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IMPACT Payments Recruiting

7/19/18 – Expert Tips on How to Navigate the ATS

July 23, 2018 by Susan Lamphiear

ATS TipsWritten by Susan Lamphiear

Inundated with too many job applications to handle, companies of all sizes are routinely turning to the ATS–the Applicant Tracking system–for help. Frustrating as it is for the job seeker, this ATS has become one of several strategies companies use to electronically and quickly screen resumes for open positions. So the savvy job seeker today must understand the ATS and then design a resume that can be as ATS proof as possible– to have a fighting chance of nabbing one of the coveted job interviews. And maybe the job.

Keynote

An ATS is not inherently bad, though, as our keynote speaker Jackie Schierenberg explained to attendees. But last year Dignity Health reviewed over 550,000 resumes, so they regularly use the ATS.  She came to Scottsdale Career Connectors to give job seekers tips for getting noticed during the job hunt—including getting past the ATS screening.  Working for Dignity Health for 14 years, and in Talent Acquisition for over 20 years, Jackie leads her current team of 10 to fill both those hard-to-fill positions as well as leadership positions. Her team scours the internet in search of talent. The ATS has become a very important tool.

Tips for Getting that Job Interview, including Surviving the ATS “Cut”

  • Leave out what used to be called the “objective” section on a resume. Instead, spend time describing how you add value to the company. Use active verbs.
  • The Skills section is THE most important section from the standpoint of the ATS.
  • Do your homework.  Create your resume carefully. For example, find out if the company you’re targeting uses the term “nurse” or “RN” so the ATS system understands you. Make sure you’re using the recent lingo of the industry–or of that company in particular.
  • Read the minimum requirements and then make sure you use key words on your resume to describe–in those terms where possible– your qualifications.
  • Font type— Don’t get fancy or the ATS might not recognize what you’re saying. Same with bullets.
  • Sometimes ATS can’t read PDF files so consider submitting just a regular MS Word file.
  • Remember– Recruiters can specifically target the experience section. It’s Jackie’s favorite place to search. So craft this section carefully.

Q & A with Jackie and Scottsdale Career Connectors Attendees

  • As a recruiter, she’s paid to be on the phone, so she advises–be bold–call recruiters and hiring managers. Jackie said she will take your call even if it’s only five minutes and at least give some advice. As part of your homework, find hiring managers via linked in and then google to find their phone numbers.
  •  Cover letters can be great, but integrate them into one document that includes the letter and the resume. This forces the reader to look at the cover letter. It’s not reviewed like a resume, but if there’s something compelling that’s not in your resume, then include it in your letter. As a recruiter, Jackie says she reads very few cover letters. But there are always exceptions. Her husband included a cover letter to explain why he went into architecture. I believe he got both the interview and the job.
  • Dignity Health uses an ATS that can search the resume, the attachments, and experience sections.
  • The ATS system looks for specific “hard” job skills. But not soft skills. The company will figure out your soft skills in the interview.
  • Number of pages in a resume. Just be sure your experience on the resume is recent or relevant. She doesn’t believe in a limiting one-pager resume. Instead, she suggests you include enough to get the point across.
  • Address versus no address on the resume. She sees many resumes without addresses. She personally doesn’t include an address on her resume, but her cell phone indicates where she lives anyway. With pre-screening questions, distance from work is often revealed;  in nursing, for example, at times a nurse might be required to come to the hospital within 30 minutes after being called. So location becomes important.
  • Dignity doesn’t use a personality test as part of the application. That tended to bog down the application process for them. But Dignity relies heavily on the behavioral interview instead.
  • In some states, employers are no longer allowed to ask what salary you currently make. But they can ask what your salary expectations are. That’s different than “What are you making?” She reminds us of the well-known phrase that “The one who talks money first, loses.” But as a candidate you can answer by asking the question, “What salary do you feel is commensurate with my skills and experience?”

Jackie tells us the company she works for, Dignity Health, doesn’t use robots—yet.  But they use the ATS. And as they say, ATSs are definitely trending now.  Jackie advises job seekers  to be prepared and realize ATS systems are being used by many companies of all sizes. She recommends you design your resume with the ATS in mind so you’ll be able to compete for that dream job.

Hiring Companies

Bank of the West

Doug Deyo, Corporate Recruiter

Bank of the West has a location in Tempe starting in October of 2017, but employs 10,500 team members across 23 states, servicing over two million customers. Open positions span a variety of areas including managers and analysts, customer service, Admin/Human Resources, accounting, IT, and loan officers.

