#106 - 5 Unconventional Ways to Stand Out in Postdoc Applications
Today, I'm sharing five proven techniques that helped my mentees land postdoc positions at top institutions even when their publication records weren't the strongest in the pool.
16 July 2025
Read time: 3 minutes
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Your CV lists impressive publications and your research statement explains your brilliant ideas, but you're still not getting postdoc interviews.
Why?
Because every competitive candidate has good papers and research plans.
What separates the candidates who get offers from those who get ignored are the unconventional elements that most PhD students never include in their applications.
Today, I'm sharing five proven techniques that helped my mentees land postdoc positions at top institutions even when their publication records weren't the strongest in the pool.
During my own postdoc search, I had solid publications but kept getting rejection emails from positions I was clearly qualified for.
The breakthrough came when I completely changed my application approach, focusing on demonstrating value beyond just research credentials.
This new strategy immediately improved my success rate.
More importantly, I started helping other PhD students implement these same techniques, and watched them secure competitive postdocs despite having fewer publications than other candidates.
Technique 1: The Problem-Solution Video Introduction
While everyone else submits text-only applications, create a 90-second video that shows your personality and communication skills.
How to do it: Record a brief video introducing yourself and explaining one specific problem in the lab's research area that you're excited to help solve.
Keep it conversational and enthusiastic, not formal and scripted.
Upload it to a private YouTube link and include the link in your cover letter.
This technique works because it shows you can communicate clearly, demonstrates genuine enthusiasm, and gives busy PIs a quick way to get a sense of who you are as a person.
Technique 2: The Collaboration Portfolio
Instead of just listing your past work, create a document that shows exactly how you collaborate and add value to research teams.
How to do it: Create a one-page "collaboration portfolio" with three brief examples of how you helped improve other people's research.
Include specific details about what you contributed and what the outcomes were.
Focus on problem-solving, technical skills, and teamwork abilities.
This shows that you're not just focused on your own research but actively contribute to lab success.
Technique 3: The Skills Translation Matrix
Most applications focus on research experience without explaining how your specific skills solve the lab's current challenges.
How to do it: Research the lab's recent papers and identify 3-4 specific technical or methodological challenges they're facing.
Create a simple chart showing how your existing skills directly address each challenge.
Include specific examples of when you've solved similar problems.
This demonstrates that you've done your homework and can contribute immediately rather than just learning for months.
Technique #4: The Future Impact Projection
While others write vague statements about career goals, create a specific plan.
Show how the postdoc will advance both your career and the lab's research program.
How to do it: Draft a concrete 18-month plan showing specific milestones, potential publications, and grant applications you could pursue during the postdoc.
Include how these align with the lab's strategic goals and funding priorities.
This shows you're thinking strategically about mutual benefit, not just your own career advancement.
Technique #5: The Reference Strategy Bonus
Most candidates provide the standard three academic references.
Add one unexpected reference who can speak to different aspects of your value.
How to do it: Include a fourth reference from outside academia who can speak to your problem-solving abilities, work ethic, or leadership skills.
This could be someone from industry, government, nonprofits, or teaching contexts.
Brief your unconventional reference about the specific skills and qualities that matter for the postdoc position.
Key Takeaways:
- Show your personality and communication skills through video introductions that help you stand out from text-only applications
- Demonstrate immediate value by directly connecting your skills to the lab's current research challenges
- Think beyond academic references by including voices that speak to different aspects of your capabilities
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→ Your Action Plan for This Week
- Research one target lab's recent papers to identify specific technical challenges they're facing
- Create a collaboration portfolio with three examples of how you've helped improve others' research
- Practice recording a 90-second video introduction explaining one problem you're excited to solve
Which unconventional technique do you think would work best for your field? Reply and share your thoughts!
Well, that’s it for today.
See you next week.
Whenever you're ready, there are 3 ways I can help you:
1. Get free actionable tips on how to secure a tenure-track job in academia by following me on X, LinkedIn me Instagram and BlueSky
2. Take my proven Academic Job Accelerator Program that has helped hundreds of researchers secure academic positions, and start with my free training videos to learn the exact strategies hiring committees respond to.
3. If you're ready to take your PhD application journey to the next level, join my PhD Application and Scholarship Masterclass. Click the link below to learn more and secure your spot.
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