Anonymous wrote:
FWIW, I literally addressed my time off in 1 sentence within my cover letter. The hiring committee was 4 women and 2 men and no one ever inquired about it. Thanks again and good luck to everyone who is looking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I seriously don't believe OP. Not even a little bit.
The whole scenario sounds ridiculous. Hiring someone directly for a remote position. And the remote position is an Executive Director role.
I thought the same thing. Not too many exec directors are 100% remote
Oh, please. I know another DC area Exec Director who was remote. Also stayed home for several years with kids. If you are a superstar, you can make it work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I seriously don't believe OP. Not even a little bit.
The whole scenario sounds ridiculous. Hiring someone directly for a remote position. And the remote position is an Executive Director role.
I thought the same thing. Not too many exec directors are 100% remote
Oh, please. I know another DC area Exec Director who was remote. Also stayed home for several years with kids. If you are a superstar, you can make it work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I seriously don't believe OP. Not even a little bit.
The whole scenario sounds ridiculous. Hiring someone directly for a remote position. And the remote position is an Executive Director role.
I thought the same thing. Not too many exec directors are 100% remote
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the snark especially about not believing (one of my favorite comments on DCUM). It's for a small trade association that's moving away from an AMC to a virtual office--everyone will work from home minus local committee meetings/member events.
My best advice is to invest in a great resume and cover letter. Once you get an interview, prepare for it. Go overboard--I spent days putting together a proposal and presentation (some of which was required, but some wasn't). Was I the world's greatest presenter? No, but I gave them some great solutions that were tangible and hit home. I also went "big" with some of those ideas figuring that I only wanted to work at a place that would fit my personality/management style (a very risky move).
FWIW, I literally addressed my time off in 1 sentence within my cover letter. The hiring committee was 4 women and 2 men and no one ever inquired about it. Thanks again and good luck to everyone who is looking.
Thanks OP. Did you have professional help with your resume? If so, would you mind sharing the name of the person/company you used?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the snark especially about not believing (one of my favorite comments on DCUM). It's for a small trade association that's moving away from an AMC to a virtual office--everyone will work from home minus local committee meetings/member events.
My best advice is to invest in a great resume and cover letter. Once you get an interview, prepare for it. Go overboard--I spent days putting together a proposal and presentation (some of which was required, but some wasn't). Was I the world's greatest presenter? No, but I gave them some great solutions that were tangible and hit home. I also went "big" with some of those ideas figuring that I only wanted to work at a place that would fit my personality/management style (a very risky move).
FWIW, I literally addressed my time off in 1 sentence within my cover letter. The hiring committee was 4 women and 2 men and no one ever inquired about it. Thanks again and good luck to everyone who is looking.
Thanks OP. Did you have professional help with your resume? If so, would you mind sharing the name of the person/company you used?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the snark especially about not believing (one of my favorite comments on DCUM). It's for a small trade association that's moving away from an AMC to a virtual office--everyone will work from home minus local committee meetings/member events.
My best advice is to invest in a great resume and cover letter. Once you get an interview, prepare for it. Go overboard--I spent days putting together a proposal and presentation (some of which was required, but some wasn't). Was I the world's greatest presenter? No, but I gave them some great solutions that were tangible and hit home. I also went "big" with some of those ideas figuring that I only wanted to work at a place that would fit my personality/management style (a very risky move).
FWIW, I literally addressed my time off in 1 sentence within my cover letter. The hiring committee was 4 women and 2 men and no one ever inquired about it. Thanks again and good luck to everyone who is looking.
Congrats! What was the wording you used? Personal reasons? Family reasons?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the snark especially about not believing (one of my favorite comments on DCUM). It's for a small trade association that's moving away from an AMC to a virtual office--everyone will work from home minus local committee meetings/member events.
My best advice is to invest in a great resume and cover letter. Once you get an interview, prepare for it. Go overboard--I spent days putting together a proposal and presentation (some of which was required, but some wasn't). Was I the world's greatest presenter? No, but I gave them some great solutions that were tangible and hit home. I also went "big" with some of those ideas figuring that I only wanted to work at a place that would fit my personality/management style (a very risky move).
FWIW, I literally addressed my time off in 1 sentence within my cover letter. The hiring committee was 4 women and 2 men and no one ever inquired about it. Thanks again and good luck to everyone who is looking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I seriously don't believe OP. Not even a little bit.
The whole scenario sounds ridiculous. Hiring someone directly for a remote position. And the remote position is an Executive Director role.
I thought the same thing. Not too many exec directors are 100% remote
As a director myself with WFH options I have to agree. Moving up the ladder has caused my ability to WFH to dwindle. I have 8 direct reports and over 500 people fall under my name on the org chart. I have a ton of meetings, industry events, and speaking engagements....plus I pretty much babysit grown ass adults.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the snark especially about not believing (one of my favorite comments on DCUM). It's for a small trade association that's moving away from an AMC to a virtual office--everyone will work from home minus local committee meetings/member events.
My best advice is to invest in a great resume and cover letter. Once you get an interview, prepare for it. Go overboard--I spent days putting together a proposal and presentation (some of which was required, but some wasn't). Was I the world's greatest presenter? No, but I gave them some great solutions that were tangible and hit home. I also went "big" with some of those ideas figuring that I only wanted to work at a place that would fit my personality/management style (a very risky move).
FWIW, I literally addressed my time off in 1 sentence within my cover letter. The hiring committee was 4 women and 2 men and no one ever inquired about it. Thanks again and good luck to everyone who is looking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I seriously don't believe OP. Not even a little bit.
The whole scenario sounds ridiculous. Hiring someone directly for a remote position. And the remote position is an Executive Director role.
I thought the same thing. Not too many exec directors are 100% remote