NYC Folks: Discounted Club Membership

This is for anyone who lives or works around Midtown Manhattan. UVM has a partnership with the Penn Club on West 44th Street (between 5th and 6th ave.) and they are running a recent graduate special.

2015-09-02 13_41_25-Penn Club in New York, NY 10036 Directions, Location and Map _ MapQuest

You can join the club for $570 a year and they’ll waive the joining fee (also $570).  It might sound steep right now, but you get a lot for about $50 a month.

You get access to affordable gym facilities (yeah, it’s $450 extra a year, but still cheap for NYC), social events, affordable guest rooms, meeting and event spaces, and reciprocal memberships at many other facilities around the world.

It’s certainly not for everyone, but if you are interested, sign-up before September 30th to get the joining fee waived.

Move-In Day: Class of 2019 Edition

moveuvm

Strange as it seems, Friday is Move-In Day for the UVM Class of 2019. Feeling a little weird that you’re not heading back to UVM? You’re not alone.

The good news is that you can be a part of Move-In Day at UVM this year–wherever you are in the world.

Here’s how you can participate:

  • Watch and share this video.

  • Share your best 3 words of advice using the #moveUVM hastag.  Use Instagram, Twitter, Snapchat (uvmvermont) and Facebook and we’ll put your advice on our huge 20 ft banner in the Davis Center using one of these:

moveuvm stickers

Thanks in advance for your advice. We’ll keep an eye out for your posts, tweets and snaps!

Win a Free Course

September 4 Update: Congrats to Vanessia Lam, who won the free course giveaway!  We’ll check in with her in October and post her thoughts on Afterword.

2015-08-17 14_07_42-Project Management Basics - Univ. of VermontAfterword has partnered with our friends at UVM Continuing Education to offer one lucky Class of 2015 alum the opportunity to do some learning for free.

It’s a 4 week certificate course on project management that will give you real-world skills you can use in your job right away (or you can use to help you get a job). It’s normally an $849 course.

Enter your name here for a chance to win.
price-is-right-million-winner-o

OK, it’s not a million bucks (and we won’t shower you with confetti), but a free course is useful.

It will walk you through the key steps for managing a successful project, from initiating, planning, executing, and closing projects–big or small. You’ll learn various project-management strategies from a range of examples used in everyday workplace situations. If you want more details, you can read about the course here.

Put your name in the hat to win by going here.

(And, don’t worry, there are no strings attached to entering your name or to winning–this is actually just a simple giveaway)

We’ll announce the lucky person on Friday, September 4th and the course starts on September 16th.

My First Year Out

It’s been a few months since you graduated from UVM and the summer is fading (sadly). Some of you might not be heading to grad school, others may not yet be comfortably employed. The terror of not knowing your future sets in slowly, as September sneaks up, and for the first time in 18+ years, you are not returning to school in the fall.

You will realize that it is time to make something happen.

If this sounds like you – then this upcoming series of blog posts is for you.

It’s called “My First Year Out” and we will feature UVM alumni and their stories about their first year after UVM.

Most of these stories will be filled with the highs and lows you are all experiencing right now.  Our hope is that by telling you stories of people who have been in your exact shoes, you’ll gain some insight into your own first year out.

My Own Story

Ryan-for-about-page

I figured I would go first and tell you my story. Not because I like seeing my name, but because I vividly remember what it was like and what I learned from that first year after UVM.

I made it through a long stretch of not really knowing what the heck I wanted to do and learned a lot about what a college education means to me and the value of making connections along the way.

Bored and Tired

I graduated from UVM in 2010 and moved back in with my parents after graduation. I had an inkling that I wanted to go to graduate school, but I was “content” to save some money by living at my parents’ house and working at a tent rental company.

Except I found out very quickly and I wasn’t really content.

Not many folks from my high school days were around to hang out with, since I come from a small town, there wasn’t much to do.  And I was always very tired from working long days of manual labor in the blazing hot sun.

I instantly regretted not taking an internship or working a job that actually got me some professional experience.

Back to Burlington

However, struggling through those first few months made me realize something. I wanted to make my way back to Burlington – the place I love. I knew quite a few people, so I was determined to try to get my foot in the door somewhere and figure out if graduate school was right for me.

I did exactly that and it was the best decision of my life. I didn’t have any more money or a better job in those last several months of my first year out, but I was in Burlington.  And I had friends and classmates to talk with and help me decide what was next.  That happened to be a graduate degree at UVM.

