How I’m Using a Mind Map to Keep Track of My Job Search

Folks who’ve known me a while will know I’m a big fan of mind maps. A mind map is a diagram that helps to organize information visually. I know a lot of folks like outlines, and I’ll grant that they have their place, but I’ve always found outlines too structured and too limiting.

Outlines force straight-line, linear, hierarchical thinking. That’s exactly what you want for some things. I know a lot of people who think in a straight line most of the time — I’m just not one of them.

My thinking tends to try to go in multiple directions at once, and I like to figure out how things connect together. Sometimes those connections aren’t straight lines and don’t fit into simple hierarchies. This is where mind maps come in handy.

Plus, with a mind map, I feel like I can get an overview of the “big picture” with a single glance.

Several people have seen me using mind maps as a note-taking tool during brainstorming sessions. I wanted to demonstrate their usefulness as a tracking tool, too, so I figured, why not use my job search as an example (since I’m actually using a mind map to track my search).

If you weren’t aware that I’m currently looking for my next job, please take a moment to read about my job search before continuing with this post.

OK, with that out of the way, let’s dive in.

Defining the Search Process

First, I had to define the process a potential opportunity goes through from when it starts as an idea all the way through my receiving and accepting a job offer. For me, it was helpful to think of this in terms of the “phases” that opportunity passes through.

The diagram below shows the phases I’m using to track my search. I’ll define them below the diagram. (Click to enlarge.)

  1. No Contact Yet – For my purposes, “no contact” here means I haven’t yet had a conversation with the actual hiring manager. I may have been in contact with someone for a while, through several conversations, but if I haven’t spoken to anyone doing the actual hiring yet, that lead stays in the No Contact Yet phase.
  2. “Pre-Interview” – This is for those initial conversations with this hiring manager that aren’t quite a formal interview. From here, a lead moves to either Phase 3 or Phase 4, and no place else.
  3. Never Got as Far as Interview – A lead that ends up here progresses no further. After conversation(s) with the hiring manager, there won’t be a formal interview. This could be because after speaking we mutually conclude that the job isn’t a good fit, or it could be that the hiring manager doesn’t actually have headcount for the job at the moment. (The majority of the leads I have in this section were a result of headcount issues.) In general, a lead that ends up here goes no further. It’s possible that something could happen to “resurrect” the lead, but I haven’t yet seen an instance of that in my current search.
  4. Moving to Interview – This is a placeholder phase. A lead moves to this phase if, after conversation(s) with the hiring manager, we decide that the next step is a formal interview. Ideally, a lead stays here for only a brief time and moves to Phase 5 quickly. Depending on difficulty coordinating the schedules of everyone they want me to interview with, the lead could stay in this phase for a few days.
  5. Interviews – A lead moves here from Phase 4 when the interview has actually been scheduled. It stays here after the interview has happened. A lead stay in this phase until the hiring company makes a decision that moves it to either Phase 6 or Phase 7. Depending on the company’s hiring process, a lead may remain in this phased for multiple rounds of separate interviews.
  6. No Offer – This is, admittedly, my least-favorite phase. A lead ends up here if, following the interview(s), the hiring organization decides not to extend me a job offer. A lead reaching this phase is, for all intents and purposes, dead.
  7. Offers – This is, not surprisingly, my favorite phase. A lead ends up here if, following the interview(s), the hiring organization decides to extend me a job offer. (As of this writing, no leads have yet reached this Phase.) Those of you paying attention have noticed that this Phase has “sub-Phases” associated with it. They are:
    1. Negotiating – This phase is for an offer received that the hiring organization and I are actively engaged in negotiations on. The negotiation could be over salary, benefits, vacation days, working location, perks, and/or job description details.
    2. Deciding – This phase is for an offer received that is not being actively negotiated, but is at that point where I need to decide whether or not I’m going to decline or accept the offer.
    3. Declined – This phase is for an offer received that I decide, for whatever reason, to not accept. I’d imagine that any lead making it to this phase would be effectively dead.
    4. Accepted – This phase is for an offer received that I decide to accept. Unless I really screw something up, only one lead should end up in this phase.

Tracking Leads

Create a branch for each individual lead. These branches start off from the Phase 1 node. I track the following information:

The diagram below shows examples of two different leads as I might enter them into Phase 1. (Click to enlarge.)

Moving Leads Through the Phases

The great thing about using an application for mind maps is that I can make changes very quickly. A simple “click, drag, and drop” operation is all it takes to move a node (and all its sub-nodes) to a new branch in the tree. (I’ve tried that on whiteboards and it works less well.)

So, as something happens to move a lead from one phase to another, I simply drag the lead from its current place in the map to its new spot, and then update the information.

Below is an example of what the leads above could look like after the phone call on 2/27. (Click to enlarge.)

 

State of My Search

As I type this, my job search tracking mind map is tracking the status of 30 different leads, split amongst the phases described above as follows:

Obviously, I’d hoped there would be more leads to track and, in particular, more leads in more positive phases by now, but that’s the way things go sometimes. All I can do is keep doing things to drive the search forward.

Final Thoughts

This is the system I’m using to track my job search, and it’s working for me. Feel free to take any parts of this system — or even all of it — and use it to track your own job search, or anything else you want to keep track of.

Just remember the two rules of any effective tracking system:

  1. You need to use it consistently, updating every change as soon as possible.
  2. You need to use a system that works for you — not for anyone else.

Some things you could do to adapt this system include:

If you’re using mind maps to track anything else, I’d love to hear about it. Maybe I can learn ways to improve my system.

If you’re also engaged in a job search, and using something other than mind maps to track everything, I’d love to hear what you’re using.