Interview with the volunteer; 'Pitt' your wits with a step-by-step guide to grabbing that perfect charity job

Interview with the volunteer; 'Pitt' your wits with a step-by-step guide to grabbing that perfect charity job

Rachel recently joined the nfpSynergy team as a Research Assistant and she provides research and administrative support to our CAM team. Before that she was the Ethical Careers Coordinator at Student Hubs, where she was responsible for helping students find work experience in the third sector. She has been on both sides of the application process and as a recent graduate herself, she shares her top tips for finding a job in the third sector.

With just under 800,000 employed in the third sector at the end of last year, the number of people seeking out careers in charities has been steadily increasing since 2007. Making yourself stand out to employers is paramount to getting a foot on the charity career ladder. An area once regarded as an ‘unconventional’ career path has now become fiercely competitive and highly desirable. But what can you do to give yourself a headstart?

Skills-driven or cause-driven

Know your stuff! The early stages of a charity career often come in one of two forms; skills-driven or cause-driven.  Decide whether you want to look for a role which contains specific skills, for example grant proposal writing, or whether you are more focussed on working for a specific cause, like wanting a job in an international development or mental health charity.   

Go Investigate!

If you’re interested in a skills-focussed role then make sure you check out websites and blogs dedicated to these areas. For grant proposal writing you could check out the Institute of Fundraising website. If you’re interested in a specific cause, start researching some of the leading charities in that area and the key issues it faces. For both, work out if further study is required for breaking into that area; often it isn’t, but best to check first!

VOLUNTEER!

This is a bit of a no-brainer really; if you want to work in the charity sector you are going to need to prove your dedication and the easiest way to do this is through volunteering. Us charity folk love a bit of volunteering; creating social change is what it’s all about and there is no better way to get experience.  

It’s not all working in charity shops and going on litter runs. What is great about volunteering is that you can do what you love. Volunteers can get involved in the top level decision-making in a charity by becoming a trustee and most organisations involve volunteers at every level. The key is finding the right position and this is something you can afford to be very choosy about. Look for positions which match your interests, reflect the time you are willing to commit and offer you training or supervision throughout.

Oh and whilst you’re at it, you should keep your eyes peeled for the next nfpSynergy report on volunteering - it’s going to be epic. But in the meantime, check out the Do-it website for volunteering placements to suit you.

Conducting your job search and looking for roles

Conducting a job search can feel a bit like competing in a 100 metre sprint with a blindfold on…it’s difficult to know where the start line is, how close you are to the end and who else you are racing against.

Narrow your search right down. This may seem like unconventional advice, but only go for roles you are seriously interested in and can meet most of the criteria for. Applying for every single job you come across will only reduce the quality of your applications.

Great places to start looking for third sector opportunities are Third Sector Jobs, Charity People and Guardian Careers. But don’t just go with the obvious options; also remember to start following charities you like on Twitter. They will often tweet about any opportunities which open up and make sure you are using LinkedIn to its full capacity during your job hunt.

Brush up that CV

Notice how this step comes after you have started your job hunt? Do not think about writing one conventional CV and sending it off to every job you apply for. Find the job description first and then tailor your CV to fit the role. Third sector CVs are a bit different from academic or corporate CVs and so you may need to get yours up to scratch (more advice on that here). As somebody who received over 300 CVs to read last year, one of my top tips would be to always send your CV in the correct format. If the organisation asks for a PDF, they want a PDF, not want a Word Document. Following basic instructions always bodes well with a potential employer!

Awesome application writing

Use your key achievements from your CV to form the ‘bare bones’ of your application form and then flesh them out with extra detail and inject a little bit of personality into your writing. Trawl through their website and pick up on some of the key terms used and stick these in your application; it looks as if you are already using ‘their’ language and suggests you’ll fit in well.  In the not-for-profit sector, an organisation’s mission statement and values will be of paramount importance to them, so make sure you address these at some point in the application form. And always, always get your application proof-read by somebody else.

Acing the interview

‘Failure to prepare is preparing to fail’. No phrase is truer than this for interviews. Prepare answers to common interview questions, go in with some examples of relevant past experience and think of two intelligent questions about the role or the organisation to ask at the end. One thing about the third sector is that your motivations for applying for the role are as equally important as your skills, so make sure you have thought this through. Also bear in mind that you can train people to have certain skills, but you can’t ‘make’ them fit in a team. Team spirit is important in charities whose work deals with difficult issues, so make sure you are warm and friendly in the interview room and don’t let your nerves get to you.

One of my friends likens the interview process to online dating. First you connect online over written word during the application process, then if you both like what you see you’ll arrange to meet up (the interview).  After the interview, it might either be love at first sight and you get the job straightaway or you might go for a second interview, but sometimes your date decides they’re not interested and doesn’t call you back ever again. Not sure if comparing interviews to dates makes the interview more or less scary, but the point is that interviews should be a two-way process; you are there to make sure the organisation seems like a nice place to work as much as they are there to see if you are the right person for the job.

And the final step that everyone forgets

Send your follow-up note the next day. Email your interviewers a few short lines thanking them for their time (after all they do have other work to do!), summarise your strengths and confirm your interest in the role. One tiny step can make them feel good and shows the role is important to you. But do check the spelling of names!

