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If you met someone who could not find a career, let’s say 4 years after graduating. What would you assume about this person?
Is it natural?
Is it his or her fault?
Poor networking?
Not applying to as many jobs as they should?
Generally most people I meet say you’ll get a job somewhere 6 months to a 1.5 years after graduation if you make it your job to look for work and network. Do you guys agree?
If you met someone who could not find a career, let’s say 4 years after graduating. What would you assume about this person?
Is it natural?
Is it his or her fault?
Poor networking?
Not applying to as many jobs as they should?
Generally most people I meet say you’ll get a job somewhere 6 months to a 1.5 years after graduation if you make it your job to look for work and network. Do you guys agree?
Add another one to the list:
Were they too picky, hard to please?
No realistic job offered to them based on their qualifications was acceptable. There are people who have an inflated view of their worth or they want everything to land in their laps.
Have a relative like this. She somehow never returned to the workforce after childbearing because no one would pay her the executive salary she felt she deserved. That child is now in college.
Well, mental health becomes a big issue for the job seeker after a certain amount of time. The person has to dig themselves out of the large unemployment gap while also staying mentally strong.
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Here's the deal, people have to be willing to work outside of their fields until they can either find something in their field or make such an impression on their new job that something opens up for them there. Jobs aren't guaranteed regardless of your degree, and you should be doing something regardless of what it is.
I have an English degree (wanted to teach but student teaching helped me decide against it) and took a job out of college in customer service for GTE (now Verizon). Great company, crappy job. I busted my butt and did the best work I could, and it wasn't even a year before they put me into a better position, and that was the start of my IT career.
It's not rocket science. You just need to show the company you're working for that you're worth an investment in time, and things will work out for you.
A friend worked for a few years in data entry, after he got his MIS degree. He smoked weed every day. It really screwed with his motivation to do anything. When he found out I made 6 figures without a degree, he studied a book that I gave him. He went from $30k/yr to $60k/yr doing SQL work.
Now, he is smoking weed every day again. He watches youtube while at work for a few hours a day. I was happy to have helped him. I am disappointed that I had such a short term impact on his career path.
A friend worked for a few years in data entry, after he got his MIS degree. He smoked weed every day. It really screwed with his motivation to do anything. When he found out I made 6 figures without a degree, he studied a book that I gave him. He went from $30k/yr to $60k/yr doing SQL work.
Now, he is smoking weed every day again. He watches youtube while at work for a few hours a day. I was happy to have helped him. I am disappointed that I had such a short term impact on his career path.
Drugs can really do bad things for you. Not everyone can handle being a casual user.
If you met someone who could not find a career, let’s say 4 years after graduating. What would you assume about this person?
Is it natural?
Is it his or her fault?
Poor networking?
Not applying to as many jobs as they should?
Generally most people I meet say you’ll get a job somewhere 6 months to a 1.5 years after graduation if you make it your job to look for work and network. Do you guys agree?
It completely depends on the situation and person. After what I went through, I really try not to judge until I get the whole story. Sometimes the things that are holding you back are in your past or just who you are (older, long term unemployed etc), and there is nothing you can do about it. No matter what you do, no matter how much effort you put in, people just can't get over your past.
It also depends on what the job market is like overall. Lots of people couldn't find work during the worst of it, and once you are long term unemployed, no one wants you for a professional type job.
When finding a career type job in your field of study, lots of graduates never make it, and it has nothing to do with them. There simply are not enough entry level career type professional jobs. Especially since employers stopped training and developing their workforces. It is getting better today, but that does nothing for people who have already racked up time unemployed.
When it comes to just any low wage job, things have gotten so much better over just the last year, but not everyone can do just any job. Some people have physical reasons/limitations and they can't work physical jobs, or even stand all day etc.... so all those type of jobs aren't a possibility for them. And when it comes to low wage jobs, I ran into a ton of issues with being over qualified. No one wanted to hire me at all for those jobs.
Eventually, if I wanted to make money, I was forced into self employment. I had no other choice.
Don't get me wrong, plenty of people have issues with drugs, depression and other mental illness issues, being too picky or are just plain lazy, but to automatically think that when someone can't find work is just plain wrong.
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