Y L F M A E T Team-Fly® The Career Portfolio Workbook This page intentionally left blank. The Career Portfolio Workbook Using the Newest Tool in Your Job-Hunting Arsenal to Impress Employers and Land a Great Job FRANK SATTERTHWAITE GARY D’ORSI McGraw-Hill New York Chicago San Francisco Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Milan New Delhi San Juan Seoul Singapore Sydney Toronto ebook_copyright 8.5 x 11.qxd 6/27/03 9:29 M Page 1 Copyright ©2003 by Frank Satterthwaite and gary D’Orsi. All rights reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America. Except as permitted under the United States Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher. 0-07-142505-5 The material in this eBook also appears in the print version of this title: 0-07-140855-X. All trademarks are trademarks of their respective owners. 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DOI: 10.1036/0071425055 This book is dedicated to Frank’s wife,Martha Werenfels,and two children,Peter and Toby; and to Gary’s wife,Julie D’Orsi,and two children,Zachary and Amanda, with deep gratitude for their immeasurable support,encouragement ...and patience! This page intentionally left blank. For more information about this title, click here. Contents Acknowledgments ix PART 1 BUILDING, USING, AND MAINTAINING YOUR CAREER PORTFOLIO 1 Introduction: What Is a Career Portfolio? 3 2 Assembling Your Master Portfolio 15 3 Targeting Your Portfolio 29 4 Using Informational Interviews to Perfect Your Portfolio 45 5 Creating Resumes That Work with Your Portfolio 61 6 Using Your Portfolio to Get That Job 79 7 Getting That Raise and Other Important Uses for Portfolios 101 8 Developing Your Portfolio to Protect and Advance Your Career 115 9 Digital Options for Your Portfolio and Resume 125 10 Portfolios on the Fly: Creating a Portfolio in a Few Hours 139 , Copyright 2003 by Frank Satterthwaite and Gary DOrsi. Click Here for Terms of Use. vii PART 2 EXAMPLES OF TARGETED PORTFOLIOS Zachary Schwartz: Getting a Job in a Highly Competitive Field 159 Gwen Johnson: From Homemaker to Paid Job 175 Peter Evans: Getting That First Job After Graduating from School 189 Karen Cresson: Changing Careers 205 Amanda Ferraro: Getting That Promotion 223 APPENDIX: WORKSHEETS 243 viii Contents Acknowledgments The authors would like to thank Dr.John Yena,Dr.Stephen Friedheim, and Celeste Brantolino for their useful comments on our original proposal for this book. We would like to thank Jeffrey Krames and Mary Glenn of McGraw-Hill for making this book happen; Michelle Howry for helping us shape the outline for the final draft;Donya Dick- erson for her careful editing;and Janice Race for coordinating the pro- duction of this book. We would also like to thank Deans Louis D’Abrosca and Joe Goldblatt of Johnson & Wales University for supporting our desire to create and continue to develop a career self-management course for the Alan Shawn Feinstein Graduate School.This course became the initial testing ground for many of the ideas in this book.Dr.Martin Sivula has given us many insightful comments and suggestions for the research that has informed our understanding of what makes an effective career portfolio. We are indebted to Ames Brown for his ideas on digital formats for portfolios and for writing a section of the digital options chapter. Jim Abbott and Ralph Florio made special contributions by providing ideas for key sections of this book. We also want to thank the clients for whom we are career coaches. Each of you has inspired us to do our very best to help you find effec- tive ways to create portfolios that document and present your many im- pressive career P.E.A.K.S. Reflecting on his own career,Frank would like to especially thank Dr. Douglas T. (Tim) Hall, now at Boston University, for providing a fascinating introduction to the study of the field of careers when Frank was a graduate student at Yale. Frank still treasures his notes from that course, though some of the pages, alas, have turned brown and curly along the edges! This book would not have been at all possible without the support and encouragement the authors received where it counts most—at home. Our wives and kids were always there when we needed them, though we weren’t always there when they needed us. With regard to the latter, Frank would like to thank his mother, Emily (a.k.a. “Granny”) Satterthwaite, and our kids’ world-class caregiver, Claire Custer,for being essential members of our extended family,particular- ly during the crisis of meeting a book deadline. , ix Copyright 2003 by Frank Satterthwaite and Gary DOrsi. Click Here for Terms of Use.
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