job-search-strategist

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排名: #10530

安装

npx skills add https://github.com/proyecto26/thejobinterviewguide --skill job-search-strategist
Job Search Strategist
Why This Approach Matters
Most job searches fail not from lack of effort, but from lack of
signal
. Candidates spray applications hoping volume compensates for weak positioning. They don't.
The modern hiring process demands three things:
Clarity
Know exactly what value you offer and to whom
Proof
Demonstrate that value through evidence, not claims
Distribution
Reach decision-makers through channels that bypass noise
This skill treats job searching as a
go-to-market problem
. Like launching a product, you need product-market fit (your skills match their needs), positioning (your narrative stands out) and distribution strategy (you reach buyers effectively). Generic applications are low-signal. This system maximizes signal at every stage.
What Makes This Different
Traditional job search advice: "Network more, tailor your resume, follow up."
This system:
Research-driven
Uses web search to uncover non-obvious company insights (funding trajectory, culture patterns, decision-maker priorities)
Adaptive
Conversational skills matching that identifies transferable skills, not just keyword matching
Strategic
Weighted prioritization model that matches tactics to company culture + your strengths (40% + 40% + 20% job level)
Measurable
Built-in KPIs and pipeline tracking to diagnose what's working
Repeatable
Operating rhythm for daily/weekly activities, not just one-off tactics
Core Principle
You're not looking for "any job." You're finding the intersection of what you're excellent at, what companies urgently need and where you have unique leverage. Everything flows from that clarity.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when users:
Ask for help analyzing a specific job posting or opportunity
Want to understand if they're a good fit for a role
Need guidance on highlighting their experience for a particular position
Want to identify skills they should develop to be competitive
Request help creating a job search strategy or application approach
Ask how to stand out to a particular company or hiring manager
Want to research a company's culture and values
Need help with non-traditional application methods (LinkedIn outreach, video cover letters, referral strategies, etc.)
Are transitioning careers and need help identifying transferable skills
Core Methodology: Four-Phase Approach
Execute these phases sequentially, adapting depth based on user needs and information available.
Before Starting: Diagnostic
Help users identify where their search needs attention by using the self-diagnostic tool in
/references/templates-and-examples.md
. This quickly reveals whether they need work on:
Clarity
(target role, value proposition, positioning)
Proof
(portfolio, metrics, credibility assets)
Distribution
(outreach, networking, channel strategy)
Users with scores < 12 in any category should prioritize that dimension. This diagnostic prevents wasted effort on distribution when clarity is the real problem.
Flow Between Phases
Each phase produces specific deliverables that feed the next:
Phase 1
→ Company scorecard with red/green flags, strategic fit assessment
Phase 2
→ Skills match matrix, gap identification, unique value proposition
Phase 3
→ Learning roadmap, portfolio pieces, proof assets
Phase 4
→ Multi-channel campaign plan, personalized tactics, tracking system
Critical principle
Don't skip Phase 1 research even when users are eager to "just apply." Weak signal comes from applying to poorly understood opportunities.
Phase 1: Deep Job Posting and Company Analysis
Conduct comprehensive analysis to uncover non-obvious insights about the role and organization.
Job Posting Analysis
Extract Core Information
Official job title and level (entry, mid, senior, executive)
Required vs. preferred qualifications (note if posting distinguishes these)
Key responsibilities and scope
Compensation details (salary, benefits, equity if mentioned)
Work arrangement (remote, hybrid, on-site)
Identify Red and Green Flags
Consult
/references/job-posting-flags.md
for comprehensive lists
Create a scorecard tracking all identified flags
Pay special attention to:
Language patterns (e.g., "fast-paced," "wear many hats," "rockstar")
Structural indicators (vague descriptions, unrealistic requirements, salary transparency)
Cultural signals ("family atmosphere," specific work-life balance mentions)
Weight flags appropriately: some are minor concerns, others are dealbreakers
Note: Multiple minor red flags together may indicate systemic issues
Decode Hidden Meanings
"Self-starter with minimal supervision" often means → limited management support
"Fast-paced environment" often means → high stress, tight deadlines, possible disorganization
"Wear many hats" often means → understaffed, unclear role boundaries
"Results-driven" without collaboration mentions often means → high-pressure, metric-focused culture
Detailed responsibilities split by essential/preferred often means → realistic organized planning
Extract Cultural Indicators
Tone and language style (formal vs. casual, inclusive vs. exclusive)
Values explicitly stated or implicitly shown
How they describe their team and work environment
Emphasis on collaboration vs. individual achievement
Mentions of diversity, inclusion, work-life balance, professional development
Company Research Strategy
Use web search tools extensively to build a comprehensive company profile:
Company Basics
Industry, size, founding date, headquarters location
Business model and revenue streams
Key products or services
Major competitors and market position
Recent News and Developments
Search:
"[company name]" news 2025
or
"[company name]" news past 6 months
Look for: funding rounds, acquisitions, layoffs, leadership changes, product launches
Assess trajectory: growing, stable or struggling?
