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Friday, February 26, 2021

Intern for a Day Lite

 

More information: go.umd.edu/ifad


Intern for a Day Lite will match UMD undergraduate students with professionals working in a field of interest for 30-60 minute virtual informational interviews! Students have access to 270+ professionals

 

CCJS majors may be interested in meeting the professionals working at the following organizations/areas.

 

LAW/LEGAL

Andalman and Flynn, P.C.

DLA Piper LLP (US), Paralegal 

Law Office of Eshigo P. Okasili, LLC

Law Office of Gary Kaufman, PLLC (GVPT Alum '03)

Maryland Judiciary

Maryland Office of Administrative Hearings

State of NJ; Judiciary, Superior Court Judge

Wallace Kleid Law, LLC

Wood Law Offices, LLC

 

LAW ENFORCEMENT, SECURITY & CRIMINAL JUSTICE

Amazon Web Services Associate Cloud Consultant, Cybersecurity

Raytheon CODEX (Cyber Offense and Defense Experts), Cybersecurity

USDA APHIS IES (Investigative and Enforcement Services), Investigation and Compliance Specialist

Montgomery County Police Department, Police Officer

 

GOVERNMENT & CONSULTING

Deloitte, Government Consultant 

Department of Homeland Security, Management and Program Analyst

Insight Technology Solutions, Contractor 

US Department of Labor, Senior Advisor

 

NON-PROFITS & ASSOCIATIONS

American Psychological Association

Community Advocates for Family & Youth, CAFY, Program Manager 

Community Advocates for Family and Youth, Clinical Manager

Joyful Heart Foundation, Policy and Advocacy Consultant

The Literacy Lab

 

MARKETING/HOSPITALITY  

Brand Groupies

Rendia

Ripken Baseball

SAVE The DATE, LLC EVENTS

SmithBucklin

 

CHILD/TEEN DEVELOPMENT

College Park Academy School Counselor 

Greenbelt CARES Youth and Family Services Bureau, Vocational/Educational Counselor

KIPP NYC, Managing Director of Student Support Services

Metropolitan Family Services, Education Manager

Prince George's County Public Schools, School Counselor

Prince George's County Public Schools: Walker Mill Middle School

 

Search for the organizations above and/or view all 270+ professionals participating! 

 

 

Steps to Participate in Intern For a Day, Lite: 

  1. Enroll in and complete the 20-minute asynchronous online orientation between Monday, March 1 and Monday, March 22, 2021 to learn about the program and best practices to conduct an informational interview. It is required to complete the orientation in order to have access to the application.

  2. You will receive the Intern for a Day Lite application on Tuesday, March 23 and you will rank the top 8 professionals you're most interested in talking to through an informational interview.

  3. After you submit your application by the deadline of Sunday, March 28, University Career Center staff members will begin matching students with professionals.

  4. You will be notified of your match by early April 2021!

 

Questions can be directed to ifad@umd.edu. Hosted by the University Career Center. 

 

 


UNESCO Employer information sessions

 


UNESCO Employer information sessions


Interested in gaining career insights and advice on careers in the UN

Consider joining one of the webinars below offered by professionals working at UNESCO. Students from all academic disciplines are invited to hear directly from international professionals working in Costa Rica at UNESCO to learn about their work around 3 major UNESCO programs to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) while also gaining career insights and advice on careers in the UN.

UNESCO is the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. Its purpose is “to contribute to peace and security by promoting collaboration among the nations through education, science and culture in order to further universal respect for justice, for the rule of law, and for the human rights and fundamental freedoms which are affirmed for the peoples of the world, without distinction of race, sex, language or religion”. 

Criminal Law Internship w/ DC Public Defender Service

 

Criminal Law Internship w/ DC Public Defender Service


The Public Defender Service for the District of Columbia is currently accepting applications for the Fall 2021 Criminal Law Internship Program (CLIP). 

The Criminal Law Internship Program (CLIP) at the Public Defender Service for the District of Columbia (PDS) provides undergraduate and graduate students with the fundamental investigative techniques and the relevant criminal law knowledge needed to assist Staff Attorneys. The Internship kicks-off with an intensive weeklong training session that orients interns to PDS and the city. In the second week, Investigative Interns are partnered together, assigned to one or more Staff Attorneys and are responsible for all investigative aspects of their attorneys’ cases. Investigative Interns will be assigned to Staff Attorneys in the Trial Division, but some also investigate for the Parole Division, Community Defender Division and Special Litigation Division.

