Five mistakes to avoid in your not-for-profit job application
Lois Freeke
NGO Recruitment manager of Asia-Pacific and International Lois Freeke shares the most common mistakes she sees from job applicants.˜
NGO Recruitment consultants receive hundreds of applications daily and are trained to carefully screen them to identify the candidates who most closely match our client?s brief. If you are not having any luck with your non-profit career applications, make sure you are avoiding these common mistakes to increase your chances of being invited to an interview in an NGO.
Mistake #1 Not following application instructions
Make sure you follow the application advice when you apply, many candidates will omit a well-written cover letter which can make the difference between being invited to an interview ? or not. Check to ensure you are applying for a position that you have valid working rights for. Positions in Australia will usually require you to be a citizen or have residency and working rights, and positions we advertise for Asia/international will usually state if sponsorship is available. If a cover letter is requested, you should include one. You should address the skills and experience required in your application, both in your resume and cover letter. If you do not meet most of the criteria and you cannot demonstrate any related transferable experience, you might consider if it is a good use of your time to apply and wait for a more suitable opportunity. You can also send your resume for inclusion on our database and check our postings regularly for updates. Candidates who apply for every vacancy regardless of their suitability will not be helping build their professional personal brand.˜ It is better to selectively contact our consultants with a quality application. Usually, a Word document is preferred.Mistake #2 Not tailoring your application
A generic cover letter or resume shows you have not tailored it to the job and will detract from your application, it may mean your application gets less attention, or is not progressed if it appears to be irrelevant. A cover letter is a chance to brand yourself as a well-qualified candidate, especially if you are missing some of the required experience. You can also explain any special circumstances (such as a planned relocation, an employment gap, or a transition from another sector or job function) and your motivation for the role and the organisation?s cause in your cover letter. This is very important to include on not-for-profit sector applications. Make sure your cover letter is well written and addresses the key selection criteria identified in the advertisement you responded to or via the position description we?ve sent you, so the consultant reading it will want to read more in your resume. Do not copy chunks of your resume in your cover letter, it is better to paraphrase in your cover letter for maximum effect rather than repeat the same content.˜ NGO Recruitment often receives applications with resumes not tailored to the job the candidate is applying for, and our consultants then check the cover letter to see if there is any additional information to help them assess it, but often the cover letter is a generic one, or it?s not included at all. It is true that an experienced recruitment consultant is well trained to first scan your resume to see if you appear to meet the key selection criteria before reading on. If your resume?s heading, summary, and skills section are not communicating your strengths and unique point of value, your application may not be progressed. Your resume and cover letter:- Should have a clear and modern format
- Should be easy to read and scan
- Must communicate your fit to the key selection criteria
- Must demonstrate the previous roles? responsibilities and achievements
- Must demonstrate your commitment or connection to the organisation?s mission