Ryan Kahn, a nationally recognized career coach with Dream Careers, Inc., spent part of Thursday speaking with the Minnesota Daily about the best ways to get ahead in the job market. Kahn was also featured on MTVâĂ„Ă´s âĂ„ĂşHired!,âĂ„Ăą a 20-episode documentary series where he helped recent college grads land a job in their dream careers. He recently released a book by the same name.
In this economy, students might be a little scared to go after their dream jobs. How do you suggest they start out on their own?
I wish I had time to help out as many people as I get emails from, but I put together the book as a way that if thereâĂ„Ă´s someone who doesnâĂ„Ă´t have the opportunity, thatâĂ„Ă´s a way that they can get some guidance. ItâĂ„Ă´s not me telling someone what to do; itâĂ„Ă´s more of me creating a path they can follow. I want the reader to create their own success and drive their own career, all I do is give a couple steps and help pave the way.
The economy is tough and the unemployment is high. Should students look for other opportunities for experience outside of their dream career?
No. Even in a tough economy youâĂ„Ă´ve got to keep moving toward it. But if you have a passion itâĂ„Ă´s not always a straight and narrow path to get there.
âĂ„¦The key is always travelling toward your passion, and not taking sacrifices. It would be a detriment to say âĂ„Ăşoh, I canâĂ„Ă´t get a job, so IâĂ„Ă´m just going to work in retail.âĂ„Ăą No âÄì there are jobs out there, you just have to be creative in how to get one. IâĂ„Ă´m confident someone can land one if theyâĂ„Ă´re really passionate and willing to take risks.
WhatâĂ„Ă´s the best way for students to build up their resume?
The best way is internships. IâĂ„Ă´m a huge advocate of internships and the value that they bring. I have a quote: âĂ„Ăşnetwork is net-work.âĂ„Ăą If youâĂ„Ă´re able to get in there and complete a lot of internships and meet a lot of people âÄì make a great impression âÄì youâĂ„Ă´re going to put yourself in a much better position to be hired. Part of that is, when youâĂ„Ă´re at your internship donâĂ„Ă´t just be another intern, be the best intern theyâĂ„Ă´ve ever seen. If you make that kind of impression on a boss, as soon as thereâĂ„Ă´s a job opening they know about, you can bet that theyâĂ„Ă´re going to say âĂ„ĂşIâĂ„Ă´ve got the person for that job âĂ„Ă® sheâĂ„Ă´s right here.âĂ„Ăą
What skills can students highlight that employers are looking for?
Social media âĂ„Ă® itâĂ„Ă´s so important and every business realizes how important it is. And honestly, the people that are best at social media are people that are in college. TheyâĂ„Ă´re on the cutting edge of whatâĂ„Ă´s cool, whatâĂ„Ă´s hot âĂ„Ă® they live it, they breathe it. If you can prove that youâĂ„Ă´re a master at it, it can help open additional doors to the position youâĂ„Ă´re going after. If you can bring to the table, âĂ„ĂşI took my twitter account from 1,000 followers and now I have 100,000 followers,âĂ„Ăą theyâĂ„Ă´re going to be like âĂ„ĂşWhoa! How the heck did you do that, and how can you do that for us?âĂ„Ăą College students can really leverage social media to their advantage. Businesses get that thatâĂ„Ă´s important. They just donâĂ„Ă´t know how to do it as well as college students do.
What do you suggest to make a good impression during an interview?
The best way to go into an interview is to already know the boss. The way to do that is to already do an interview with them. They already know your work ethic; they already know you from around the office. ThatâĂ„Ă´s the best way. ThatâĂ„Ă´s ideally where IâĂ„Ă´d want someone to be, but maybe youâĂ„Ă´re coming into an interview cold, and youâĂ„Ă´ve never met them. My best advice is to do a couple things. First, know yourself really well. If youâĂ„Ă´re able to talk about yourself really easily and all of your work experiences, and all the things youâĂ„Ă´ve accomplished âÄì thatâĂ„Ă´s going to give you that boost. The next thing to do is study up on them. If you know everything about them and what their company does, youâĂ„Ă´re going to feel confident if they ask âĂ„Ăşwhat can you do for us?âĂ„Ăą or âĂ„Ăşwhy do you want to work here?âĂ„Ăą I think with those two tips, youâĂ„Ă´ll feel calm, cool, no curveballs will come your way because you know yourself really well, and you know what youâĂ„Ă´re going after.
Can you talk about the MTV show you were on?
Last year, we ran 20 episodes of âĂ„ĂşMTV Hired.âĂ„Ăą It was a ton of fun, it was a blast. We helped a lot of real people get real jobs on the show. Right now there arenâĂ„Ă´t plans for more episodes coming out, but the whole experience was amazing and I was very happy to have been a part of it.
Any final advice?
The one message I try to get across as best as I can is, itâĂ„Ă´s very comfortable to spend the summer at home and work at the local retail store, but IâĂ„Ă´m always so impressed with somebody that actually takes risks and goes for what they are truly passionate about. Sometimes that means that you have to fly out to L.A. or New York because you want to work in the fashion industry. I really admire people that take those kinds of risks. ItâĂ„Ă´s not easy, but thereâĂ„Ă´s great reward for those that do that.
Episodes of the MTV show can also be seen here: http://www.mtv.com/shows/hired/video.jhtml?filter=fulleps