More information and application instructions can be found on the CLIP page.

Summer 2021 Intern, Dignity: LGBTQI+ Assistance Fund

 

Summer 2021 Intern, Dignity: LGBTQI+ Assistance Fund


 


Job details

Job Type
Temporary
Internship

Full Job Description

Internship Description

Freedom House promotes the spread of freedom and democracy around the world through research, advocacy, and programs that support frontline activists. We are a leader in identifying and mitigating threats to freedom worldwide. With 12 field offices and two U.S. offices, we support the right of every individual to be free.

Freedom House seeks an intern to support the Dignity for All: LGBTQI+ Assistance Fund. Dignity provides emergency assistance; security, opportunity, and advocacy rapid response grants (SOAR grants); and security assessment and training to human rights defenders and civil society organizations under threat or attack due to their work for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex human rights. Freedom House manages the global fund through a consortium of 8 international human rights organizations. Dignity has supported over 935 HRDS, CSOs, and survivors of severe state prosecution in over 95 countries with support for temporary relocation, trial monitoring, medical expenses, and other types of emergency assistance, in addition to support for efforts to mobilize communities to seize on emerging opportunities.

Position Summary

The intern will have the opportunity to provide administrative, logistical, and programmatic support for Dignity’s work in providing grants to front line defenders and human rights CSOs in a worldwide effort to advocate for LGBTQI+ rights. They will be well-integrated into the team and work in a highly dynamic, multicultural office environment.

Anticipated learning outcomes include understanding threats to civil society worldwide; how to design programs in restrictive environments; how digital security techniques can be utilized in the human rights field; practical administrative, logistical, and programmatic skills to help implement a large-scale grant and sub-grant program; understanding of financial and budgetary oversight; and qualitative and quantitative monitoring and evaluation techniques.

This position is based in Washington, DC and reports to the Program Officer for the Dignity Program.


Minimum Qualifications

  • Currently enrolled college or graduate student
  • Strong ability to communicate effectively in English, both verbally and in writing
  • Demonstrated knowledge and interest in human rights
  • Proficiency with MS Office Suite, specifically Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Outlook
  • Ability to work both independently from and collaboratively with program team
  • Excellent research, analytical, writing, and organizational skills
  • Experience with preparing financial documents preferred
  • Experience handling sensitive information in a secure and confidential manner preferred
  • Language skills including Arabic, French, Russian, and Spanish preferred

Duties and Responsibilities

  • Provide support for the administrative, logistical, and programmatic aspects of project implementation
  • Provide research assistance for discrete projects
  • Prepare daily news update that highlights country-specific and regional developments related to LGBTQI+ rights
  • Assist with developing and writing reports, press releases, briefing books, and other communications materials
  • Prepare grant agreements, payment requests, and other financial documents as needed
  • Assist with emergency assistance case processing as needed
  • Contribute to work streams related to donor reporting
  • Assist in tracking qualitative and quantitative progress on subgrants
  • Monitor and develop Dignity-related updates on mainstream news sites, blogs, and social media sites
  • Assist with organizing events and meetings in DC and abroad related to FH programs
  • Other related duties as assigned

Disclaimer - This job description is only a summary of the typical functions of the job. It is not an exhaustive or comprehensive list of all possible job responsibilities, tasks and duties. The responsibilities, tasks, and duties of the jobholder may differ from those outlined in the job description and that other duties, as assigned, may be part of the job. Freedom House may add, change, or remove essential and other duties at any time.


Qualified and Interested Applicants

We invite qualified candidates to complete an online application and submit a resume and cover letter.

Only candidates who have been selected for an interview will be contacted.

Only candidates authorized to work in the U.S. without any restrictions need apply.

The internship is unpaid. 

A fixed stipend for travel cost will be available.

Read more and apply online: https://phe.tbe.taleo.net/phe01/ats/careers/requisition.jsp?org=FREEHOUS&cws=1&rid=1150

For best consideration, apply by March 12.

Thursday, February 25, 2021

Summer 2021 Court Operations Internship w/ US Court of Appeals

 


Summer 2021 Court Operations Internship w/ US Court of Appeals


The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit is currently seeking a Court Operations Intern for the Summer 2021 term. This internship is an excellent opportunity for students who are interested in learning more about working in the judiciary, gaining valuable professional experience, and developing operational skills. Clerk’s Office interns provide a wide range of operational support services to the court, including general administrative support, documentation management, and assisting the CO staff with other projects and initiatives. This is a paid internship.

