Applying for the perfect job and getting turned down can be a real disappointment, but you need to persevere. You cannot control the quality of the other candidates. It doesn't matter how well suited you think you are to a position; someone else can always snatch it from you with a better interview, more qualifications or experience.
Applying for jobs online is much easier than trawling through various newspapers. On job search websites you should be able to find several similar positions which you can apply for simultaneously, no stamps required and your applications are delivered within seconds rather than days.
When you start to treat employment like a marketplace, it is easier to accept that you won't be asked to interview for every job. You need to hedge your bets and apply for as much as you can. Try to tailor each CV and cover letter for the job you are applying for, and don't spend too long agonising over waiting for a response. Send your application and then move onto the next.
In the short term, perhaps you should consider temping. There are many great (and some not-so-great) agencies out there who recruit on a daily basis. Remember that often, even temping agencies can pick and choose who to find work for. If you go to their offices they will ask for a CV, make you sit a short computer literacy test and ask you what kind of work you are looking for. The majority of the work agencies get is filing, archiving, administration and secretarial work. They're looking for people with good communication skills and computer competency. If you sign up with an agency and they don't find you any work, keep turning up. Turn up at 8.30 in a shirt and shoes, as often agencies will receive a call in the morning from an employer wanting to employ a temp that morning.
Personally, I found temping gave me the motivation and order in my life to go and find a job. I was checking my emails at 8am every morning, and spending half my lunch break on the internet doing job searches. Also, just speaking to bosses, managing directors and other staff at the company I was temping at gave me the confidence and "can do" attitude in job interviews.
Whatever you end up doing, enjoy it, and don't blame the world for your own failings.
How To Find Work
Once you have a band organized and have rehearsed adequately, or you are proficient in accompanying yourself with a guitar or a piano and already have a wide repertoire of song under your belt, you can now start looking for work as a singer. This is the day you have been looking forward to isn't it?
Finding work as a singer is not difficult because there will be restaurants, clubs, pubs, private and public functions looking for competent well trained singers like you. You can either engage agents or approach the venue yourself after finding out who is responsible for conducting auditions, hiring bands and singers. After talking to them, you can send them your demo CD's prior to a live audition. If you are selected, they will call you and your band for a live audition.
If you are applying for a singing job at bars and pubs, your booker will not want to listen to your original songs. What they want will be what the venue's audience wants to listen to. For example, if you sing with a jazz band, then obviously you cannot send your rock CDs to a rock club. Therefore it is imperative that you understand the nature of the venue before sending your demo CDs.
Choose about 6-8 songs for your demo CDs and audition. This is because bookers usually will want to know that you have a sufficient repertoire. Don't attempt to do slow ballads unless you are very good and soulful or otherwise, you will bore your bookers.
If you are auditioning just for a singing job and do not have a band, don't clutter your songs with some amateurish accompaniment. Sing with a karaoke minus one accompaniment instead. That will make you sound more like an accomplished singer instead of a fumbling amateur.
Singing Gigs
Your first singing gig is probably one of the most important miles stone of your singing career. Do learn quickly. If you are singing pub and no one is listening to you then you need to quickly know why. Maybe, you are not on stage so the audience cannot see you, or you may be performing too softly or too loudly. There will be a lot of tweaking until you get your performance right.
If you are a solo singer and are accompanying yourself, make sure the guitar or piano accompaniment arrangements are not too complex. Your voice must come through, not the musical instrument. Your audience are there to hear you sing and do not want to listen to the clang clang of your guitar.
Look at Barry Manilow when he accompanies himself on the piano. When singing, he just plays the chords so that his voice and lyrics come across with clarity and powerful emotions. It is during the instrumental part of the songs that his piano playing is more fanciful and more crescendo applied.
Both John Mce & are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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