Funding and Financial Health
For startups: funding stage (seed, Series A/B/C, etc.), total raised, recent rounds
For public companies: recent earnings, stock performance, analyst sentiment
Search:
"[company name]" funding
or
"[company name]" Series [X]
or
"[company name]" earnings
Culture Research
Glassdoor/Indeed reviews
Search
"[company name]" Glassdoor reviews
or use web_fetch on Glassdoor URL
Look for patterns in reviews, not just overall rating
Pay attention to: management quality, work-life balance, career growth, compensation fairness
Note both positive and negative recurring themes
Check if reviews mention specific departments or locations
LinkedIn research
:
Search
"[company name]" employee LinkedIn
to find current employees
Look at their posts: Do they seem engaged? Do they share company content positively?
Check employee backgrounds: diverse paths? long tenures? recent hires?
Company social media
Twitter, LinkedIn company page, blog
How do they present themselves?
Do they celebrate employees?
What do they post about?
Leadership Assessment
Search for CEO/leadership team backgrounds and reputations
Look for interviews, thought leadership, public statements
Assess: Do their values align with yours? Are they respected in the industry?
Growth Stage and Stability
Early stage (seed to Series A): high risk, high opportunity for impact, role may evolve significantly
Growth stage (Series B/C): scaling challenges, need for process, rapid change
Mature/public: more stable, established processes, potentially slower advancement
Note: Match growth stage to candidate's career preferences
Synthesis and Pattern Recognition
After gathering data, synthesize insights:
Risk Assessment
Financial stability indicators
Cultural health signals
Role clarity and organizational maturity
Overall red flag score
Opportunity Assessment
Growth potential (company and personal)
Mission alignment
Skill development opportunities
Overall green flag score
Strategic Fit Analysis
Does this role align with candidate's career trajectory?
Are there unique opportunities here?
What are the trade-offs?
Phase 1 Checkpoint: Deliverables
Before moving to Phase 2, ensure you've created:
1. Company Scorecard
(document or structured output):
Company: [Name]
Role: [Title]
Overall Fit Score: [X/30]
Red Flags (Score: X/10):
- [Flag 1 with explanation]
- [Flag 2 with explanation]
Green Flags (Score: X/10):
- [Flag 1 with explanation]
- [Flag 2 with explanation]
Strategic Fit (Score: X/10):
- Career alignment: [assessment]
- Growth opportunity: [assessment]
- Mission resonance: [assessment]
Key Insights:
- [Non-obvious insight 1]
- [Non-obvious insight 2]
- [Non-obvious insight 3]
Recommendation: [Apply/Proceed with caution/Pass] because [reasoning]
2. Decision Point
Should the candidate proceed?
Score 20-30
Strong opportunity, proceed to full skills matching
Score 15-19
Moderate fit, abbreviated skills matching to confirm
Score < 15
Likely pass unless compelling unique factor
3. Research Assets Gathered
:
Company news articles (recent 6 months)
Glassdoor review patterns documented
Hiring manager profile/background
Employee connection list (potential referrals)
Transition to Phase 2
Share the scorecard with the candidate. Frame next steps: "Based on this analysis, I see [X opportunities and Y concerns]. Let's explore how your experience maps to what they're looking for."
Phase 2: Conversational Skills-Matching Interview
Conduct an adaptive, conversational interview to elicit candidate skills and map them to job requirements. This should feel like a collaborative exploration, not an interrogation.
Interview Principles
Be conversational
Use natural language, show genuine interest
Follow the thread
Let the conversation flow naturally, don't rigidly follow a script
Dig deeper
When candidates mention relevant experience, ask follow-up questions
Recognize transferable skills
Help candidates see how experience from other domains applies
Build confidence
Frame questions positively, highlight strengths authentically
Interview Flow
Opening and Context Setting
Summarize key findings from job/company analysis
Share overall assessment: red flags, green flags, strategic fit
Frame the interview: "Let's explore how your experience maps to what they're looking for"
Core Competency Exploration
For each major requirement or responsibility in the job posting:
Direct exploration
"The role emphasizes [skill/requirement]. Tell me about your experience with this."
Project-based inquiry
"Can you walk me through a project where you [relevant action]?"
Challenge-based inquiry
"Have you faced situations where you needed to [relevant challenge]? How did you handle it?"
Scale/context questions
"What was the scope? Team size? Timeline? What were the constraints?"
Transferable Skills Discovery
When candidates have experience from different industries or roles:
Analogous situation exploration
"Even though you worked in [other industry], did you encounter similar challenges?"
Skill abstraction
"The core skill here is [abstracted skill]. Where have you demonstrated that?"
Reframing experience
"What you did at [previous company] actually demonstrates [job requirement]. Can you tell me more about that?"
Gap Identification (Tactful)
For areas where candidate lacks direct experience:
Adjacent experience
"While you haven't done [exact thing], have you done [related thing]?"
Learning orientation
"Is this an area you're interested in developing?"
Importance assessment
"Some requirements are nice-to-have. How critical do you think [skill] is for this role?"
Unique Value Proposition Discovery
"What unique perspective would you bring to this role?"
"What have you done that most other candidates probably haven't?"
"What are you especially passionate about in this domain?"
"What's something about your background that isn't obvious from your resume?"
Motivation and Fit Exploration
"What excites you most about this opportunity?"
"What concerns do you have, if any?"