 

Have we employed the right techinique? Or have we not applied ourselves in the right way? Leave us a comment below.

 

Submitted by Kerrie Fletcher (not verified) on 2 Aug 2013

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I've been involved in recruitment for small charities on numerous occasions and would add the following:
Don't send a CV if we don't ask for one. If there is an application form or guidelines, that's the format we want and that’s what we will focus on, so concentrate on doing that well. Additional paperwork is often discarded. Don't waste your time.
Read the person specification carefully, and spell out how you meet each point on it. More often than not the application pack will contain a job description and person specification - i.e. a list of the skills and experience we are looking for. This is what we use to shortlist people for interview. Good application forms be set out to make it obvious that this is what you need to do, but quite often there is a question which just asks you to describe your skills and experience and how they meet the role. This is your chance to make it easy for the shortlisters - don't make us have to search for the information in 3 pages of closely written prose. What actually works best is to list each point on the person specification, then write a short paragraph saying why you meet this, with a specific example of a job, occasion or achievement which illustrates this. If you are asked for a CV, do the same thing. In my experience provided you genuinely have most of the skills, it almost guarantees you an interview.
At interview: If you aren't sure, ask. Everyone will be asked the same questions and scored on their answers. If you aren't sure what the interviewers are looking for, or think you might have missed the point, it's fine to say 'is that what you were asking?' or 'have I answered your question?' or 'do you mean...?' It might just be that we haven't phrased the question very well and we won't think less of you for asking for clarification. At least then you can be sure you are answering the right question. Also don't be afraid to take time to think about your answer (it comes across as considered rather than hesitant, far better than rambling off the point!) Bear in mind that we want you to do well (it's a shame when people are obviously too nervous to do themselves justice). Everyone else will be nervous and we do understand. After all we've been on the opposite side of the table.
As for emailing the interviewers afterwards - well that's very polite but in my experience the decision is made by the panel on interview day and it won't make any difference. The person who communicates with you about your application/interview is unlikely to be involved in the decision anyway.
Finally, I never mind giving feedback after interview, so don't be afraid to ask. You might be pleasantly surprised. There's generally only one job on offer, and usually more than one person we would be delighted to employ, so it doesn't mean you were rubbish, just that there was someone with a bit more experience than you. At the very least you might get useful insight into how you come across and how you might give yourself a better chance next time.

Submitted by Janet Thorne (not verified) on 5 Aug 2013

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If you are looking for an opportunity to volunteer your skills, Reach has hundreds of roles, varying from trustee positions to short term projects.

Submitted by Olly Benson (not verified) on 5 Aug 2013

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I'd agree with much of what Kerrie has said.

Application letters should leave the employer wanting to know more, not having detail info on every facet of your working life.
Absolutely tick off every requirement of the person spec. There is nothing wrong with listing your experience point-by-point against it. But remember too it is the description of an ideal candidate and if you don't meet every point, then make sure you demonstrate how you could develop.
Don't rely on job titles to convey to responsibility. 'Activity coordinator' could mean you were in charge of a large team of people, or it could be a souped-up way of describing being an extra pair of hands.

People don't interview for the fun of it; everyone who has been invited to interview is because they are deemed able to do the job. Interviewers also know it's a stressful and unnatural situation and are on your side - if you didn't understand the question or need a couple of minutes to think of a suitable answer then ask for that. Most interviewers opt for a relatively easy opening question, generally "why do you want this job?" or "tell us a bit about yourself / talk us through your CV" so prepare for those - answering the first question well can make you feel good and makes the interviewers have confidence in you.

Have some insightful questions to ask them as well. If there is a specific concern you have about the role, even a very practical one, now is the time to ask (eg 'I sometimes have to pick my kids up early on a Thursday, how flexible can I be about hours?'). It's a good sign that you've been thinking about how *you* will do the role; not simply treating it as an abstract possibility.

I'm not sure the follow-up email is necessary, and could be seen as a little passive-aggressive, particularly if you've been told that a decision won't be made for a few days.

And my final thing is absolutely ask for detailed feedback - I'd go as far as doing it even if you were successful. Employers are generally quite bad at giving decent feedback, and tend to couch everything in generic terms. But having received some specific feedback on an interview I did (and was unsuccessful at), I really now appreciate the value in learning how I came across, and what my strengths and weaknesses were perceived as. So much of the interview is about the employer feeling confident that you would be a credible employee for them, that understanding how they saw you is of real value. And then doing something about it - and not dismissing what they said because it was critical or not how you felt you did.

Submitted by Kerrie Fletcher (not verified) on 5 Aug 2013

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Olly is quite right about the person spec - often there isn't anyone who ticks all the boxes, so you interview those who come closest. But I would say, put something for each one, however small (draw on voluntary work or something you do in your family life or leisure time) - or at least say how keen you are to develop in that area. It just shows you understand the role and the skills being sought. And that you have taken the time to fill in a decent application (you'd be surprised how poor some of them are).

One last thing, and this may be an obvious one, but if you can, do type/word process your application - especially if the job asks for IT skills. Or at least write very neatly and legibly in block capitals...

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