I was hoping the MT forums could help me out a bit.
I have been asked to give a talk to a group of 50 new, and about to graduate students at a vocational IT school from the point of view of a hiring manager.
Are there any kernels of truth you would want to pass on to these students?
Any and all suggestions are appreciated.
--Augie

I've spoken to groups of
I've spoken to groups of students in the past (although not specifically IT focused students). Given their current situation, finding a job is ever-present on their mind. I try to focus on three keys that they can think about during that phase:
Then I like to throw in a 4th bonus point - get hired, deliver great results, and keep your head up with regards to career development, opportunities, networking, etc. If you wait until you need these things, it will be too late.
Thanks,
G.R.
ditto :)
Everything Regas14 Said!!
Especially the networking part--many students think that if it isn't online, the job doesn't exist. They spend way too much time searching classifieds and too little time developing their network.
Here's Part...
...of what I end my talks to students with. I know they want to know about getting hired, but I try to stress that there's more to life than that.
While Still In School:
- Create lasting relationships
- Reading: your most powerful development tool
- Don't choose a job based on money
-Start Minding Your Manners
- Introductions, Conversation, Meals, Technology, And Names
Starting a Career
- Create AND MAINTAIN lasting relationships
- Forget about school and grad school
- Turn off the TV and read
- Show up early, stay late, be quiet, and work hard
- Serve, serve, serve
- Ask questions to move forward
- Keep your resume current
- become a genuinely nice person
- Save 10-20% of your salary
Forging a Life
-Family First: that means on your calendar too
- Create, maintain AND SHARE lasting realtionships
- Management is boring, unsexy, unpretty, and powerful
- Beware the three ring circus
- Set a genuinely nice example
What do hiring managers want?
A smiling, friendly demeanor.
A suit and other accoutrement associated with professional and reasonable grooming.
Crisp communication. Clear preparation on answers to questions you know are coming.
Evidence of rehearsing.
HUNGER.
Mark
Had to do something similar a few years back
A years ago I had to do something similar at my Alma mater. I put the details on my web site.
The core point I tried to address, the question I asked, was "If you had to address a group of recent graduates or final year students on job hunting what would be the one thing you would want them to remember and take away with them.", here are the links:
There might be something useful there.
Stephen
--
Skype: stephenbooth_uk | DiSC: 6137
"Start with the customer and work backwards, not with the tools and work forwards" - James Womack
Thanks for all the great input!
Thank you so much for all the great input, that really got the ideas flowing -- I have about four pages of ideas now! Thanks so much all!
--Augie
Thanks!
I'm not sure how I stumbled across this, but thanks for this post.
As a new professional, these are all recommendations I can use to help shape my career.
Thanks again