For more information and to apply, log into to Careers4Terps and search by either the job title, organization, or job ID (217744).  Applications are due March 5, 2021.

Paid Summer Research for Intelligence & Security Challenges (RISC) Initiative Internship for Hard Security Problems

 


Paid Summer Research for Intelligence & Security Challenges (RISC) Initiative Internship for Hard Security Problems


The Research for Intelligence & Security Challenges (RISC) Initiative
Summer Internship for Hard Security Problems
June 1 – August 6, 2021
College Park, Maryland

The Applied Research Laboratory for Intelligence and Security (ARLIS) at the University of Maryland, College Park, is seeking outstanding undergraduate and graduate students to participate in the Research for Intelligence & Security Challenges (RISC) Initiative and internship program. This exciting 10-week paid program will pair students with mentors from UMD campus and the Department of Defense (DOD) and Intelligence Community (IC) community, and offer the potential opportunity to be considered for future employment with the US government, to include possible sponsorship for a security clearance.

Students will be introduced to career opportunities with the DoD and IC as well as develop their technical capabilities through hands-on real world problems. Project topics will be posed by government operators, and supported with realistic data sets and other materials. Over the 10-week period, students will participate in lectures and regular team development meetings in a shared virtual work environment. The summer program will conclude with a demonstration event and workshop, with a panel of visiting experts from DOD/IC to discuss the results.

Eligibility: We seek outstanding graduate and senior undergraduate students with expertise in disciplines listed below. Students must be U.S. citizens and be available full-time for the duration of the program. Selection criteria emphasize technical strengths in relevant fields, experience working both independently and in teams, and demonstrated interest in contributing to national security.

While specific topics are in development, the missions supported are likely to include geospatial analysis, human geography, disinformation, insider risk, and critical technology protection. The RISC Initiative is particularly seeking interns with expertise in one or more of the following disciplines:

  1. Computer Science, Information Science & Engineering: AI/ML algorithmic development, HCI, data science, data and knowledge engineering, software engineering, systems engineering, media analysis and forensics, information systems design, GIS;
  2. Mathematics and Statistics: Data analytics, quantitative modeling, experimental design, graph analytics, data visualization;
  3. Social & Behavioral Sciences: anthropology, human geography (e.g., pattern of life and mobility modeling), cognitive/neuroscience & psychology, criminal justice, teamwork and group dynamics, communications, disinformation and misinformation;
  4. Library Science: Data curation, tagging, metadata, repositories, social media analytics;
  5. Additional topics may include: Measurement and evaluation of learning outcomes, environmental modeling and remote sensing, human factors, regulatory public policy.

Remuneration: Interns will be paid a weekly stipend up to $1,000, commensurate with education and experience. Housing accommodations, transportation, and food allowances are not provided.

To apply: Please assemble a package including a) your resume, b) a copy of your transcripts, c) one recommendation letter from a professor, and d) a letter of interest describing your disciplinary focus (referencing the topic areas above), experiences that have prepared you for success in an internship focused on intelligence and security challenges, and anything else in your background that that could be helpful for the selection committee to know.

Submit your package (and any questions) to risc@arlis.umd.edu.
The deadline for applications is Friday, February 26, 2021.
Notifications to accepted students will be sent out by Friday, April 9, 2021.

More at: https://www.arlis.umd.edu/risc2021


Summer 2021: Arlington County Police Department Investigative Assistant Internship

 Summer 2021: Arlington County Police Department Investigative Assistant Internship


The Arlington County Police Department Investigative Assistant Internship is currently accepting applications for exceptional undergraduate students interns. This position is located in the Criminal Investigations Division: Homicide/Robbery Unit. The purpose of the Investigative Assistant Intern is to provide direct assistance to the detectives in the Homicide/Robbery Unit, Burglary/Larceny Unit, Special Victims Unit and the General Assignment Unit.

