View of Career Services Building from southeast Career Services @ Virginia Tech
Career Services Building (0128)
Corner of Washington Street & West Campus Drive
Blacksburg, VA  24061
phone 540-231-6241     fax 540-231-3293       www.career.vt.edu
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Career Services is for all students: freshman, sophomore, junior, senior,
and graduate level, at
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.
Our Mission and Core Values 
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You are here: Career Services > For Students > Job search > Networking
 
JOB SEARCH TOOLS & SKILLS:
Resumes and vitae
Cover letters & other letters
E-mail
Telephone
References
Researching employers
 
FINDING JOBS & EMPLOYERS:
How VT grads did it
Who hired VT grads
How to start your job search
Pros & cons of ways to job-hunt
Advertised jobs
Unadvertised jobs
Networking
VT CareerLink
CareerSearch
Hokies4Hire & the On-Campus Interviewing Program
Job listing web sites
On-line job search advice & privacy protection
 
MEETING EMPLOYERS:
Handshakes
Career fairs / job fairs
Employer info sessions
Interviewing
Interview attire
Business casual attire
Dining etiquette
 
DECIDING ON A JOB OFFER:
Salary, benefits, negotiating
Responding to job offers
Acknowledging a job offer
Deadline extensions
Declining
Accepting
Contracts
Relocating
 
SPECIAL INTERESTS:
Diverse students
International students
Students with disabilities
LGBT students
Graduate students

 
 
 
Networking
On this page:
Why network?
What is it?
What are the rules?
 
Why network?
Personal contacts / networking is consistently the largest single source of accepted jobs for Virginia Tech graduates.
We ask each academic year's grads; 35% to 48% of grads got their jobs through networking and referrals.
For more details see our Post-Graduation Report based on our annual survey of the graduating bachelor's degree class.
The percentages are higher for some colleges and lower for others.  The Post-Graduation Report gives data for each college within the university.
The Report also lets you see the other ways graduates found their jobs, with percentages for each.
Read any article about the job search.  You'll consistently hear about "the hidden job market" and "unadvertised jobs." People find these jobs by networking.
Technology is great, but it will never replace the personal touch.  Before you get hired, people need to get to know you. Networking is a way of getting to know people, and getting people to know you — and to like you if you do it right.
 
What is it?
Networking is a little different from directly applying for jobs — but it can lead to one. Networking is simply talking to people — everyone from your professors to your neighbors to your friend's sister to your customer at the place where you work. Everyone you talk to may potentially suggest another person who might help you, and your circle of contacts grows — get the idea?
Students in your major or a similar major who are a year or more ahead of you, or have graduated are an excellent source for information. Student organizations related to your major or career interest are a good source for meeting students who are ahead of you.
VT CareerLink is a networking source we offer. Use it to find Virginia Tech alumni who've volunteered to help students.
Most people who network don't call it networking — they just call it talking to people. Makes sense, doesn't it?
Keep an open mind. You never know what and who may connect you to a job lead until you get there.
 
What are the rules?
Don't ask flat out for a job. Ask for help and advice.
Have good manners and good interpersonal skills.
If you're contacting someone who doesn't know you, introduce yourself succinctly. Tell the person how, where or from whom you got her name and why you are contacting her. Think about your reaction to getting a call from a stranger and what you would want to know.
Be positive. Even if job searching is getting you down, don't let it show. No one wants to hire (or recommend) someone who has a gloomy attitude. On the other hand, enthusiasm and positive attitude are infectious.
Be articulate. Tell what you know about the career field you're pursuing, and ask intelligent questions to learn what you don't know.
Be yourself — your best, aspiring-to-be-a-professional self.
Good manners and appropriate conduct will help you build allies.
Thank everyone who helps you and keep people posted on your progress. Write thank-you letters to people who take time to talk with you. Leave a good impression — someone might remember you in a few weeks when she hears about a job (internship, co-op, whatever) that you'd like.
 
Also see more information outside Career Services' web site:
More about networking on WetFeet.com.
 
           
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