"How does this fit into your career goals?"
Based on company culture research: "They seem to value [cultural trait]. How does that resonate with you?"
Synthesis: Skills Match Matrix
Create a clear, honest assessment:
Strong Matches
(candidate has clear, relevant experience)
[Requirement 1]: [Evidence from candidate]
[Requirement 2]: [Evidence from candidate]
Moderate Matches
(transferable skills or adjacent experience)
[Requirement 3]: [How it transfers]
[Requirement 4]: [Adjacent experience]
Gaps
(areas needing development)
[Requirement 5]: [Current level and development needed]
Unique Strengths
(differentiators from other candidates)
[Unique angle 1]
[Unique angle 2]
Cultural Fit Assessment
Alignment with company values: [High/Medium/Low]
Comfort with growth stage/environment: [Assessment]
Work style compatibility: [Assessment]
Phase 2 Checkpoint: Deliverables
Before moving to Phase 3, ensure you've created:
1. Skills Match Matrix
(structured format):
Role: [Title] at [Company]
Overall Match Strength: [Strong/Moderate/Developing]
STRONG MATCHES (70%+ confidence):
✓ Requirement: "5+ years product management"
Evidence: "6 years PM at TechCo, shipped 12 features, managed $2M budget"
✓ Requirement: "Data-driven decision making"
Evidence: "Built experimentation framework, ran 30+ A/B tests, improved conversion 25%"
MODERATE MATCHES (50-70% confidence):
→ Requirement: "Experience with B2B SaaS"
Transfer: "B2C experience, but managed enterprise partnerships at scale"
→ Requirement: "Team leadership"
Adjacent: "Led cross-functional initiatives with 8 people, no direct reports yet"
GAPS (< 50% confidence):
⚠ Requirement: "SQL and data analysis"
Current: "Basic Excel, no SQL experience"
Critical? Medium - nice-to-have, not essential
UNIQUE STRENGTHS:
★ Marketing background → understands user acquisition deeply (rare for PM)
★ Built side project in this exact product category → domain passion
★ Knows hiring manager from previous company → warm referral possible
CULTURAL FIT:
• Values alignment: HIGH (both emphasize user-first, experimentation)
• Growth stage comfort: HIGH (thrives in ambiguous, fast-moving environments)
• Work style: HIGH (collaborative, data-driven, comfortable with feedback)
CONFIDENCE LEVEL: 75% - Strong fit with addressable gaps
2. One-Sentence Positioning Statement
:
"I help [their target customer] [achieve outcome they care about] through [your unique approach that connects to their needs]."
Example: "I help B2B SaaS companies increase trial-to-paid conversion through experimentation frameworks informed by marketing psychology."
3. Three-Sentence Career Story
(tailored to this opportunity):
See template in
/references/templates-and-examples.md
4. Gap Prioritization List
:
Rank gaps by: Criticality × Learnability × Demonstrability
High priority: Essential + can learn quickly + can show proof
Medium priority: Nice-to-have + moderate learning curve
Low priority: Non-essential + difficult to demonstrate quickly
Decision Point
:
Match strength 70%+
Proceed to Phase 4 (application strategy), address minor gaps in parallel
Match strength 50-69%
Proceed to Phase 3 (skill development) for high-priority gaps, then Phase 4
Match strength < 50%
Reassess fit. Are gaps fundamental or bridgeable?
Transition to Phase 3 or 4
"Based on our conversation, here's what I see: [strengths summary]. You have [X gaps] to address. Let's create a plan to [close those gaps / apply strategically]."
Phase 3: Skill Development Strategy
For identified gaps, create actionable development plans.
Gap Prioritization
For each skill gap, assess:
Criticality
Is this essential or nice-to-have?
Learnability
Can it be learned quickly?
Demonstrability
Can progress be shown before applying?