The company prides itself on a diverse culture, encouraging team members to share their voice/opinion to help advance the organization. The company offers several benefits including complete medical, tuition reimbursement, generous paid time off, company holidays, and discounted banking rates.

For more information on the company or to apply, visit their website.

IMPACT Payments Recruiting

Marc Badalucco, Managing Partner

IMPACT Payments Recruiting has been around since 2000, focusing exclusively on the payment and cards industries worldwide. They specialize in working with senior to executive-level roles, both on a permanent and contract basis. They employ 15 in-house employees across the U.S., with more than 130 contract employees in Arizona.

IMPACT works within every area including product, sales, marketing, compliance, IT, and operations. Many benefits to working with IMPACT include the company working closely with you throughout the entire process including resume prep, interviewing, and salary negotiations.  IMPACT has many contacts in place with companies in the Valley, and those offering remote work.

Current openings include VP of Technology, Account Manager, Sr. Web Developer, Sr. Risk and Credit Specialist, Director of Underwriting, Sr. Director of Risk, Net Developer, Data Scientist, Sr. QA Automation Engineer, and Technical Architect.

For more information or to contact them, visit their website. Send your resume and one of their executive recruiters will contact you.

Allstate

Nate Smith, Senior LSP Recruiter

Allstate offers a variety of insurance products throughout the United States and appears #84 on the Fortune 500 list. The company has over 10,000 Alllstate Agency owners. The company always seeks employees in information technology, HR, product, claims and sales management, plus exclusive financial specialists, agency owners, and licensed sales producers.

Advantages to owning your own Allstate Agency include no franchise fee (though there is a startup investment) and the ability to leave the business to heirs. Because Allstate is a national brand, agency owners benefit from the big marketing plan which gives credibility to their individual offices. For anyone who has no insurance experience, Allstate will help prepare owners for their careers–including licensing.

Allstate also offers a Military Program for veterans. Click here for more information.

For more information on all other positions, or becoming an Allstate licensed sales professional, visit their website.

Resources

Woz U

John Bernard, Director of Business

Woz U was founded October 17, 2017 by one of Apple’s founders, Steve Wozniak. Woz U seeks to bring opportunities in the technology field to the masses, provide quality education to their students, launch students into a technology field, create a community of developers who help one another during the program and beyond, and offer lifetime support to each of their students.

The school teaches Java, JavaScript, .NET, Ruby on Rails, Data Science, and Cyber Security. Except for Cyber Security, all programs are entry level and required no background or experience.

John showed a video showing the success story of a Phoenix technology student who became homeless during his course of study, received assistance from the school, and went on to accept a great job as soon as he completed the Woz U program.

For more information, visit their website.

Closing

Executive Director of Career Connectors Jessica Pierce closed the formal part of the meeting and thanked the host, Highlands Church of Scottsdale; guests including keynote speaker and hiring companies; and volunteers. She then invited attendees to take advantage of the breakout sessions: meeting with hiring companies and training resources, getting advice from resume writers and LinkedIn coaches, and receiving free professional headshots from the professional photographer on site.

The next event for the Scottsdale location will be held Thursday, August 16, 2018, at 9 AM.

For a complete list of events along with times, locations, and speakers, see the information to the right of this blog. Or go to the events’ section of this website.

Filed Under: Event Recaps Tagged With: Jackie Shierenberg, woz-u, Bank of the West, ATS, Allstate, IMPACT Payments Recruiting, career transition

8/23/16 – The Power of You

August 26, 2016 by Chris Layfield

Power of You graphicWritten by: Chris Layfield

Opening

Jessica Pierce, Executive Director of Career Connectors, opened and closed the meeting today with some key comments:

  • Take advantage of the free stuff!  The DISC assessment under the [Job Seekers] and [Resources] tabs of the Career Connectors website, and the PBJ Book of Lists
  • Get connected to the weekly email, check the event recap, and join the LinkedIn Group Discussion
  • Consider volunteering – looking for photographers, writers, A/V support, and LinkedIn Coaches

Keynote

Wade Thomas, founder and principal of Aim to Win

How can you get so comfortable in your own skin that your interviews come from the heart and not your memories of your Google searches for answers to standard interviews questions?

