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SharePoint Joel's SharePoint Land > Posts > 10 Ways to a SharePoint Job
10 Ways to a SharePoint Job

The MS news was depressing add that to everyone else that’s laying off and there are a few people looking for work.  I posted a while ago how SharePoint is recession proof.  Phil shares his comments on SharePoint and the Economy. I don’t want it to get anyone down, but there are some social ways of getting SharePoint jobs.

chrispoteet Still looking for that elusive SharePoint consulting job. 9:27 PM Jan 17th from TwitterFon

Good job Colligo, on setting high numbers and helping us see there are SharePoint ISV companies that are doing well despite the odds.

 

1. Join a SharePoint User Group – it’s great for networking, but as well companies often are recruiting and looking for help at the User Group.  Don’t be afraid to speak up and connect.  For info on a user group near you go to sharepointpros.org (ISPA)

2. Tap into twitter.  Twitter and all that noise?  Yep, there are multiple recruiters who tweet SharePoint jobs by city or region all day long and you can follow those recruiters.

Recent Twitter Traffic:

gaylord_focker: Work at home jobs Seeking SharePoint Tester (Toronto, ON): QA Engineer THIS IS A WORK FROM HOME.. http://tinyurl.com/92y97s

masterdwarf: needs a Sharepoint Developer or extensive OLAP experience. contract to hire. high profile role in multibillion dollar company. #jobs

GetGraDesigJobs: Sharepoint Development Lead / Interactive Design - Bellevue, WA (http://tinyurl.com/98zy6u) Get Graphic Design Jobs

prithvy: JOB: Sharepoint 2007 in SW suburbds of Chicago - Long term contract

TIP: If you can’t stand twitter, you can still subscribe to the twitter feed in your favorite RSS reader with a search term like “SharePoint” or “SharePoint and Job”.  That way you don’t have to sit and wait for someone to say something interesting.  (You don’t have to anyway if you know what you’re doing.)

3. LinkedIn – I see linked in as nearly the defacto way to build a solid reputation and background and way to network in the world of today and tomorrow.  Resume’s are old school and are helpful for people that aren’t familiar with the internet.  Linked in communities around SharePoint expertise are often communicating that they are looking for people with skills.  Don’t spam the groups, but look at what the recruiters are doing there.  Use your LinkedIn Status to tell people what you are looking for.

4. Local SIs (systems integrators) – Whether you want to be a consultant or are in between jobs, connecting with your local systems integrators and even the national ones are always looking to find people to fit contracts they have.  It can be a roller coaster, and may sound too good to be true.  Sometimes it is, and sometimes you find the job.  Many SIs don’t advertise their jobs.  They go by word of mouth, so reaching out and telling them what your experience and skills are will help get the word out.  Talk to your MS friends to find these local systems integrators.  There are tons of ‘em.  You don’t have to create your own, while that sounds fun.  There’s a lot of secrets, I learned and shared some of these secrets to independent consulting.

5. Reach out to SharePoint MVPs and friends – Despite the down market, there is serious SharePoint work out there still.  It has not gone away your network of friends may be aware of companies that are hiring.  I believe they still say networking is the #1 way to land a good job.  While some companies are no longer recruiting, for the right person they will make room. 

6. Speaking at Code Camps/SharePoint Saturdays/.NET and SharePoint User Groups – If speaking is a skill and you have something to say, I’ve found that the regional events are a great way to get visibility and *Very* often someone comes up and says hey I have this problem.  They like your solution and they ask how they can get you to work on it.  These could easily turn into FTE or Contract positions.

7. Facebook? – Yes social networks are a way to stay connected to the community.  On both your linked in and Facebook profile you should update your STATUS to say “Skilled XXX looking for XXX SharePoint position.”  Dust off your dice.com, monster.com, and … profiles.  With 1745 jobs with the term “SharePoint” on dice.com there is plenty to wade through, there are even more with interesting meta data around them to help you narrow by experience, education, type, .  The technology can help you keep tuned in.

8. Diversify your skills and job search – Remember SharePoint is HUGE.  If you have experience in Collab, it isn’t that much of a stretch to look at Doc Management, and then Records Management.  Is Program Management and Product Management and Project Management different?  Sure it is, but it isn’t tough to learn the other disciplines.  Support can look up to Ops and Ops can look to Engineering, and Engineering to Technology Architect and so on.  Don’t be afraid to stretch.  Start a blog or promote your blog when you’re bored.  It’s only cool when people are reading it.

9. Stay Positive – The cool thing with social networks… you can stay active in the community and not let your skills go to waste.  There are many non profit companies, charities, and codeplex projects even that could use your service and that experience can lead to real jobs.  The better connected you are, and the more visibility the more likely you’ll get offers and loops.  I’m not saying spam anything.  You can and will get dissed/de-listed by your friends and the various social groups if you use them inappropriately.  Contribute.