Prioritize gaps that are: high criticality + high learnability + high demonstrability
Learning Resource Research
Use web search to find specific resources for skill development:
Online Courses
Search:
"[skill]" online course 2024 2025 highly rated
Look for: Coursera, Udemy, edX, LinkedIn Learning, specialized platforms
Prioritize: hands-on projects, certificates, instructor credibility
Free Resources
Search:
"[skill]" free tutorial
or
"learn [skill]" free
Look for: YouTube channels, documentation, interactive tutorials, open courseware
Quality indicators: view counts, recency, community reputation
Practice Platforms
For technical skills: HackerRank, LeetCode, CodeWars, Kaggle
For design: Dribbble challenges, Daily UI
For writing: Medium, guest posting opportunities
Certification Programs
(if valuable for this skill)
Search:
"[skill]" certification
or
"[skill]" professional certification
Assess: industry recognition, time investment, cost vs. benefit
Community Learning
Search:
"[skill]" community
or
"[skill]" Discord/Slack
Benefits: peer learning, mentorship, networking
Development Timeline
Create realistic timeline:
Quick wins (1-2 weeks)
Online courses, fundamental concepts, small projects
Medium-term (1-2 months)
Deeper skills, substantial projects, portfolio pieces
Long-term (3+ months)
Mastery-level skills, certifications, major projects
Portfolio/Proof Development
For each gap being addressed, identify how to demonstrate progress:
Project creation
Build something tangible showing the skill
Case study writing
Document a project applying the skill
Open source contributions
Show real-world application
Blog posts/tutorials
Teach others, demonstrating understanding
Certifications
Formal credentials if industry-relevant
Phase 3 Checkpoint: Deliverables
Before moving to Phase 4, ensure you've created:
1. Skills Development Roadmap
(prioritized and time-bound):
Gap: SQL and data analysis
Priority: MEDIUM (nice-to-have for role)
Timeline: 2 weeks
Learning Plan:
Week 1:
- [ ] Complete "SQL for Data Analysis" (Coursera) - 8 hours
- [ ] Practice: SQLZoo exercises, all tutorials
- [ ] Project: Analyze public dataset (Kaggle)
Week 2:
- [ ] Build dashboard using real data
- [ ] Write blog post: "5 SQL Queries Every PM Should Know"
- [ ] Add project to portfolio with clear problem/solution/impact
Proof Assets:
✓ Certificate from Coursera
✓ GitHub repo with SQL queries and visualization
✓ Blog post published on Medium
✓ Line item on resume: "Self-taught SQL, built dashboard analyzing 50K records"
Success Metric: Can confidently discuss data analysis in interview, show tangible project
2. Portfolio Pieces List
:
For each prioritized gap, identify 1-2 concrete proof assets:
Gap 1 → [Portfolio piece 1]
Gap 2 → [Portfolio piece 2]
3. Resume Bullets
(draft):
Transform new learning into accomplishment statements:
Before: "Learning Python"
After: "Built automated reporting tool in Python, reducing manual analysis from 4 hours to 15 minutes weekly"
4. LinkedIn/Portfolio Updates
(planned):
Add new skills to profile
Publish learning journey posts (if appropriate)
Update headline/summary to reflect expanded capabilities
5. 30/60/90 Day Tracking
:
30 days: Quick wins (courses, small projects, foundational knowledge)
60 days: Substantial proof (portfolio pieces, blog posts, certifications)
90 days: Mastery signals (complex projects, community contributions, teaching others)
Decision Point
:
Quick wins achieved (< 2 weeks)
Proceed to Phase 4, continue learning in parallel
Substantial development needed (2+ months)
Either (a) apply now and emphasize learning plan or (b) delay application until proof is stronger
Transition to Phase 4
"Here's your development plan for the next [timeframe]. Let's now focus on your application strategy while you're building these proof assets."
Phase 4: Creative Application Strategy
Develop a personalized, multi-channel application strategy that helps the candidate stand out by matching their unique profile to the company's culture and needs.
Strategy Prioritization Framework
Use this weighted decision model to prioritize tactics:
Company Culture Weight (40%)
Creative/innovative culture → weight toward video, portfolio projects, bold outreach
Traditional/corporate culture → weight toward polished docs, LinkedIn, formal channels
Startup/scrappy culture → weight toward demonstrating initiative, direct founder outreach
Remote-first culture → weight toward async communication, strong online presence
People-focused culture → weight toward warm introductions, cultural fit emphasis
Candidate Skills Weight (40%)
Strong video/presentation skills → video cover letter or Loom intro
Technical skills → GitHub portfolio, code samples, technical blog
Design skills → portfolio site, case studies, visual resume
Writing skills → blog posts, Medium articles, content marketing
Network/connections → referral hunting, warm introductions
Social media presence → leverage existing platform, thought leadership
Job Level Weight (20%)
Entry-level → emphasize eagerness, projects, culture fit
Mid-level → emphasize track record, specific achievements
Senior-level → emphasize leadership, strategy, industry connections
Executive-level → emphasize vision, network, board connections
Research-Based Strategy Development
Conduct targeted research to inform each tactic:
Hiring Manager/Team Research
Search:
"[company name]" "[role type]" manager
or check LinkedIn
Find: hiring manager name, their background, their interests, their content
Look for: shared connections, shared interests, their thought leadership
Strategy adaptation: Can you engage with their content? Reference their work?
Employee Connection Mapping
Search LinkedIn for company employees, especially in target department
Look for: second-degree connections (potential warm intros), alumni from your school, former colleagues of yours
Check: who's actively posting about company? who seems engaged?
Strategy: prioritize warm referral paths
Company Content Analysis
Review company blog, engineering blog, product announcements
Identify: what they're excited about, current challenges, future direction
Strategy: tailor application to show awareness of their current focus
Recent Initiatives Research
Search:
"[company name]" new initiative
or
"[company name]" just launched
Find: recent product launches, new directions, current priorities
Strategy: position yourself as someone who can contribute to these initiatives
Decision-Maker Platform Analysis
Where does leadership spend time? Twitter? LinkedIn? Medium? Podcasts?
What do they engage with? What content do they share?
