What Do You Bring To The Table

Over the past months a very large number of visitors to my blog have read a post: “What Do You Bring to the Table.” The post is certainly among the most useful ones that I’ve written, outlining in simple terms a stance to take in thinking about a new career direction, writing a resume, networking, or interviewing.

“What Do You Bring to the Table?” – This is the fundamental question I ask my clients to think about when contemplating a job or career change, crafting a resume, or preparing for a job interview. Up until perhaps 2005 a job seeker was almost as likely to ask potential employers what they had to offer as opposed to focusing on what was being offered by the seeker. This stance was often reflected in the very first sentence of a resume.  For example: “Job objective – to secure a position that will allow me to combine my passion for ______ with my skill at _______.” Even today I encounter a fairly large number of resumes that place considerable emphasis on what the employee is looking for, rather than what she / he had to offer. Even in today’s almost-post-COVID hot job market, unless you have a very specialized skill possessed by few others that is highly in demand, you need to reconceptualize your job hunting approach, starting by examining the answer to the question “what do I bring to the table?”

Components

What you bring to the table has two key components. First, you: your skills, your experience, your personality, your drive, perhaps even your connections. The second – to what kind of table are you bringing yourself? By this I mean “what exactly are the goals and challenges facing your prospective employer, and how does the specific job for which you’re applying potentially contribute to fulfilling that goal, or meeting that challenge?”

Know The Table

I have found that most applicants (or those contemplating career change) are reasonably well-versed in determining and articulating their own assets. Even those people who come to me desiring testing to reveal their strengths generally have a at least a reasonably good idea of what those are. Where they fall down is in knowing more about the table.

I can draw a simple but apt analogy with the pre-COVID Thanksgiving holiday. If you were invited to dinner at someone else’s home and were asked to contribute a dish, it would be important to know both what it is you’re good at cooking, and what it is that the host is planning on serving. You may make the world’s best green bean casserole, but if the host was already planning on preparing one, your casserole would be superfluous.

Gather Information

So how do you determine what’s on your prospective employer’s table? Of course a job description is the place to start, but job descriptions only tell a part of the story about the job. What it doesn’t tell you is what kind of people you’ll be working with, what kind of a boss you’ll have, and potentially some serious negative information like an impending takeover or consolidation. Undertaking an intelligence-gathering campaign will be a good use of your energy.

Dig Deeper

Go beyond looking at the company’s website and annual report. Read articles written about the organization, go to Glassdoor.com for employee reviews (or, even better, talk to current or former employees), look at and research the competitive environment in which the organization operates. From that compendium of knowledge you can write a compelling cover letter or resume and craft responses to interview questions that demonstrate the specific applicability of your strengths to the situation at hand.

Be Personable

You might reference how you had encountered and mastered a problem currently being faced by the organization, or what additional dimension you could bring to the table that would be in keeping with the organization’s mission and specific business objectives. With the proper experience, you might even volunteer that you are able to handle a function above and beyond the job for which you’re applying – a bonus that you’d bring to the organization if hired. Just make sure you have a good feel for the table at which you’re asking to be seated.