10. Certification – While some would complain that the MCTS is too easy for WSS and MOSS, it will set you apart from the next guy.  Even passing one test will help set you a part to a company looking for a “SharePoint” person vs. someone who doesn’t.  Even if you’re in a company it helps on retention.

Bonus: Get more familiar with SharePoint Online Cloud and Hosting based services, as the $$ gets tighter and companies look to pinch pennies you’ll see hosted services for corporations become more mainstream.

I was looking at the current jobs on Monster and trends are… they want 2-6 years of experience with a bachelors degree and most likely in the computer industry, but not exclusively.  All industries do appear to have SharePoint work with 90% of them in IT or Dev.

Years of Experience
Posted By Industry Education
  • 2+ to 5 Years (242)
  • 5+ to 7 Years (218)
  • 7+ to 10 Year... (66)
  • 1+ to 2 Years (42)
  • 10+ to 15 Yea... (23)
  • Less than 1 Y... (7)
  • Today (77) Yesterday (158)

    Last 3 days (272)

    Last 7 Days (411)

    Last 14 Days (670)

    Last 30 days (971)

    Last 60 days (1419)

  • Computer/IT S... (581)
  • Computer Soft... (375)
  • Aerospace and... (85)
  • Other/Not Cla... (84)
  • Computer Hard... (81)
  • Government an... (76)
  • Internet Serv... (63)
  • more...
  • Comments

    single best way...

    ...is to get skilled up. all this social networking crap won't help if you can't implement. it's about skills not buzz
    at 1/22/2009 5:32 PM

    It takes skills and the buzz

    I think you may have missed the point of the post... It's illustrating how to get a job.  Obviously if my background is knitting, i'm not going to look for a SharePoint job (although it does require attentiont to detail as well).
     
    I believe Joel was trying to give folks out there that already have experience with SharePoint, some new ideas on how to promote yourself. 
     
    It doesn't matter if you are a Microsoft Certified SharePoint Master - if you just sit on the couch in your living room pouting you don't have a job - there are other ways to look for one other than just activating a resume on Monster.
     
    Most job openings are filled before they even make it to a listing on a career board.  Sometimes, it really is about who you know and not what you know.  That's for getting the job, once you get it, yes your skills better be up for the job.
     
    I will agree that anyone in IT should constantly be evaulating their skill set and improving it.  And if unemployeed its a great time to do so.  But you still have to let people know that you have those skills.
     
    Dan Lewis
    at 1/22/2009 6:01 PM

    Great post especially in this difficult time

    Dan you hit it right on the nail, the person who commented first totally missed the point, these days your chances of getting hired through a referal or through connections you make via various social networking tools (twitter, facebook, linkedin, etc) are far greater. Although its annoying sometimes I get too many requests through facebook, linkedin etc, I still respond and keep the connections, you never know when u going to need them.
     
    at 1/22/2009 6:29 PM

    Excellent Post.

    Shadeed Eleazer -
     
    Right around mid-July 2008, I did a presentation on Understanding the SharePoint Job Market for the Baltimore SharePoint Users Group. I started off from the technical perspective and the second half was a staffing professional to close things out from the IT Staffing angle.
     
    It was really well received and the feedback was:
     
    1.) Finding SharePoint talent is very difficult for many professionals to do. 2.) Hiring the 'right' skillsets prove to be even tougher with certain gray areas such as Developers doing configurations and administrators doing coding.
     
    This is a great post.
    at 1/23/2009 8:07 AM

    I didn't miss the point at all

    you know - I'm not an idiot - I didn' miss the point. There's nothing per se wrong with "marketing" yourself using the systems Joel mentions in the post.
     
    However, the insidious trend of self promotion will never replace skills in the marketplace. You might land a job via agents that don't know anything by having a "profile" but the people who make hiring decisions in real companies don't care.
     
    I've never landed a gig by my web site, blog, or anything else like that - I get gigs because of my reputation in the marketplace. and that has nothing to do with any of the social sites whatsoever.
     
    Most hiring managers of any salt know how to use google, they are likley to check how much time you are likely to spend on twitter versus working.
     
    And as for Monster - well that's just as bad... :)
     
     
     
     
    at 1/23/2009 8:39 AM

    Excellent Post.

    Shadeed Eleazer -
     
    Right around mid-July 2008, I did a presentation on Understanding the SharePoint Job Market for the Baltimore SharePoint Users Group. I started off from the technical perspective and the second half was a staffing professional to close things out from the IT Staffing angle.
     
    It was really well received and the feedback was:
     
    1.) Finding SharePoint talent is very difficult for many professionals to do. 2.) Hiring the 'right' skillsets prove to be even tougher with certain gray areas such as Developers doing configurations and administrators doing coding.
     
    This is a great post.
    at 1/23/2009 9:08 AM

    SharePoint Job Site

    You may also want to check out the SharePoint Jobs site. Filtering usually displays more search results.
    at 1/28/2009 5:19 AM

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