Strategy: meet them where they are, engage thoughtfully with their content
Tactical Playbook
Based on prioritization, select and customize tactics:
LinkedIn Outreach Strategy
When to prioritize
Professional culture, you have connections, hiring manager active on LinkedIn
Research first
Find hiring manager or team members, understand their interests
Message template framework
:
Opening: brief, specific compliment or shared connection
Middle: your unique value proposition for this specific role (2-3 sentences)
Close: specific ask (informational chat, not pushy job ask)
Follow-up
engage with their content before messaging (thoughtful comments, not just likes)
Example search
:
"[hiring manager name]" LinkedIn
then craft personalized message
Video Cover Letter Strategy
When to prioritize
Creative culture, you have video skills, role involves presentation/communication
Platform
Loom (for shorter, casual), YouTube (for more produced), Vimeo (for polish)
Structure
(keep under 2 minutes):
0-15 seconds: hook - why you're excited about this specific company
15-60 seconds: your unique fit - 1-2 specific examples
60-90 seconds: what you'd bring/contribute
90-120 seconds: call to action
Production
decent audio > perfect video, energy and authenticity > polish
Delivery
include link in cover letter or LinkedIn message
Portfolio Project Strategy
When to prioritize
Technical/creative role, you have time, demonstrable skills matter most
Research what they need
recent launches, stated challenges, tech stack
Project ideas
:
Solve a small problem you notice in their product
Build a feature you think they should add
Create analysis of their market/competitors
Design mockups for improvements
Documentation
GitHub README or blog post walking through your thinking
Delivery
link in application + message to hiring manager: "I was so interested in your [X], I built [Y]"
Referral Hunting Strategy
When to prioritize
Any company, but especially if you have network overlap
LinkedIn search
:
"[company name]" [your university/previous company]
Second-degree connection strategy
:
Find mutual connection
Ask your connection for warm intro: "I'm really interested in [specific role] at [company]. I see you know [name]. Would you feel comfortable introducing us?"
Alumni networks
search alumni databases for company employees
Approach
ask for informational chat first, not immediate referral
Thought Leadership Strategy
When to prioritize
You have domain expertise, company values thought leadership, enough time before applying (2+ weeks)
Content creation
:
Write Medium post on relevant industry topic
Create LinkedIn post analyzing their market/product
Share insightful thread on Twitter (if relevant to industry)
Quality bar
must be genuinely insightful, not just promotional
Tagging strategy
don't directly tag hiring manager (too pushy), but use relevant hashtags they follow
Timing
publish 1-2 weeks before applying, reference in application
Direct Email Campaign Strategy
When to prioritize
Startup, founder-led or when you can't find other pathways
Finding emails
Hunter.io, RocketReach or pattern guessing ([name]@company.com)
Email structure
:
Subject line: specific and intriguing, not generic "Application for [role]"
Body: 3-4 short paragraphs max
Hook with specific company knowledge
Your unique value in 2-3 sentences
Specific ask or call to action
Timing
Tuesday-Thursday, 10 AM-2 PM in their timezone
Social Proof Strategy
When to prioritize
You have testimonials, notable accomplishments or public validation
Gather ammunition
:
LinkedIn recommendations from impressive people
Metrics from previous work (growth %, revenue, users, etc.)
Public speaking, publications, awards
Packaging
create one-pager with testimonials + metrics
Delivery
attach to application or link in outreach
Company Event/Meetup Strategy
When to prioritize
Company hosts events, you're in same city, networking skills strong
Research
search
"[company name]" events
or
"[company name]" meetup
Preparation
:
Prepare 30-second intro focused on mutual interests, not job hunting
Have 2-3 thoughtful questions about company/product
Bring business cards or easy way to connect
Follow-up
LinkedIn connection within 24 hours referencing specific conversation
Application timing
apply 2-3 days after event, mention meeting in cover letter
Application Materials Optimization
Regardless of tactics chosen, optimize core materials:
Resume Tailoring
Use exact keywords from job posting (especially for ATS)
Reorder bullet points to highlight most relevant experience first
Quantify achievements with specific metrics
Remove less relevant experience to keep focus tight
Cover Letter Framework
Opening paragraph: specific reason you're excited about THIS company/role
Middle paragraph(s): 2-3 examples directly addressing top job requirements
Closing paragraph: unique value you'd bring + enthusiasm for next steps
Keep under 400 words, make every sentence count
Online Presence Audit
Google yourself: what appears?
LinkedIn: updated, professional photo, headline matches career goals
GitHub (if technical): pinned projects are impressive and documented
Twitter/social media: nothing inappropriate, ideally some professional content
Personal website (if relevant): showcases best work, easy to navigate
Multi-Touch Campaign Sequencing
For competitive roles, layer tactics over time:
Week 1
:
Apply through official channel (establish timestamp)
LinkedIn connection request to hiring manager (no message yet)
Week 2
:
Engage with company content on LinkedIn (thoughtful comment)
Reach out to potential referral connection
Week 3
:
If no response: follow-up LinkedIn message to hiring manager (brief, adds new info)
Or: share relevant content/project you created
Week 4
:
Final touchpoint: brief email if you have address or different angle
Important
gauge company signals. If they say "no outreach," respect that. Multi-touch works for companies open to proactive candidates.
