The following post is Part Two of the excellent "going to sea" primer by a member of the gCaptain community. Re-posted with his kind permission:
Time For A Road Trip!
Now that you busted your ass and spent several months
getting your MMD, or years getting your Third Mate license, you feel like you
deserve a job from the first place you think is lucky enough to have you.
Hold up and put that ego in check. Sad to tell you that you
are not a special and unique snowflake, there are hundreds of guys just like
you looking for that first job, and even more with experience looking at any
one time for their next job. You might get lucky and have a job fall in your
lap, but don’t count on it.
The industry is just starting to turn around and while an
experienced guy can find work pretty easy, it’s harder for somebody with no
experience. Hopefully these few tips will help:
1- What to pack in your sea bag. All you really need are
steel toe boots, helps if you can also get a pair of steel toe rubber boots
also, enough cloths to last a week mainly long pants and t-shirts, whatever
medicine and stuff you need for the bathroom.
If possible bring more than enough if you end up working
over. Not exactly a pharmacy right around the corner out here. Keep this in the
back of your car on every interview. We are not kidding when we say have your
bags packed when interviewing. What you think you are being hired for your
sparkling personality and witty conversation? The reason they are hiring you is
they need somebody RIGHT NOW! All you are is a warm body to them.
If you can’t leave right that second to get on a boat the HR
guy is just going to wait 5 minutes for the next guy to walk through the door
with his bags packed, and thus give that guy a new job.
2- What to wear to a job interview. You can wear a suit and
tie, but don’t be surprised if you are better dressed then the guy interviewing
you is. It’s a very informal industry. That said I have seen people show up
looking for a job in flip flops, shorts, and a tank top. Please don’t be that
guy, and if you are don’t complain that you can’t find a job.
I keep it simple, blue jeans, tennis shoes, and a button
down shirt tucked in. I have long hair and keep it in a ponytail. Also if you
have facial hair, keep it neat and trimmed up. The reason I wear the above is
that when I get that new job and have to go to the boat I don’t have to worry
about changing out of my suit in the bathroom someplace. You also don’t want to
wear something that you are afraid to get stains on or snag on something when
getting on a boat. Also boats are smelly and you don’t want your nice suite to
smell of boat when you get home, do you?
3- How to actually get that first job: I work in the Gulf
oil fields on supply boats so this next section will mainly apply to finding
work in the oil patch. I’m sure other places are the same, just the locations
are different. Don’t waste your time with online applications or constantly
calling on the phone for your first contact if you have no experience.
You are going to have to get in your car and drive down to
where the boat companies are. Most of them are located along Hwy 90 between New
Orleans and Lafayette, with a high concentration of them along LA-1 towards
Golden Meadows. If I see another thread in the Jobs section from somebody
complaining that they cannot find a job and they have not gotten off their ass
and made multiply trips through southern Louisiana I am going to scream.
I live in Austin, TX it’s a 10-hour car ride down there so I
get that the trip can be expensive and time consuming. It takes a week to
seriously hit most of the boat supply boat companies, and you are more than
likely going to have to do it multiply times.
So plan to take at least two weeks. The first one to see
everybody you can and the next to go back to the ones you liked and showed the
most promise. I’ve had to repeat this several time over the course of several
months to find a job before. To find where to go in Louisiana type “Supply Boat
Companies In Louisiana” or any such variant in Google to get their address.
4- The Interview: Most importantly besides having your bags
packed for work it to have all your documents together. I have a file folder to
keep them in along with receipts and any other work related stuff I want to
keep together. Also it helps to have your Social Security card and your passport,
if you have one. When you walk in, go to the receptionist and ask to fill out
an application, look smart and bring your own pen, she will hand you an
application and ask you for your documents so she can make a copy to go along
with your application.
Be nice to the ladies at the front desk, they are the gatekeepers
and are just as important to you getting a job as the HR man. Make small talk
with them and use lots of please and thank you with them. After you fill out
the application and hand it back to the receptionist ask if they are seeing
anybody toady.
Hopefully they are and she’ll either give you your documents
back or keep them for the HR man to look over. Go sit down and wait. If she
says they are not seeing anybody today ask when the best time might be to stop
by and see someone is and come back then. If she says that the HR guy only sees
people by appointment, thank her for her time and move on to the next company.
When the HR guy comes out get up and shake his hand look him
in the eye and introduce yourself and what job you are looking for. You guys
will then take a few minutes doing the usual interview thing; he will then
offer you a job or tell you that they have nothing available right now. If
that’s the case then get up shake his hand and tell him that you will check
back with him in a few days.
And so with the next company and the next. The thing to
remember is that you want to make a good impression because you will more than
likely be talking to him over the next few months as you keep looking for a
job. He will start to remember you and it you just might get a call one day
looking for a deckhand because he remembers you and knows that you’re serious
about working.
In Closing
Did I mention if you have questions please do a search
first? Any general question you can think of has been asked and answered
numerous times. If you search and can’t come up with an answer to a specific
question then go ahead and ask, but please include as much information as
possible and put some thought into how you are asking it.
We are constantly answering the same question over and over,
and this has caused a few members to equip them selves with pointy sticks and
others to get even bigger ones. So to save your self some embarrassment do a
search. This also keeps the number of threads asking the same questions down so
that when someone does a search they don't get page after page of related
threads and then you have to dig through all of them to find the information
you are looking for.
You will find discussion about the use of head hunters
around the forums. Avoid the ones asking you to sign a contract stating that if
they find you a job you will pay them an amount equal to 14 days of work. Don’t
sign on with those blood suckers. Along with taking your money they give
kickbacks to whoever hired you to use them.
So you are essentially
paying the HR man to hire you. What they are doing is technically illegal, but
have yet to be brought to justice. There are a few companies that don’t charge
you and they try, but I have never had luck using them. I’ve always found my
jobs the old fashioned way, with the employment agencies calling me a few days
after I get my new job with job offers.
Every now and then a guy looking for a spot on a yacht gets
lost and ends up on this forum. If you haven’t figured it out yet we are commercial-
oriented and can give little if any help outside of questions related to
license upgrades.
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