Like a lot of things in life, Wade Thomas says it’s easy to take for granted how much we know ourselves which leads to interviews feeling more like interrogations than conversations.  The goal of the interview should be to get the right job at the right company and not to manipulate the company to hire you for a job you’re not a fit for.  In fact, many good recruiters and hiring managers can differentiate between someone who is speaking from the heart and someone who is speaking from memorization.

Seem a little too fluffy?  Wade provided some guidance for making this real:

1) Establish your vision: You have to be career-focused, not job-focused.  If the job fits into your career plan, you seem like a “plan-ful” person in your thinking.  Hiring managers think the way you are behaving in a job search is the way you will behave in a job.  Watch out for impulse shopping on the job boards, where you think you can do this or that job, but you haven’t fit it into the narrative of your career story.

2) Know yourself:  Think about what your core values are, not what they should be – it’s big tendency to think about what they should be.  What do your core values look like?  What won’t you tolerate?

3) Know your brand: What consistently makes you unique, memorable, valuable, and trustworthy.  85% of job seekers are not thinking about their brand – just by thinking about it, you are standing out.  Don’t be one of those that develops a brand for each company – it has to be consistently you.

4) Know your talents: Talents are special attributes that allow you to do something well.  Think about stories that represent your best accomplishments and what you brought to bear to achieve those accomplishments.  You need to prove it to yourself first before you try to prove it to employers.  Don’t fall into the trap of thinking talents are just experiences and resume data.

5) Value proposition: Now that you know where you are heading and how you do your best work, you can articulate what’s in it for the company.  Turn your self-knowledge into an offer to the company:  “I help companies do X, by …”

Once you feel really good about the authenticity of your vision, your values, your brand, and your talents, you’ll ask better questions.  Unlike the questions you will find on Google, your questions are authentic and will make the recruiter think.  Don’t be afraid to turn down the offer if it’s not a good fit.

One job seeker asked, “Once you formulate your brand, what’s the best way to present it?”  Wade said it has to permeate everything – your elevator pitch, your references, and the answers you give in the interview.  If you believe it and have lived it, it will.

Hiring Companies

TriZetto

Lora Strachan, Senior Recruiter

TriZetto is a maker of healthcare software products.  TriZetto is part of the growing IT Healthcare industry, so they can offer long-term career stability and growth.  They have an office in Ahwatukee; flexible schedules and work arrangements are common.  Benefits are effective day 1.  TriZetto is currently looking for:

  • Product Owner Team Lead
  • Senior Software Engineer (TIBCO)
  • Technical Analyst
  • Senior Product Manager
  • Sales Director (West)
  • Senior Strategic Account Executive (East)
  • Associate and Senior Corporate Counsel roles
  • Team Leads for Quality Control and Data Entry

Community Bridges

Amy Little-Hall, Director of HR

Community Bridges is a fast-growing, statewide system of care for behavioral health.  They have over 29 facilities and more than 36 programs.  Due to their fast growth, 24/7 operating hours, and promotion from within, they are currently hiring for a number of jobs across the state.  Some examples of current openings in the Phoenix metro area include: Licensed Counselor, Medical Assistant, Benefits Specialist, Practice Manager, Quality Audit Administrator, Peer Support Specialist, Navigators, EMTs, Integrated Care RNs, Admissions Coordinators, and Crisis Interventionists.  At Community Bridges, you begin accruing paid time-off immediately.

You can search for jobs by starting here.

IMPACT Payments Recruiting

Marc Badalucco, Head of Sales & Business Development

IMPACT Payments Recruiting is a 3rd party staffing agency focused on positions in the payments business and working with partners like Intel, AMEX, Silicon Valley Bank, and Discount Tires.  IMPACT Payments Recruiting advocates for its candidates with hiring managers throughout the talent acquisition process.  The firm is very specialized, which enables them to be very connected in their niche.

They are looking for candidates to fill current openings:

  • Senior Underwriter
  • Regional Sales Executive
  • VP of Sales
  • GM Card Services
  • Mid-Market Sales Executive (SaaS)
  • Support Engineer

Charles Schwab

Amy Munson, Talent Attraction Manager

Schwab is a purpose-driven organization, serving individual, advisor, and employer investment and asset management needs.  Schwab has two primary centers in the Valley: Biltmore has 2500 employees, and Chandler has around 1000 employees and is more IT-focused.  Hot jobs in Phoenix right now include:

  • Broker Training Program
  • Relationship Specialist
  • Estate Services Professional (for processing deceased investor estates)

Schwab is proud of its meritocratic culture, and average tenure of Schwab associates is 8 years.  Schwab believes employees should be financially fit as well and provides on-site advisors.

