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How has being Greek helped your career?
I know being Greek serves for a lot of different aspects but I'd like to know if it has helped any of you in your careers? Did it help you get that awesome job after graduation?
My other question is how do you incorporate something like that on your resume? |
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Connections may get you in the door but it's still up to you to prove that you're the right person for a job. You also need to realize that not every hiring manager sees Greek membership as a plus. I would list any Greek affiliation(s) as a line item under Memberships or Activities, and include any positions held. |
I find that Greek Life isn't interesting to employers unless it involves leadership. Employers want to know what you DID/LEAD/etc.
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I know a few recent grads who were offered jobs by Kappa alums through networking, which is awesome in this economy. However, most of them were engineers who weren't having a lot of trouble finding jobs anyway. 85% of the posts I see on our internal Kappa networking resources (we have a Yahoo group/listserv and a Linked In group) are from recent or soon-to-be grads looking for jobs in marketing/PR/event planning in NYC/LA/other major cities, and I'm not sure how successful they are since there are so many of them asking for help.
I did have my Kappa involvement on my resume for my first job out of college and I think it helped because the leadership roles I had were related to the job I was interviewing for. We discussed it briefly in my interview, mostly in relation to the events I had planned and the recruiting/marketing work I had done, since the job involves planning events and doing recruiting work. I also made sure to include tangible results in the description on my resume. My chapter had a great deal of growth during 3.5 years I was in it and I was heavily involved in that, so I included things like "Was instrumental in increasing yearly chapter recruitment from X women in <year 1> to Y women in <year 3>." I don't think it's as compelling to just say you were highly involved and learned people skills or whatever. That said, I don't think it's appropriate for your resume for any job. My friends in the hard sciences and engineering did not include their Greek membership on their resumes because it wasn't really relevant and could even be detrimental. It's relevant to the field I work in, but I don't think I'll keep it on my resume for my next job (I'm still working in my first job) because it will be several years old. I would probably include alumna involvement, though. ETA: My chapter also organized presentations by alums with professional positions in finance, law and the corporate world on how to network, how to dress in the workplace, how to write a resume, "Things I Wish I had Known About the Workplace", etc. in our senior programming. All that stuff was actually really helpful. |
For me, it has helped in less direct ways. I am comfortable conversing with people that I have not met before because of my sorority experiences so that helps in interviews. I am comfortable with public speaking because of my sorority experiences as well. These things help! I also run meetings more efficiently than many of my co-workers, which is greatly appreciated in a work environment and demonstrates leadership.
It can also be good to have volunteer work on your resume, especially since there is a trend toward companies encouraging community service among their employees. They've actually put minimum service hours on managers in my health system to demonstrate that we are good corporate citizens. There is a difficult line in putting volunteer work on your resume though. Some people have a distinct anti-Greek bias. However, my other volunteer work all revolves around my kids' activities and in an interview, this is a slippery slope. They aren't supposed to ask about children so you're volunteering information that they can't ask. |
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The only interview where my Greek affiliation was brought up was for my current job. I had interviewed with my now EVP and he asked about it. Turns out he's a Sigma Alpha Epsilon alum!
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It has helped me a lot! I was hired at my internship in L.A. for being Greek, and my current and past (part-time) jobs have been jobs that the Greeks hand down to each other.
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My sorority affiliation has been on my resume ever since I joined. I got my first "career" position, in large part, because of it. I was going for a particular position and had some competition, so I used whatever I could.
I always find a way to bring up my experiences within the Sorority and, on this occasion, it turned out that the executive was herself in Alpha Epsilon Phi. We went off on a tangent about it and I brought the conversation back around to the benefits of having that experience for the job I was applying for. I got the job and was later told that it was the connection I made with the executive that pushed me above the rest. I have several years of National Board experience within my Sorority, which always come up in interviews. I attribute that experience to a number of opportunities I've been given. ETA: The word "multicultural" in my Sorority's name is a great conversation piece and has almost never been overlooked by interviewers who are looking for someone comfortable in "diverse" environments. |
My school's affiliation has helped me more as far as my career goes, but as far as relationships with my coworkers, the fact that I am part of a GLO and others are parts of other GLOs is kind of a little "in". Like, "Oh, you're an XYZ? I'm an ABC." "Really? They were a great group at my school!" And so on and so forth. There is a guy at work who is part of a group that I was pinned in during college, and we have gotten to know each other a lot more than we would have had we not have had a connection.
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Thanks for the responses guys. When I made the comment that it serves many aspects I meant Greek isn't only a way to advance your career. It's exciting to be a part of something big. I am in a Greek org. but I've never looked it as "greek" and often forget to mention it.
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Our listserv has offers from alums frequently.
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Less than 2 weeks ago, you were "flirting" with a sorority... certainly not a member. |
I'm a DeltaSig and I have to say, my alumni connections are the reason I and many of my bros got the jobs that we do now. A lot of the HR Managers end up being DeltaSigs, so we have that one up, but in the end it's up to each individual to slam dunk the competition.
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