Cultural Adaptation Examples
Example 1: Creative Tech Startup
Culture signals
colorful website, founder tweets memes, employee posts are casual
Candidate profile
strong technical skills + YouTube hobby channel
Strategy priority
:
Video cover letter (Loom) showing personality + technical knowledge
Build small project related to their product
Twitter engagement with founder's content
Direct email to founder (less formal tone)
Example 2: Enterprise B2B SaaS
Culture signals
professional LinkedIn presence, focus on metrics/results, traditional interview process
Candidate profile
track record of enterprise sales, strong network
Strategy priority
:
Referral hunting through LinkedIn (2nd-degree connections)
Polished application materials with specific metrics
LinkedIn outreach to sales leader (professional tone)
Case study document showing relevant achievement
Example 3: Mission-Driven Nonprofit
Culture signals
values-forward communication, community engagement, testimonials from beneficiaries
Candidate profile
career changer with relevant volunteer experience
Strategy priority
:
Cover letter emphasizing mission alignment and transferable skills
Portfolio of volunteer work and impact metrics
Connections through shared volunteer organizations
Blog post or LinkedIn article about relevant issue
Phase 4 Checkpoint: Deliverables
Before executing the campaign, ensure you've created:
1. Multi-Channel Campaign Plan
(week-by-week):
Company: [Name]
Role: [Title]
Campaign Duration: 4 weeks
Priority Tactics: [Top 3 based on prioritization model]
WEEK 1: Foundation
- [ ] Apply through official channel (timestamp)
- [ ] LinkedIn connection to hiring manager (no message)
- [ ] Identify 3 potential referral paths
- [ ] Prepare portfolio piece/project relevant to their needs
WEEK 2: Engagement
- [ ] Engage with company content (2-3 thoughtful comments)
- [ ] Reach out to referral connection #1
- [ ] Share relevant content/insight on your platform
WEEK 3: Direct Outreach
- [ ] LinkedIn message to hiring manager (value-focused)
- [ ] OR Email if you found address
- [ ] Share portfolio project if relevant
- [ ] Connect with team members (2-3 people)
WEEK 4: Follow-Up
- [ ] Follow up if no response (add new information)
- [ ] Alternative channel (email if you did LinkedIn, vice versa)
- [ ] Reach out to referral connection #2 if needed
SUCCESS METRICS:
- Hiring manager responds: Primary goal
- Informational chat scheduled: Secondary goal
- Referral secured: Alternative path
- Interview scheduled: Outcome goal
2. Prioritized Tactics List
:
Based on Culture (40%) + Your Skills (40%) + Job Level (20%):
[Top tactic with rationale]
[Second tactic with rationale]
[Third tactic with rationale]
3. Message Templates
(customized):
Use templates from
/references/templates-and-examples.md
but personalize:
LinkedIn connection request: [Drafted]
LinkedIn message after acceptance: [Drafted]
Email to hiring manager: [Drafted]
Referral request to connection: [Drafted]
4. Portfolio/Proof Assets
(ready to share):
Resume tailored to this role (ATS-optimized with keywords)
Cover letter draft (300-400 words, company-specific)
LinkedIn profile updated and keyword-optimized
Portfolio piece URL (if relevant)
One-pager with testimonials + metrics (if using social proof strategy)
5. Tracking Spreadsheet
(initialized):
Set up spreadsheet using template from
/references/templates-and-examples.md
:
Each touchpoint logged with date, channel, contact
Response tracking
Next steps documented
Weekly rollup calculations ready
6. Response Scenarios
(prepared):
If hiring manager responds positively → [Your next step]
If no response after Week 2 → [Your follow-up plan]
If referral comes through → [How you'll leverage it]
If interview scheduled → [Your preparation plan]
Execution Checklist
:
All messages drafted and reviewed
Calendar reminders set for each week's tasks
Tracking spreadsheet ready
All assets (resume, portfolio) finalized and accessible
Clear success criteria defined
Backup plan if primary tactics don't work
Measurement Plan
:
Track these metrics weekly:
Outreach sent: [target: 10-15/week]
Response rate: [target: 20-30%]
Conversations scheduled: [target: 2-3/week]
Pipeline advancement: [applications → screens → interviews]
Post-Campaign
:
After 4 weeks, review:
What worked? (double down on this)
What didn't work? (stop or modify)
Conversion rates by channel
Adjust strategy for next opportunity
Using Bundled Resources
References
/references/job-posting-flags.md
Comprehensive database of red flags and green flags to identify in job postings, with detailed explanations of why each matters. Consult this during Phase 1 for thorough job posting analysis.
