I've
recently started keeping tabs on job seeking and my investigations
into Marketing and PR as a line of future work. Back in 2007, before
I got my current job, I was doing this using Excel, but I remember
having distinct problems with this.
At
the time, my Excel spreadsheet covered dates, company names, contact
names, and other details. This was a searchable list that allowed me
to check who I'd contacted and what I needed to follow up. There was
one problem, though: when it came to printing the document, the info
spread to 3 landscape pages, which sort-of looked better in portrait,
only the document wouldn't convert to a decent printable form.
When
it came to printing, my computer would only give me the second page.
So I was going to the job centre, sometimes to sign on, sometimes to
sign off after finding some short term work, sometimes to sign back
on again. When I presented the jobseeking record I'd claimed I'd
made, I only had old information that they'd already seen. They had
to take my word that there were more records at home, and that I had
in fact been looking for work since I last met them.
More
recently, my DLA has been scrapped and a meagre PIP allocation has
been put in its place, plus my Working Tax Credits were stopped for
an issue that's still debatable and under review with Citizen's
Advice, and I've subsequently been lumped with a £400 bill (which I
still haven't paid). I've decided it's time to purposefully look for
work again.
This
time, however, I've made a table in Word, made it landscape and given
it 3 headings.
Date
|
Organisation
|
Details
|
Here
I can detail when I made an inquiry, who this was with (a business or
public body) and what was discussed. In a day off, I might visit an
organisation, talk to a manager or advisor and make notes on our
conversations. Once home I'll then type up any notes straight onto
this form, taking only a couple of minutes from my day.
This
then means that whenever a further meeting occurs with any employment
advisors (for example Get Oldham Working is a department of the local
authority that I'm currently meeting with), I can print off the
relevant pages (whatever was put in after the last meeting), and show
them exactly what I've done. There's no need to try to recall
anything or root through diaries to see where I was on certain days.
It's
a fairly straightforward method of keeping a track of what goes on in
your life. It could be that, for yourself, job seeking isn't what's
filling up your time but meetings with the NHS (particularly if
you've recently had an acquired brain injury). It takes a little time
to transfer notes from paper to computer, but unless you're carrying
a very fast-loading laptop around with you wherever you go, you can't
have everything 100% digital. But then, that's why I tried to learn
shorthand- so that I could take quicker notes and could ask more
questions in what little time public services, like doctors
surgeries, would give me.
So,
Word, not Excel, for keeping written records, is always much more
beneficial.
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