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Determining
Fit
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After
months upon months of high-gear
networking, sending out
your resume, and interviewing,
you finally have a job
offer! After all that hard
work, it's awfully tempting
to accept the new position
and put your grueling job
search behind you.
But, unless
you have thoroughly researched
your employer and your
prospective position, don't
be so quick to jump on
board. As anyone who has
ever had a deceitful boss
or a soul-sucking job will
tell you, it's foolish
to blindly accept your
first offer. Though it's
advisable to research potential
employers before you even
interview - if not before
you apply at all - the
bottom line is that you
do your homework before
you accept a job.
Begin by investigating
the company as a whole.
As you research, be particularly
mindful of whether the
organization is compatible
with your moral and political
beliefs, whether the organization
has growth potential, and
whether the organization
is financially sound. The
Internet, the library,
and your alma mater's career
services office should
be helpful. It's also savvy
to do a Nexis search for
newspaper and magazine
articles about the company
in question. Specific,
helpful publications include
The Wall Street Journal,
Barron's, Fortune, and
Business Week. Standard
and Poor's corporation
records and Dun and Bradstreet
reference materials are
also helpful directories.
Don't forget to take notes!
Through your
research you should be
able to answer the following
questions:
- What is
the organization's size
as compared to others
in the industry?
- Is the
organization's industry
one with a bright future
ahead? (Make sure you're
not thinking of joining
the modern equivalent
of a company that mass-produces
phonographs or slide
rules.)
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- What was the
organization's annual sales
growth over the past five years?
- What is the organization's
projected future success or
growth?
- What is the complete
line of products and services
that the organization provides?
(Keep in mind that many companies
are parts of larger corporations
or own subsidiaries.)
- Where is the
organization's headquarters?
- Where are the
organization's other offices,
companies, plants, factories,
or outposts?
- At which of these
locations would you be happy
living and working?
- What is the organization's
transfer policy? (Could you
be forced to transfer? Can
you apply to transfer? If you
hate the cold, make sure the
company won't force you to
work in their Juno, Alaska,
office.)
- Does the organization
sponsor or donate money to
particular groups, political
parties, or social causes?
(Haven't heard of the groups
who receive money from your
potential employer? Do some
extra research - if you are
a card-carrying Green Party
member, you may not feel comfortable
working for one of the GOP's
primary donors.)
- What is the organization's
history? Who runs it, and what
are their backgrounds?
Though digging up
this kind of data can be tedious,
you'll be glad you did. You'll
put your potential work in context,
and you'll evaluate whether your
prospective employer is financially
dependable and aligned with your
value system. After all, you
don't want to take a job that
you'll lose in a year when your
employer declares bankruptcy.
Nor do you want to have to quit
when you find out you're morally
opposed to the company's products,
mission, production methods,
or political agenda. Both outcomes
put you right back at the beginning
of your job search.
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