Great question. Probably an obvious answer. The easy answer is, you probably aren't perfect for the job, at least from the recruiter's or hiring manager's perspective. Now that doesn't mean you aren't perfect. It may mean you didn't communicate effectively as to demonstrate just how perfect you are. So you get screened out.
It has been my experience in close to 30 years as a recruiter that candidates too often ignore the competition that also claim to be perfect for the job. As a recruiter in today's economy, we can get 500+ responses to an executive level position, all claiming to be, "perfect." With this volume of resumes, emails, phone calls and referrals, you have to demonstrate you are more perfect than all of the rest.
The real question is, "Have you demonstrated you are more perfect than all the others?" I realize candidates generally have limited information about the position, so demonstrating this can be difficult. It isn't possible to give every screening detail. Anyone who has hired people knows this. Most hiring managers experience the same thing. When you are looking to hire some one you too get resume overload. So how do you prioritize all these resumes, calls, emails, and referrals? Most have set up some sort of checklist to reduce the number to a manageable figure. Some things on the checklist include, industry, company size, compatibility with products, systems, organization, title, turnover, etc. This is important information that is missing from many resumes. The result is you may get screen out or put in the infamous "B" pile.
The next step might be to further read the resumes that passed the checklist to reduce the number even further. It is at this stage that you must really demonstrate that you are perfect for the position. From a recruiter's perspective this is the point where I want to see how your accomplishments align with what the client is looking for in the person they hire to deliver the results. This is the, "So why did I get screened out?" point.
Here are some suggestions that might help you to not get screened out if you really are perfect:
I welcome your thoughts and comments.
Stop Your Job Search Until 2010 – Dumb Move
I get this all the time from candidates I’m working with in our job search coaching program. It usually starts with, “The holidays are here and nobody is hiring during this period.” or “Why look now? I will wait until the new year. It is time for a break.”I’m Getting Interviews But No Offers. WHY?
This was a question a potential job search coaching candidate asked me. Although frustrating, at the same time it is a very good problem to have. At least she was getting interviewsJob Search Stalled? Do What the Pros Do.
If your search isn't delivering the results you want, taking too long, or stalled here are a few tips the pro's do to get it back on track.