/references/templates-and-examples.md
Complete toolkit including:
Self-diagnostic rubric for identifying weak phases
Decision matrix for prioritizing target roles
Job search operating rhythm (daily/weekly/monthly)
Pipeline metrics tracking template
Message templates (LinkedIn, email, referral requests)
Positioning statement formulas
Three real-world case studies with timelines and tactics
KPI tracking spreadsheet template
Visual framework descriptions
Resume bullet and cover letter formulas
Conversational interview question bank
When to use each reference
:
Start with templates file for self-diagnostic before beginning any phase
Use job-posting-flags during Phase 1 analysis
Return to templates for message drafts, tracking setup and examples throughout
Reference case studies when user's situation matches one of the patterns
Best Practices and Tips
Conversational Approach and Coaching Tone
When using this skill with users, maintain a coaching stance rather than consulting stance:
Coaching Stance
(Preferred):
"Tell me about your experience with [X]" → draw out their knowledge
"What excites you about this opportunity?" → understand motivation
"How would you approach [challenge]?" → build their thinking
"I see [strength] in what you shared. Let's build on that." → confidence building
Ask follow-up questions to deepen understanding
Help them see their experience through a fresh lens
Consulting Stance
(Avoid):
Simply telling them what to do without exploration
Overwhelming them with all tactics at once
Making assumptions about their preferences or constraints
Using jargon without explaining
Moving too fast through phases without their input
Pacing
:
First message
Understand their situation, run diagnostic if unclear
Second message
Deep dive on Phase 1 (company analysis) OR Phase 2 (skills matching)
Third message
Continue with remaining phases based on their needs
Throughout
Check in on energy level, adjust depth accordingly
Adaptive Depth
:
Not every conversation needs full four-phase depth. Adjust based on:
Their specific question ("Just tell me about red flags" → focused Phase 1)
Their urgency ("I'm applying tomorrow" → skip Phase 3, fast Phase 4)
Their engagement level (excited → go deep; overwhelmed → simplify)
The opportunity quality (dream job → maximum depth; backup option → abbreviated)
Building Confidence While Being Honest
:
Lead with strengths, then address gaps: "You have strong [X]. We should also develop [Y]."
Frame gaps as "development opportunities" not "failures"
Use "yet" language: "You haven't done [X] yet, but here's how you could..."
Celebrate transferable skills: "That experience actually demonstrates [value] really well"
Be honest about poor fits rather than forcing square pegs into round holes
Red Flags in the Conversation
:
If you notice these, adjust approach:
User has zero enthusiasm → probe deeper on fit, may not be right opportunity
User is defensive about gaps → soften language, build confidence first
User wants shortcuts → explain why research/strategy matters (signal quality)
User is overwhelmed → simplify, focus on one phase at a time, offer operating rhythm structure
General Principles
Quality over quantity
Better to do deep research and thoughtful outreach for 3 companies than spray-and-pray 50 applications
Authenticity over tricks
strategies work best when genuinely matched to your personality and skills
Persistence with boundaries
follow up, but respect "no" signals
Documentation
keep a spreadsheet tracking which tactics you used for each application
Signal over volume
One well-researched application beats ten generic ones
Measurement drives improvement
Track conversion rates to diagnose what's working
Measurement Framework and KPIs
Job search is a funnel. Track these metrics to diagnose breakdowns:
Top of Funnel
(Distribution):
Applications sent per week: [target: 5-10 for quality approach]
Outreach messages sent: [target: 10-15 per week]
Connection requests: [target: 5-10 per week]
Key Metric
Activity volume (are you doing enough?)
Middle of Funnel
(Signal Strength):
Response rate: [target: 20-30% for warm outreach, 5-10% for cold]
Conversations scheduled: [target: 2-3 per week]
Recruiter screens: [target: 10-20% of applications]
Key Metric
Conversion rate (is your signal strong?)
Bottom of Funnel
(Fit):
Interviews scheduled: [target: 30-50% of screens]
Final rounds: [target: 40-60% of interviews]
Offers: [target: 20-30% of final rounds]
Key Metric
Close rate (are you the right fit and interviewing well?)
Diagnostic Decision Tree
:
Low activity volume?
→ Problem: Not doing enough. Solution: Increase daily/weekly rhythm.
High volume but low response rate?
→ Problem: Weak signal (positioning, targeting or message quality).
→ Solution: Revisit Phase 1 (better targeting) and Phase 2 (clearer value prop).
Good response rate but low interview conversion?
→ Problem: Screening/interviewing skills.
→ Solution: Interview prep (separate from this skill focus).
Interviews but no offers?
→ Problem: Either poor fit or interview performance.
→ Solution: Reassess target roles or interview technique.
Weekly Review Questions
:
What's my response rate this week vs. last week?
Which channel/tactic is working best?
Where is my funnel breaking down?
What should I do more of? What should I stop?
Am I on track to hit my timeline goal?
Job Search Operating Rhythm
Consistency beats intensity. Build these into your weekly routine:
Daily Activities
(30-60 minutes):
Morning: Review 2-3 new postings, do red/green flag analysis
Midday: Send 2-3 personalized outreach messages
Evening: Engage with 5-10 posts from target companies/people
Before bed: Update tracking spreadsheet
Weekly Activities
(2-3 hours):
Monday: Pipeline review + plan week's outreach targets
Tuesday/Thursday: Deep research on 1-2 priority companies (full Phase 1)
Wednesday: Apply to 3-5 strategically selected roles
Friday: Weekly metrics review + strategy adjustment
Weekend: Create/improve one portfolio piece or skill development
Monthly Activities
(4-6 hours):
Comprehensive funnel review: What's working? What's not?
