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There are 3 comments on The Job Hunt: A Hiring Pro’s Perspective

  1. More platitudes. Seriously? Hiring across the board? No, in fact, real unemployment is at 20%+. 400,000+ claiming NEW unemployment benefits weekly. Don’t forget the people who have lost all benefits after searching in vain for 2+ years (and these are by no means lazy folks, they include veterans, police, teachers, attorneys, scientists, engineers, IT workers, and others who have tried networking, volunteering (which is insane given people need money to live) continuing education, sending hundreds of resumes, cold-calling, etc.)).

    And having a good attitude, being adaptive, etc. won’t help you if there are literally hundreds of people per opening. When 8% of people applying for minimum wage jobs at McDonald’s are actually hired, there isn’t good news, no matter how many lies are told.

    Don’t forget if you’re too educated, too adaptable, you might be viewed as a threat/overqualified by people in charge and you won’t get hired. Also, don’t forget that many jobs and entire industries have been offshored and outsourced, and many H1-B visas are issued so that companies can hire foreigners at a fraction of the cost while claiming they can’t find any qualified Americans (which is ludicrous given the number of unemployed Americans with skills in engineering, science, medicine, IT, law, teaching, writing, construction, etc., loads of experience, and degree after degree). Basically, things aren’t good for the vast majority of Americans and no amount of spin will fix it unti the root issues are addressed.

    1. Always be positive and never give up. Everyone knows about the job market, unemployment, over qualified, under qualified, employers not being fair, etc…. Its all about your attitude and what you want in life and you need to decide whats important. Never give up and try different ways to job hunt even if there are way to many candidates. Make yourself different and don’t be the “usual” candidate. Never give up and I would not want my kids in college to use the Bogus Platitudes to motivate them after they graduate. People who complain alot are never happy, again always be positive even in the worst conditions,it will pay off in the long run.

  2. “What do you tell liberal arts majors looking for a job?”

    I think the given answer is a strong euphemism for the true answer: “You should not have majored in liberal arts.”

    I agree with the previous post that this is highly platitudinous.

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