What I Learned

Your experience is going to be different than mine, and I sincerely hope that you don’t find yourself living at your parent’s house, binge watching X-Files for three months and working a boring job like I did.

But, if you do (there are a lot of great TV shows right now) be sure to accomplish something each day. Whether it’s applying for jobs or researching places to live or thinking about what makes you happy, this will help you feel like you are getting somewhere.

I recommend traveling or visiting a lot of places you are interested in if possible. Break up the monotony of uncertainty.

“Doing something with your degree”

The worst part of my experience was the crippling thought of needing to “do something with my degree”.

Here are my two cents: Stay open minded and do something you are passionate about even if it doesn’t earn the most money or accurately reflect your studies. You might have to work two jobs to make ends meet, things might not be glamorous for a while and that is totally okay.

It is most important to be with friends and stay busy. Don’t rush anything.

More Stories Like This

We will be sharing stories from other UVM alums like yourselves who have had a variety of experiences during their first year out. The common theme will be that they all eventually found direction through those experiences (the good ones and the bad ones).

So stay tuned for more advice and support from us over here at Afterword.

-Ryan

Tips for Tough Interview Questions

If you haven’t yet experienced an interview question that leaves you speechless, consider yourself lucky. It happens in almost every interview.

Someone throws you a question that freezes you. You stumble. You stammer. It kills your confidence.

Our own HR guy at the UVM Foundation, Andrew Flewelling, has thrown plenty of these questions to job candidates, so we thought he would be the best guy to give a few tips on how to handle these questions.

Andrew Pic_jrcHe’s interviewed hundreds of candidates and he’s seen seen the good, the bad, and the ugly.

Here are some tough questions and Andrew’s advice for answering:

“Tell me about yourself.”

  • Why interviewers ask this question: With this question I am not interested in your thoughts on politics or where you grew up. I want a very brief top line of your history – where you went to school and what you studied (for recent grads), maybe a brief work history and recent career experience.
  • Tips for responding: Emphasize what you have done most recently that lead you to applying to this position. It’s important not to waste your best points as this is likely a warm up question to get you talking. This is your opportunity to demonstrate how articulate you are and begin engaging the interviewer. The goal is to make me look up from your resume that I may have only looked at for 3-5 minutes and start paying attention to you. 1-3 minutes at most should suffice here.

“What’s your biggest weakness?”

  • Why interviewers ask this question: With this question, I might try to gauge your honesty and self-awareness, as well as any major red flags that might make you ill-suited to the position.
  • Tips for responding: Someone who identifies project procrastination in a fast paced environment just lost the job. But if you answer that you can sometimes be a perfectionist and take a bit too long to deliver – but you are working on letting go of projects earlier, that gives me a better sense of why it might take you longer to get things done.

“Tell me about a time you failed”

  • Why interviewers ask this question: I’m looking to gain a sense of the types of mistakes you make – we all do – how it happened and what you did. In a best case world, and dependent on the industry, I’d be more receptive to mistakes that came from taking a calculated risk that you thought would advance the objectives of the organization, rather than a total flub at a sales presentation….
  • Tips for responding: Ultimately, demonstrating how you used the failure to create a breakthrough puts even the biggest mistakes in the best light. Don’t under any situation say that your failure was because of someone else. Take responsibility for your actions and don’t try to lay the blame elsewhere. That makes you look weak and like you lack integrity.

“Why should I hire you?”

  • Why interviewers ask this question: Like a good cover letter, you should be able to succinctly articulate your understanding of the position and the ways in which your skills and experiences meet the organization’s needs.
  • Tips for responding: I’m really looking for the candidate to do my work for me. I don’t like simple answers that make me put the pieces together. Rather, I am looking for the candidate to synthesize her/his work history, specific skills, life experiences and personality in such a way that I can envision them at a meeting with me, listening to their ideas and benefiting from their opinion. Highlight the top 3-5 things that make you outstanding and connect them directly to the responsibilities of the position you are trying to secure.

“What questions do you have for me?”

  • Why interviewers ask this question: You will invariably get this question at the end of the interview. Never say you have no questions, or that everything has been covered in the interview. That just says that you haven’t looked very closely at the company.
  • Tips for responding: Ask about the work place culture. Ask the interviewer how long they have worked there and why they joined, or why they have stayed for so many years – you’ll learn a lot and will cue the person across the table that you are assessing them, as much as they are interviewing you. Ultimately, this is your last chance to sell yourself. Be confident, thank them, and restate why you think you would a terrific addition to the team.

Here are a few articles with more tips for your first (or next job) interview: