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Popular Career Advice That’s Actually Awful For You

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Career and job search advice is plentiful today, and much of it is now research-backed. So, it’s easy to forget that on occasion, best practices won’t apply to your situation and may, in fact, backfire.

For example, wearing a tailored suit and tie to an interview is usually a winning strategy, but if you’re interviewing at an early stage start-up where the culture calls for flip flops and t-shirts, overdressing may cost you the job offer.

Also, the ideal length for a resume is one to two pages, but in certain industries or functions a lengthy 20-page CV (curriculum vitae) or a one-page biography might serve you better.

Conversely, in some situations you may be tempted to try something risky after hearing about someone’s usual success story. For example, boldly delivering your qualifications to the hiring manager via a singing telegram could earn you the offer (like it did for your cousin’s roommate’s boyfriend’s sister). However, more often than not, it will get you escorted off the premises by security.

Remember this: Don’t allow popular advice to override common sense.

A job search is complex, often filled with frustrating and confusing processes and lacking clear steps or guaranteed results. So, it makes sense that job seekers and career changers are looking for concrete answers to make the process less ambiguous..

The good news is that most of the well-researched strategies that have been proven to be effective will be beneficial to your job search, especially when applied in the right context and at the right time. But as the saying goes, knowledge is having the information and wisdom is applying it correctly.

To avoid blindly engaging career advice that could potentially derail your efforts, here’s howto discern if it makes sense for your situation:

Managing your career is part science and part art. No strategy works 100% of the time and there will always be an outlier (e.g., my friend posted on a billboard and nabbed the job!) someone can refer to that can confuse your decision. When all else fails you, trial and error is usually a better option than doing nothing at all since you’re gathering data that can inform your next decision.

What’s important is taking the time to reflect on your situation and not giving your power away. As comforting as it might feel in the moment to let someone else choose your path, it won’t offer solace when the choice doesn’t pan out. You can blame others for bad advice, but you’re the one left without the job offer.

Make the time to invest in yourself – you’ll be glad that you did.

Happy hunting!

Reposted from: Forbes.com

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