  • Interns will be directly involved interviewing victims and witnesses in a variety of cases such as assaults, threats, missing persons, domestic assaults, larcenies and other property crimes
  • Interns will be provided with orientation and guidance on how to conduct these interviews and work on each case with the assigned detective
  • This internship will acquaint the student with the investigative process by actually being a part of the investigations
  • Interns will conduct interviews, document statements and provide input to the detectives on disposition of cases
  • An intern’s work may lead to identifying suspects to be prosecuted

Interns accepted for this assignment will complete the process with true investigative experience. The intern will develop strategies and make recommendations to the Detective and the intern will work closely with the Detectives throughout the investigative process. The Detectives will involve the intern in all phases of the investigation and treat them as colleagues.

Applicants must be enrolled in a program that will continue to December 2021 in order to participate in the summer semester internship. Students may find more information and the application process on Handshake or on the Arlington PD job posting. The Summer 2021 deadline is March 1, 2021.  Applications submitted after that deadline will not be accepted. 

Questions? Contact the Intern Coordinator at POLInterns@arlingtonva.us or 703-228-4337. Application and additional information available online here.

Summer 2021 internships w/ Montgomery County Family Justice Center

 Summer 2021 internships w/ Montgomery County Family Justice Center


The Montgomery County Family Justice Center is currently accepting applications for several open Summer 2021 internship positions. All internships listed below will qualify for CCJS internship credit. Applications are due Friday, April 30th.

For more information and to apply, log into to Careers4Terps and search for each position by either the job title or the job ID. Questions can be directed to the FJC Program Manager, Ngozi Obineme (mcfjcvip@gmail.c0m).

Client Services Intern | Careers4Terps #218891
Legal Services Intern | Careers4Terps #218892

Summer 2021 internship w/ Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights

 Summer 2021 internship w/ Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights


The Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights is currently accepting applications for their Summer 2021 Undergraduate/Recent Graduate Volunteer Internship Program. Although assignments for each intern vary, most students are asked to draft documents, track news, and policy changes, write legal research memoranda, conduct factual investigations, participate in conference calls, and complete some administrative work. Each undergraduate student intern is assigned to work primarily, but not exclusively, in one of the following areas: Communications/Development, Educational Opportunities (+ PREP), Economic Justice, Public Policy, Stop Hate, or Voting Rights (+ Election Protection). For descriptions and more information, visit Lawyers' Committee Career Opportunities or view below.

To apply for an Undergraduate/Recent Graduate Volunteer Internship, please fill out the application form and submit a resume, cover letter with expected start and end date, and a 2-3-page writing sample here.

For questions about the internship program, please email internship@lawyerscommittee.org. Application materials that are sent to this email are not accepted - please submit all application materials through the link above. The deadline to apply for the Summer 2021 internship is Friday, March 19th. Decisions will be made on a rolling basis, so early applications are encouraged. 

The Communications and Development Departments‘ internship offers a unique opportunity to engage in all of the Lawyers’ Committee’s civil rights project areas. Interns will work with staff on press releases, op-eds, speeches, scripts and testimony. They will learn how to build media lists and track news coverage using a highly in-demand public relations and marketing software. Interns will gain valuable experience in creating and posting web content and desktop publishing. Interns will also assist with management of donor files, foundation research and the planning of upcoming events.

The Educational Opportunities Project strives to guarantee that all students receive equal educational opportunities in public schools and institutions of higher learning by promoting school integration; supporting the mission of the No Child Left Behind Act, and challenging discriminatory discipline and classroom assignment practices as well as school finance inadequacy. The Education Project’s Parental Readiness and Empowerment Program seeks to improve K-12 student performance, retention, and access to equal educational opportunities.  PREP serves low-income and minority children in targeted communities (currently San Diego, CA and Arlington, VA) by increasing parental engagement in education and ensuring that parents become successful advocates for their children.  PREP is particularly interested in candidates with near or complete Spanish fluency.

The Public Policy Department leads and coordinates the organizational policy agenda through the development, analysis and support of all Lawyers’ Committee projects by providing policy leadership, advocacy, visibility and materials for the Hill and in coalitions on substantive priorities as they arise on the legislative calendar. Public Policy interns engage in research and writing, producing issue briefs and policy statements. They attend and report on coalition meetings, as well as briefings and hearings taking place on the Hill, and may prepare testimony and talking points for Lawyers’ Committee staff members.  Interns are likely to work on a wide range of issues related to any of our substantive projects, such as Voting, Education, and Fair Housing, as well as perform duties related to Public Policy core initiatives, such as the Judicial Diversity Program and Criminal Justice reform efforts.  Interns placed in this project should expect a collegial but fast paced and demanding work environment.