You can create an online profile, and search for jobs at tiny.cc/CareerConnectors.  If you see a job you are interested in, complete an application there as well.

Resources

Dynamic Worldwide Training Consultants

Roger Brubacher, Director of Continuing Education

Dynamic Worldwide Training Consultants is a professional certification training school with programs that can be funded through government grants, including WIOA, TAA, and GI Bill.

· Project Management and Six Sigma

· Medical Administrative and Coding

· Digital Marketing and Social Media

· IT/Networking/Cybersecurity

Class sizes are small (typically 6:1), and students may retake any class up to 6 months from start date. Look them up at www.DWWWTC.com.

 

Filed Under: Event Recaps Tagged With: IMPACT Payments Recruiting, Aim to Win, Trizetto, Community Bridges, DWWTC, Charles Schwab

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Testimonials

I’ve attended a few of your events in Gilbert and Scottsdale since returning to AZ and being an active job seeker. I’m happy to report that I’ve been offered a job! I’m over the moon about the offer and couldn’t be more grateful after a long, three month search (that definitely felt much longer…. 🙂 ). I want to thank you for your programs. You have excellent speakers who always energized me when I was needing it most. And your resume reviewer was great. She was a tough cookie with a red pen y… Read more
Becky T.
I originally found Career Connectors during a large quarterly networking event and started attending meetings in May/June with a girlfriend who was also laid off. I appreciated all the information, resources, encouragement and genuine support I felt from everyone at Career Connectors. What you are doing is an amazing service for  those of us who find ourselves “displaced” in these tough economic times. The benefit you are providing is not only for those “transitioning” — but also for lo… Read more
Candice T.
I own a Leadership Company, and have enjoyed attending the Career Connector events. With gratitude I listen to the speakers you line up… they offer phenominal and practical information. What has struck me each time has been the audience. My heart hurts for them. They are in a desperate place in their lives. I have had the opportunity speak with a few of the people in attendance, and they have shared their stories… I walk away thankful to God for the opportunity to meet these people and they … Read more
Bonnie M.
This was terrific! Very successful. I’m glad I came!
Maggie D.
I just wanted to reach out to you and say Thank you to you, Career Connectors and the whole Team! So let me explain why, while I’ve known of Career Connectors for many years, I never thought that I would need employment services or guidance before. On September 19th 2019 I found myself being let go from my job. I later the next day saw the Career Connectors event at Central Christian Church Gilbert Campus coming up on Facebook and signed up for it. While attending my first Career Connectors even… Read more
Brian P.
I just wanted to let you know that there’s a reason why I haven’t come to any recent Career Connectors events. It’s because I found a job! This past week, I started working as a data scientist for a technology startup in the financial services space that’s based in downtown Phoenix. It’s an ideal opportunity for me to break into the data science industry with an exciting company. I wanted to thank you and your staff for putting together all of your fantastic networking events and bringing … Read more
Chris M.
Good news. I have landed. Thank you for your support throughout my job search journey. You and your organization has lots to offer besides the positive energy, uplifting of self confidence and immense networking opportunities. I am very appreciative of the efforts and time put forward by you and your team.
Kirtida A.
Thank you for all you do! I’ve been nine loooong months looking for a full-time position and Career Connectors was a real life-line. I was pretty discouraged by the time I found your organization on-line and first visited. The speaker provided some great information but most importantly, encouragement and hope. The panel discussion on resumes was incredibly helpful! Last month I had the opportunity to sit with Brenda and she suggested I really pare back all but the last 10 years of experience an… Read more
Robin C.
Career Connectors offered me a one-stop-shopping capability for all of the coaching, resources and connections I needed to perfect my job searching skills.  The package of services, and support I found while attending these workshops over the past 7 months was unique to, and more productive than any other networking venues I attended. I am thrilled to share that I’ve landed with B/E Aerospace in Tucson.  I recommend to all Job Seekers to find out what works for you, and exploit it for best r… Read more
Aidan F.
If you are a job seeker in transition or looking to find that new great position I highly recommend Career Connectors. The search process has changed significantly over the years and Career Connectors will provide you many tools that will allow you to stand out and demonstrate your unique value to potential employers. At each event I had the opportunity to “sharpen the saw” through top notch expert presentations on image portrayal, positive attitude, networking, social media presence, job… Read more
Joe C.
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