interest in communicating with the correct person at your target company, about a job.

3) Use a WorldWIT email group (like DesertWIT in Nevada or DutchWIT in the Netherlands) to get contacts in a target company. Membership is free - just go to www.worldwit.org and join your local chapter. Men and women are welcome. (Full disclosure: I lead this group.)

4) Use Google to find someone appropriate at the target company. Try a search like Apex+Foods+marketing+director. Try a bunch of different things. Youll find media profiles, reports of Apex Foods managers speaking at events - a ton of stuff, very likely. Its actually pretty easy to collect names inside a company. The key is to get the appropriate names, and of course, to contact people who still work for the company.

5) Also use Googles Blog Search functionality to locate people. Lots of stuff shows up on blogs that wouldnt make it into typical Google web-search returns.

6) Check out the online archive for the local business paper in the city where the company is located (that is, the location that youre interested in joining.) Sometimes you have to pay for a subscription to access the archives. If you buy and read the paper frequently anyhow, you might want to go ahead and pay for a subscription, if it will help you get the job you want.

7) Also search the archives at Yahoogroups.com to see any mentions of the company and its key folks, the ones you are seeking contact with, in any of the Yahoogroups discussion lists. Current or recent job postings show up like crazy in Yahoogroups archives, and if theyre current, the person who posted the job opening is almost certainly either the hiring manager (or connected to the hiring manager) or the assigned HR person. The only exception arises when a random (unconnected) employee of your target company posts a current job opening on a Yahoogroup that he or she belongs to, just to be helpful. Thats okay - if you contact this person about your career interest, he or she will understand why you did so (as long as they remember posting that job on Yahoogroups)!

8) Go to the website of the most relevant/logical association for the person you seek (in other words, the association that he or she would most logically be a member of), and search the site of the local chapter. Heres an example. If you want to reach the PR manager at Apex Foods, and youre located in Tallahassee, visit the PRSA website, Tallahassee chapter, and look for anyone whos a member who works at Apex Foods. Most likely it will be someone in PR at Apex!

9) Back on the companys own website, review what they say (if anything) about Community Involvement and local causes. There wont be tons of detail on the companys page - just, most likely, a link to the site of the charitable organization they support. Then go to the website of that charitable organization, and nose around for information (name and title) of representatives from your target company. For instance, if your target company is a big supporter of a kids toy drive, someone from the company will very likely show up on the toy drive groups website. Then you can contact that person by phone (I doubt that youll find an email address) to ask for help in locating the person most closely related to the kind of career opportunity you seek.

10) Lastly, go to your alma maters alumni website, and search the database for a current employee or alum of the company you re targeting. Contact this person, letting him or her know your connection (you went to school at the same place and you both have made contact information available to fellow alums - otherwise, your message would be spam) and ask for his or her help in locating an appropriate person to talk with about your job search, at your schoolmates employer.

With these tips in hand, you should be able to vault right over the HR department and get your resume to a live human being. Here's to your next interview!

Author: Liz Ryan
 
Author Bio:

Liz Ryan

Liz Ryan is a workplace expert, 25-year corporate (Fortune 500) HR executive, and the founder and CEO of WorldWIT, the world's largest online community for professional women. Liz is an international keynote speaker on workplace, work/life, leadership, and women in the workplace topics. WorldWIT provides internal communication and community-building services, consulting and training to employers seeking to create a diversity culture and to increase retention and engagement of women and minorities. Liz lives in Boulder, Colorado with her husband and five children.

 
 
 

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