The Voting Rights Project strives to achieve equality and protect advances in voting rights for racial and ethnic minorities and other traditionally disenfranchised groups through an integrated program of litigation, voter protection, research, advocacy, and education.  The project is currently active in battles to defend the Voting Rights Act, combat voter ID laws and voter suppression activities, and ensure that eligible voters are able to cast a meaningful ballot on Election Day. The Voting Rights Project leads the Election Protection Coalition, which administers the 1-866-OUR-VOTE voter assistance hotline, analyzes data on existing electoral problems, and supports positive election reforms and advocacy efforts to ensure that all eligible citizens have the right to vote.

The Economic Justice Project seeks to address persisting inequality and high poverty rates faced by African American and other minority communities.  EJP brings challenges to all forms of racial, national origin, and sex-based discrimination in the workplace, both private and public, including discrimination by federal, state, and local agencies. EJP also brings litigation seeking to lift the employment barriers faced by individuals with criminal histories who are seeking to reintegrate into their communities.

The Stop Hate Project works to strengthen the capacity of community leaders, law enforcement, and organizations around the country to combat hate by connecting these groups with established legal and social services resources. Hate incidents across the United States are surging, devastating individuals and entire communities. To help combat this trend and support those organizations, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law launched the Stop Hate Project in March 2017. Individuals and organizations that call the hotline receive resources they need as we leverage our national network of pro bono attorneys, connect callers and individuals targeted by hate to community organizations, mental health services, and in appropriate cases, provide access to counsel. Interns will gain knowledge about hates crimes and incidents and the laws and policies that are already in place to combat them and the community resources that are available, along with hands-on legal research experience.

The Social Science intern will gather, clean, document, and verify election results and election geographies for compilation in a GIS database. The data will be used by the Lawyers’ Committee and its partners to create and evaluate redistricting proposals with the aim of protecting the voting rights of communities of color. Tasks may include any of the following: collect county level election results and geographic boundary data (precincts, districts) in a number of targeted regions across the US, check data for accuracy and edit as necessary, manipulate data in a variety of formats, which may include delimited, Excel, XML, JSON; shapefiles, KML, geoJSON, etc., digitize print maps, write processing routines to automate steps where possible, including data conversion, API access, geoprocessing, etc., document data sources, processing steps, errors, and missing data, and analyze the level of racially polarized voting in elections using the Ecological Inference method.

Summer 2021 internship w/ NCVBA

 Summer 2021 internship w/ NCVBA


The National Center for Victims of Crime is seeking an unpaid Program Assistant intern to help with their National Crime Victim Bar Association (NCVBA), the legal arm of the organization. The NCVBA connects victims of crime to lawyers across the nation, and provides ongoing technical litigation support and trainings on how victim advocates can better use the civil justice system to help victims of crime.

The intern reports to the Director of the National Crime Victim Bar Association (NCVBA, an affiliate of the National Center). The NCVBA provides technical support to attorneys representing crime victims in civil actions, refers crime victims to lawyers in their local area, and works to increase general awareness about the availability of civil remedies for victims of crime.  This internship provides an opportunity to build your resume with while learning how a non-profit organization that works with those in need operates from the inside.

For more information and to apply, please visit the NCVBA Internship posting. The deadline to apply is Thursday, April 1.

COVID-19 Information Vaccine Distribution Student Task Force

 


COVID-19 Information Vaccine Distribution Student Task Force


Hey Terps! The COVID-19 vaccine will soon be available on our campus, and the students on the university’s COVID-19 vaccine distribution task force are seeking help from the UMD community to spread credible information about this vaccine to keep our campus safe.


We are forming a COVID-19 Information Vaccine Distribution Student Task Force (CoVID STF) and are seeking student volunteers to advocate for vaccination in our community via social media. We will primarily use Instagram; neither a large following nor a public account is necessary to participate. If this mission sounds exciting to you, please fill out our interest form using the following link: https://go.umd.edu/covidstf. There is no deadline, but join ASAP to start getting volunteer hours and supporting our community! Let us know if you have any questions by reaching out to covid.stf.umd@gmail.com.

From Vault: How to Change Your Job-Search Approach and Turn Rejections into Offers

 From Vault: How to Change Your Job-Search Approach and Turn Rejections into Offers


[Vault is a service available through Careers4Terps] 

by Jamie Carlstedt | February 19, 2021


"Believe in Yourself" mural-black cursive on yellow background









Regardless of whether you find out at the beginning or end of the hiring process that you didn’t [get] an offer, it's a mistake not to change your approach going forward. If you keep taking the same approach, you'll likely keep getting the same results.

