From “not qualified on paper” → final interviews

Aug 22, 2025 1:01 pm

Here’s something you won’t see on a job board:


One client came to me stuck.


  • 7 years in marketing, but wanted to move into UX.
  • Portfolio not polished.
  • Every application ignored.


On paper, she didn’t look like the “perfect” candidate.


But here’s what happened:


She reached out to a hiring manager on LinkedIn.

They set up a coffee chat — booked for 30 minutes, but it went for over an hour.

She later shared a Trojan Horse Doc: a one-page teardown of a travel app she loved.


A month later, a role opened on his team.

He remembered her.

He invited her to apply.

And today, she’s in the final round with him and his management team.






Here’s why this worked — and why job boards didn’t:


  1. Hiring managers don’t trust paper. Resumés and portfolios are sales brochures. Anyone can polish them. Few hiring managers bet a $100K salary on them alone.
  2. Trust reduces risk. When he had a real conversation with her, he got to see her curiosity, thinking process, and personality firsthand. That’s a signal no PDF can send.
  3. Recency bias is real. The last smart, thoughtful person a manager spoke to is the first they think of when a role opens. Timing > mass applications.
  4. Effort is a proxy for fit. Her teardown showed she cared enough to study the product. Most candidates never go beyond “attach resume.” Effort cuts through.





No job board. No endless applications.

Just one tailored outreach that built trust.


That’s the real game.

Hiring managers don’t trust résumés.

They trust people.

And when you show up with value before a job even exists — you get remembered.


This is what we do inside Career Creators:


  • Get clear on your direction
  • Build the right connections
  • Create Trojan Horse Docs that open the backdoor


👉 Reply “details” and I’ll send you everything.


10 spots available. Intake closes Aug 31.


Talk soon,

Joseph


P.S. Most people think the only way in is through the front door. But the backdoor is wide open — if you know how to knock.

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