Prioritizing Your Job Search While Holding Down a Full-Time Job

Episode 453 | Author: Emilie Aries

How do you make time for your job search when you’re already working full-time?

Searching for a new job can often feel like a full-time endeavor itself. So, what are you supposed to do when you still have a full-time job? How do you prioritize finding a new career path that inspires and invigorates you without completely exhausting yourself in the process?

If it’s a matter of a week or so, sure, you can go full-tilt, scouring job boards into the wee hours of the morning and pushing through your workdays bleary-eyed and fuzzy-brained. But the reality of the modern job market is that it usually takes a whole lot longer—in fact, the average time to hire for a position went from 40 to 44.5 days in just five years. 

You can’t sprint nonstop for months on end, so here are some tips for prioritizing sustainability over the sprint and making meaningful progress on your job search.

Script your next moves

When your job search time is precious, you want to be able to dive right into the most productive steps as soon as your window of opportunity opens. If you’ve already brainstormed a list of meaningful actions to take, you can skip the mental work of deciding what’s next and instead, jump right in and get going.

Keep your list of SMART to-dos (specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound) stocked up with useful goals, not just vanity metrics. When you’re coming off a full day at work, changing your LinkedIn photo for the fourth time might feel like a morale-boosting task—at least it’s something—but it’s unlikely to be as impactful as, say, taking the next step toward an essential certification or reaching out to the first couple of names on your networking list. Listen to the episode Grow Your Professional Network In The New Year for some practical tips for growing this list.

Solidify your job application strategy

One of the steps on your to-do list, of course, is to apply for jobs. But going at this in an ad-hoc manner, skimming the listings with one eye while you watch TV in the evenings, is inefficient. Here’s an example of the kind of job search routine I suggest instead:

  1. Decide on one day a week when you will browse the new postings. Sit down for an hour or so and comb through them, earmarking the best ones. You can set a goal for the number of applications you want to send per week; even one is a great place to start.

  2. Schedule time the following day to start the process for the prospective job you’ve prioritized. Even if there are a few promising leads that week, single out the best one. Get your resume shored up and create the first (possibly crappy) version of your cover letter. Check out the episode Your Cover Letter Is Better With Bullet Points for some tips!

  3. Rather than painstakingly drafting and redrafting and getting into a perfection procrastination loop, let that first draft sit overnight. Wait a day or two, let it simmer in the back of your mind, before you go back to tweak it or seek feedback from a friend or family member.

  4. Identify a day of the week by which point you hope to release the most recent application out into the world. 

This process keeps you accountable in a sustainable way. Just make sure you’re tracking how many applications you’re submitting. That’s your #1 KPI (key performance indicator) for your job search!

A caveat to this: even the best-laid plans hit snags. If you’ve chosen Thursday as your application deliver-by date and sometimes they don’t get out til Saturday—hey, you’ve still hit your weekly goal. Remember that you have another full-time job, plus full-time adulting going on in the wings, Go easy on yourself!

Decide what gets deprioritized

As someone who fully supports the importance of striking a balance in life and work, this third tip stings a bit to share, but it’s a reality when job searching is your side hustle: you’re going to have to give something up.

I spent the last year job search mode myself, and this is one of my top takeaways. From the start, I knew what I wasn’t willing to give up: quality time with family. Those hours between daycare pickup and bedtime are a non-negotiable no-work time for me, and that meant I had to find time elsewhere.

This ended up being the two-ish sweet hours between my 2-year-old son’s bedtime and my own. Once he was down for the night, I dedicated myself to checking things off my own SMART to-do list. Much as I might be craving the couch, I said goodbye to staring at the TV or reading a book. What I found was that what started out as an exhausting add-on, over time became energizing as the new narrative I was creating for myself started to unfold.

The important piece here is to make a conscious decision about what you’re going to let slide. If you don’t, the choice is going to be made for you, and a lot of the time, it’s the job search itself that you’ll wind up putting off.

So, make the difficult choice. And if you have to bribe yourself with a post-hustle reward like a cookie or an episode of your favorite mindless show…hey, do what you gotta do. Tempting my sweet tooth certainly worked for me!

I want to end by assuring you that I know what a ridiculous slog the job search has become. These steps are important, but they definitely aren’t easy. The time commitment required to find a job these days is outrageous—I hear you and I wholeheartedly agree. 

Have you figured out what does (or doesn’t) work for you in the part-time job search? Come by the Courage Community on Facebook or join us in our group on LinkedIn to share your experience and what you’ve learned along the way.

If you’re at a loss about what to do next, consider our HIRED Job Search Accelerator. It’s an on-demand, binge-able course geared to helping you navigate the nuances of the modern job search.

Related Links From Today’s Episode:

Episode 435, Grow Your Professional Network in the New Year

Episode 449, Your Cover Letter is Better With Bullet Points

Episode 450, Entrepreneurship vs. Employment: Building a Blended Career

Switch: How to Change Things When Change is Hard by Chip and Dan Heath

Drop the Ball: Achieving More by Doing Less by Tiffany Dufu

S*** First Drafts by Anne Lamott

Time To Hire Factbook by Josh Bersin

HIRED: my Job Search Accelerator

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

Accelerate your job search now:

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