And rejection isn’t the worst part. When you don’t get a job offer, it can be easy to begin to lose faith in yourself and doubt your value. However, your value has nothing to do with rejection—it’s your inability to communicate your value that’s typically the problem.

So, to make sure you’re taking the right approach with your job search, here are four tips for effectively communicating your skills, knowledge, and experience.

1. Be clear about what you want

Do you know exactly what you want? If not, that needs to come first.

Most professionals, when looking to make a job change, immediately put together a resume and cover letter and start submitting them to dozens of online listings. However, each listing is usually different, requiring different skills, types of knowledge, and experience. This means your applications need to be different for each listing.

Of course, it’s extremely difficult to please everyone—and you can’t! But it’s simple to please a specific, target audience. When you know what you want and who you’re marketing yourself to, you can then research and understand exactly what someone is looking for. So, before you begin your job search, make sure you do all of the following:

  • Narrow your search down to your desired industry
  • Narrow down to your desired companies
  • Narrow down to your desired position(s)
  • Understand the responsibilities of your desired positions
  • Understand the skills, knowledge, and experiences you need (and need to convey) to get those positions
  • Understand the requirements and desired preferences of your target companies

2. Strategically position and differentiate yourself

After clarifying what you want and what your target audience wants, you then need to decide how to strategically position yourself as the perfect fit.

Your resume, LinkedIn profile, and cover letter are not for telling your entire background story; they’re for marketing and selling your professional value as the solutions to employers’ recruiting problems (in fact, they only need to get you the interview). So, you need to show that you bring exactly what employers are looking for.

When reviewing your strategic positioning and marketing documents (resume, LinkedIn, cover letter), ask yourself these three questions:

  • Do I know exactly what my specific target audience wants?
  • Do I know what relevant skills, knowledge, and experiences I have to offer?
  • How am I currently positioning myself for my specific desired opportunity?

Do your best to answer these three questions in order, and after you’ve done that, review and update your marketing materials and interview preparation.

3. Start networking

How are you pursuing career opportunities?

Most people aren’t aware that approximately 85 percent of positions are filled through networking. This is due to the fact that when a company fills a position by way of referral, there’s a much better chance of a faster, less expensive recruiting process, as well as a better chance of hiring someone who’s a long-term cultural fit. The cost of the full-blown recruiting process for a position can be expensive: as much as 10 percent or higher than the position’s annual salary.

If 85 percent of positions are filled through networking, that leaves 15 percent for online applications, making online applications the most competitive and least effective approach for trying to land your desired position.

So, if you’re primarily relying on online applications, you must start networking. It’s not a should or maybe but an absolute must. And you can find out how to start doing that here.

If you’re already networking but it’s not working, you’ll need to change your approach to networking. The relationship must come first, everything else comes second. You can find more about how to change your approach here.

4. Articulate how you can add value

How are you pitching your value and communicating in interviews?

You can compare an interview process to going on many separate dates with someone before committing to the long-term relationship. Before dating someone, we naturally ask ourselves two questions:

  • Does this person align with what I’m looking for?
  • Do I genuinely like this person?

In the interview process, the questions are essentially the same. Do you bring what they’re looking for? Do you fit their team, energy, and atmosphere?

Write these two questions on a blank sheet of paper and begin bullet-pointing reasons for why you bring what they’re looking for, and how you believe you align with a company’s values, team, energy, and atmosphere. Once you do that, you’ll be able to begin to alter your interview prep—and start to see the difference in your interviews.

A final note

Every problem has a solution, and your rejections have one, too. Start reviewing and analyzing your job-search approach, and you'll be well on your way to solving this frustrating (and common) problem.

Jamie Carlstedt is a career coach to business professionals. Many people want to make a change in their lives and careers but don’t know how, and Jamie provides the coaching, training, and resources needed to help them advance their lives and careers, grow professionally, and make more money. Jamie’s the Founder of Redstone Coaching and previously worked as an investment banker at Goldman Sachs (in NYC). He's coached 100+ business professionals, is certified in Life Coaching & Business Mastery, and was the first student in Michigan State's history to land a job with Goldman Sachs’ investment banking division.