Last week marked the end of the first term of my course. It ended with a 24 hour time constrained case study released on a wednesday morning, and requiring that we submit a 3000 word response to the case study by the next morning. Suffice to say that I stayed up all night working feverishly, willing my brain and my eyes to remain open, both failed quite a few times and I ended up either staring cross-eyed at my laptop screen, or falling asleep over it. Not a very pretty sight. But I triumphed in the end, and submitted my essay 15 minutes to the deadline. It has been a very busy term; one minute we were out having dinner and drinks in the town centre, or partying in Sub2 the Student's Union lounge, and the next minute we were living on red bull and research references.
It has been a bit of a rollercoaster ride of a term. My course had several 1500 and 3000 word papers and reflective essays to research, write and submit within deadlines. In addition, we also had to work in cross-functional groups to work on and deliver a live case study to develop, research, prepare and deliver a presentation on utilising the 4Ds of project management; Define, Design, Do, Develop (also known as review). I believe that working in groups may have been my hardest challenge at this Msc so far, but the specifics are for another blog post. All I can say is that this is as real as it gets. As a project manager, we may work on projects of international proportions spread across geographical zones and cultures. The onus falls on you as a key member of the project team, or as a project manager, to ensure that all members of the team stay on target and achieve results. I am presently on summer holidays, and whereas I am very excited to be able to do whatever I want at my own pace, the life of a student means that income is limited.
Consequently, I began to look for a job at which I can work for the stipulated 20 hours per week, per the requirement of my tier 4 student visa. As soon as I began to search, I was amazed at the resources available to University of Bedfordshire students as a support structure towards finding jobs. I went into the university career and recruitment centre in Luton and had a discussion with a member of staff. The pointers I received were extremely helpful, and I have listed some of them below:
- Make out time to re-write your curriculum vitae (CV) every few weeks while actively searching for a job. Trends change and the job requirements differ, thus learn to highlight the achievements of what you have previously done which speak to the job being applied for.
-Never submit your cv in tabular format. Always use regular microsoft word format without any tables or bullet points if possible. Some recruitment software used by certain employers does not recognise tables in cvs and will make your cv ureadable.
-In application letters submitted together with the cv, make sure you highlight what position you are applying for, what you have done in the past, how that experience will benefit or add value to the organisation that you are applying to, and why you wish to apply to this employer.
-Try to keep your cv within 2 pages, unless you have worked for decades, or are in academia where your research papers have to be listed.
These are some of the key areas articulated. I have since edited my cv per these suggestions and I have now been invited to four interviews; three in London, and one at the university. The first two london interviews have come back as unsuccessful, the third interview will happen next week and the fourth will take place on August 4th. Although I did not get the first two jobs, I am optimistic that something excellent will work out. The important thing is to make one's cv good enough for recruiters to take a second look at it and invite you for that important chat. I shall keep you posted on how the remaining two interviews go and my quest to earn a living during the summer.
This is my holiday challenge to myself; find a job, and to you; re-write your cv, it does not matter how little or how much experience you have. The only rule is to try to keep it within 2 pages, you do not want those recruiters yawning over a complete detailing of your roles and responsibilities.
In the interim, should you wish to have a look at the university's career centre, view it here. Follow it also on twitter; @ubcareers.
Goodluck!
Photo sources:
1. Official students' Union wednesday nights at Sub2 for Bucs Sake: Photo is from the BedsSU page.
2. From my personal photography collection; panning the movement of a cyclist in London.
3. A photo of the UoB Career and Recruitment centre found on the university website.
4. From my visit to London. A lunch menu on Oxford street.
Saturday, 19 July 2014
My CV, Jobs and a Salary: A Holiday Challenge
Labels:
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university of bedfordshire
Wednesday, 2 July 2014
Rain, coffee, and stuyding all night: My Msc journey
For the last eight years, I worked in international development; working in cross-cultural teams delivering various forms of projects which were donor funded interventions geared towards improving the lives of people in mostly Nigeria. I worked in varied areas of intervention from public health to secure livelihoods. I worked steadily in community liaison and operations management of the various projects and programmes that I was involved in. After six years in the sector, I re-evaluated where I was and what I wanted going forward. I wanted more responsibility, better pay, a more diverse experience and increased project involvement spanning several continents. Having conducted some research and spoken to a few mentors, the answer, to begin with, was a master's degree. I chose to study project management as I felt it was the perfect opportunity to understand the tools and techniques required to respond successfully to any business case, and to validate the experience which I already had. For the last two years, I planned and saved towards this.
The first decision had been taken, but then came the choice of location, universities/facilities and cost. I chose the UK for the language ease and the length of the course as I did not want to spend more than 12 months away from the sector. I also reviewed over 10 UK univerisites and evaluated them based on learning and living support, feedback from alumni, and costs. The University of Bedfordshire came out tops based on my listed criteria and in March 2014, I arrived Luton to begin one of the most exciting journeys of my life so far.
When I arrived Luton and Beds exactly four months ago, I was struck especially by how diverse the university community was, how there was so much going on, and a plethora of offerings to choose from. However, I was initially concerened at how everyone seemed almost five to ten years younger than I was; surely this would impact on my experience? Four months later, I have found that this community is a mix and match of different age groups, ethnicities and life experiences. This is very much a global community in every sense of the word. I am excited to be a part of this. In my PM course units, the teaching method is a mixture of lectures, practical work, and research. The tutors are very helpful and respond to emails very often, I was very surprised by this. The learning resource centres are also open 24 hours, 7 days a week, and for someone like me with a background in English language and literature, this is all very convenient as I have had to put in extra work to make it all worth it. The department has also made provision for Msc PM students, should they opt for this, to be tutored and undertake foundation and practitioner certification work/exams for the very well respected PRINCE2.
There are a few things I would like to change here; I wish the weather wasn't so rainy, I wish I could avoid pulling an all-nighter for several assessments involving case studies and 3000 word reports, I wish I could drink coffee and red bull to stay awake and finish those reports quickly, I wish I could spend as much time as I wanted dancing in the town centre. I wish Geert Hofstede wasn't right and all his 6 dimensions weren't manifesting in the dynamics of the group work which we are required to do. But invariably, it is what it is, and I have thoroughly embraced the delightful journey and crazy freshness that this experience has brought with it. I have made some lifelong friends here and have learnt so much about the practice of PM in such a short time. Within this blog, I shall continue to record and detail the milestones and living which lead up to the achievment of all the goals for which I came here.
Photo credit:
1. Photo of some PM full time students; Sept 2013 & March 2014 entry with some tutors during a field trip
2. Photo of the new Student's Union lounge
Labels:
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diverse,
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