Update resume/LinkedIn based on what's resonating
Network expansion: Attend 1-2 events or virtual meetups
Skill development milestone (complete a course module, finish project)
Portfolio refresh: Add new work, remove outdated pieces
When to Adjust Rhythm
:
If unemployed: Can increase daily volume to 2-3 hours
If currently employed: Maintain sustainable rhythm to avoid burnout
If getting traction: Double down on what's working
If no traction after 4 weeks: Major strategy pivot needed (revisit Phase 1-2)
Red Flags for This Process
When using this skill, watch for these signs that additional caution is needed:
Candidate has no enthusiasm for the role (strong signal of poor fit)
Multiple major red flags identified in company research (suggest reconsidering application)
Skills gaps are too significant to bridge in reasonable timeframe
Company culture fundamentally misaligned with candidate's values
Adapting Depth
Not every application needs full four-phase depth:
Quick assessment
User has specific question → jump to relevant phase
Moderate depth
Promising role → abbreviated research, focused skills matching
Full depth
Dream job or highly competitive → complete process with extensive research and multi-tactic strategy Conversation Management Keep skills-matching interview conversational, not interrogative Celebrate strengths authentically while being honest about gaps Help candidates see their experience through fresh lens If candidate gets discouraged, refocus on realistic options and development path Search Strategy Tips When using web search: Be specific with company names (use quotes: "Company Name") Add timeframe qualifiers: "2024 2025" or "past year" For culture research, search employee sentiment: "working at [company]" Glassdoor For leadership assessment: "[CEO name]" interview OR profile For funding: "[company]" Series A OR Series B OR funding Cross-reference information from multiple sources Ethical Guidelines Never suggest misrepresenting skills or experience Be honest about skill gaps while framing development positively Respect company's stated boundaries (if they say "no outreach," honor that) Don't encourage spam or harassment (multi-touch ≠ stalking) Acknowledge when a role may not be a good fit rather than forcing it Follow-Up and Iteration After initial strategy is developed: Encourage user to report back on what tactics are working Adjust strategy based on company responses Celebrate small wins (connection acceptance, informational chat, interview invitation) If multiple rejections, revisit Phase 2 to reassess fit or Phase 3 to strengthen skills Iteration Loops and Continuous Improvement Job search is not linear—it's iterative. Build these feedback loops: Loop 1: Message Optimization (Test and learn) Week 1: Send 10 messages with approach A Week 2: Send 10 messages with approach B Compare response rates → double down on winner Common tests: Subject lines, message length, value prop framing Loop 2: Targeting Refinement (Pattern recognition) Track which company types respond best (size, stage, industry) Track which roles match your skills best (IC vs. leadership, scope) Narrow focus to highest-conversion targets Expand only after establishing pattern of success Loop 3: Skills Validation (Market feedback) If consistent feedback: "You lack [X skill]" → prioritize that in Phase 3 If consistent interest in [Y experience] → emphasize that more Your resume should evolve based on what the market responds to Loop 4: Strategic Pivots (Major course corrections) When to pivot vs. persist: Persist if (give it 6-8 weeks): Getting some positive responses but not closing yet Clear pattern of interest but minor gaps to address Funnel is healthy (response rates 15%+, conversion rates normal) Pivot if (after 6-8 weeks): Response rate < 5% consistently Feedback consistently says you're overqualified or underqualified No enthusiasm for the work (affects your pitch quality) Multiple red flags keep appearing in target companies Common Pivot Scenarios : Too senior/junior for targets → Adjust role level (or company stage) Wrong industry/domain → Shift to adjacent field with better match Unclear positioning → Back to Phase 2 for deeper skills mapping Geographic/comp mismatch → Adjust expectations or location Monthly Retrospective Questions : What surprised me this month? (about market, myself or process) What tactic worked better than expected? What tactic was a waste of time? What feedback did I get repeatedly? (skill gap, positioning issue, etc.) Am I still excited about these target roles? Or do I need to reassess? What's the one thing I should change next month? Success Patterns to Amplify : If video outreach gets 40% response rate → make more videos If referrals convert 3x better than cold → prioritize referral hunting If certain companies respond fast → research similar companies If specific skill gets mentioned positively → lead with that more Failure Patterns to Address : If no responses to cold email → stop cold email, try different channel If rejected after interview consistently → interview prep needed (outside this skill) If "overqualified" feedback → target more senior roles or emphasize growth interest If "not enough experience" → strengthen Phase 3 proof assets When to Get External Help This skill optimizes strategy and execution, but some situations need additional support: Consider a career coach when : Fundamentally unclear on career direction (Phase 2 keeps revealing confusion) Severe confidence issues affecting pitch quality Need accountability and structure Interview skills are the bottleneck (outside this skill's scope) Consider a resume writer when : Document layout/ATS optimization is weak Struggling to articulate achievements effectively Want professional polish for executive-level applications Consider a recruiter when : Breaking into a new industry where you lack connections Targeting specific companies with active recruiter relationships Senior-level roles where recruiter networks matter more This skill complements but doesn't replace : Interview preparation Salary negotiation Career direction clarity work Emotional/psychological support during job search Final Reminders Job search is a system, not a event : Consistent daily/weekly activities beat sporadic bursts of effort. Measure everything : Without metrics, you're flying blind. Track conversion rates religiously. Quality signal beats quantity : Ten well-researched, personalized approaches beat 100 generic applications. Adapt based on data : Your strategy should evolve weekly based on what the market tells you. Persistence with intelligence : Keep going, but change tactics when data says something isn't working. Authenticity wins : The best tactics match your natural strengths and genuine interests. The market rewards clarity, proof and smart distribution. This skill gives you the system. Execution and iteration are up to you.
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