Job hunting could be an uphill task for most fresh graduates considering
 the fact that it is a game of the survival of the fittest.Below are a 
list of 8 things you must get done while serving your nation to be 
better positioned for the job hunt especially in the private sector.
1.DECIDE ON THE KIND OF JOB YOU WANT: The
 first thing you must do is to take a decision on the kind of job you 
want.You can even stream line it down to the list of companies you would
 want to work for, that way you know what you are preparing for and how to go about it. It amuses me when
 job hunters come to an office and are asked what kind of job do you 
want and they go like “oga, any job”. Any job is no job dude, take a 
decision today because it will determine a whole lot of things in your 
preparation.
2.RESEARCH: Carry out a research on the company(ies) you
 would like to work with. It baffles me how people submit their CVs to 
companies they know little or nothing about. A little research will do 
you some good. Get to know a thing or two about their history, the people, their organizational culture, their vision and their mission statement.
3.PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATION: Acquire at least one professional certification. This is why you should
 decide first on the choice of career/job you want as it will help you 
decide on which professional course to go for. Don’t be a party to the 
band wagon mentality that is prevalent among corps members. Everybody is going for project management, therefore must you too
 go for project management? Everybody in your lodge is enrolling for 
NIM, so you too must enroll for NIM. That is not true. Get to find out 
the professional certification that best suits your dream job. All you may just need is a course on safety or data base management. Trust me!
4.SKILL ACQUSITION: Please learn a new skill. Get your hands on something, so when they ask you, what
 can you do? You can provide a definite answer, instead of just telling 
them what you studied. What you studied and what you can do are two 
distinct things altogether. This is very important especially for my 
friends with a background in social sciences. A good skill acquired
 could also be handy pending when the dream job comes.
5.CHANGE YOUR 
WARDROBE: Dude please dress like your dream job. Starting building a 
professional wardrobe from that small alawee. It’s not the time to 
spend your money on another dirty jean, combat pants, or what have you. 
Get yourself a cutting edge professional suit (don’t bank on your 
convocation suit to do the job). It doesn’t cost much. For guys, invest 
on good ties,cufflinks, shoe, shirts, and a good brief case or bag 
and stop carrying your cv in that big brown envelope, some directors can
 sight you from their office and tell the security or secretary “don’t 
let that guy in, he is looking for a job.
6.WORK ON YOUR WEB IMAGE: Image is everything. Shun
 those clichés’ or fat lies on our CV, if I go through your Facebook 
timeline or twitter handle , I will tell the kind of person you are ( I 
just shared a little secret of what some employers now do, work on it 
and thank me later). If your Facebook timeline and profile is not 
decent, work on it or get a new one before you start job hunting. Follow
 the company you would like to work for on twitter, like their page on 
Facebook. Build a professional online presence .Get a good e-mail ID (Do
 away with the xyz4love@yahoo.com craze and the likes of it.). a good professional ID comprises of your name and your surname e.gadewalejohnson@yahoo.com.
7.IMPROVE YOUR NETWORK: The job you are looking for dey some people hand, Hello! Start building your contact list, invest in strategic relationships while you are still serving. Join associations, clubs, and forums. Ladies you can join
 Women in Management and Business (WimBiz), the biggest association for 
women professionals in West Africa. You can enroll for their mentee 
program as a young female graduate. Trust me, you don’t need to know the
 caliber of women you meet in such an association. One good contact is worth more than a hundred CV submitted at random. Build new, better, and strategic relationships.
8.GET
 A MENTOR: Identify someone who has distinguished him or herself in the 
career you desire to pursue. A good mentor can carry you along, just 
make sure the person is accessible. Don’t go telling me that Ngozi 
Okonjo Iweala is your mentor, when you two don’t communicate. She can
be your role model, but obviously not
 your mentor. Identify someone that can create time for you and probably
 entrust you with responsibilities, even if you don’t get paid.
I hope 
you find this useful
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