I had dinner with my parents the other night, and in the course of the conversation my mother started talking about her dad and what he did to earn a living through the Great Depression. I had never heard those stories before . . . or perhaps I just wasn’t listening. It
was interesting and perhaps instructive for those of you who are without work during this current economic downturn.
Mom says that grandpa was without regular work for about 10 years. During that time he did whatever odd jobs he could to pay the rent and put food on the table. He worked on a friend’s ranch in Eastern Oregon and did day labor when he could find it. Grandpa heard that the railroad was hiring in Portland, so in early December of 1941 he found his way to the big city. That day was December 7th — the day the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor marking the U.S. entry into WWII. Needless to say, when grandpa got to Portland the railroad was no longer hiring.
Too old to enlist in the war, grandpa stayed with his brother-in-law and went about looking for work wherever he could find it. After many fits and starts, he finally got hired on with a trucking company where he spent the rest of his working career. He learned about the opportunity from a friend, and followed up. Luckily that opportunity turned into a long lasting career.
For several years the family lived in NW Portland in a house with 3 other families — and only ONE bathroom! It’s all they could afford. They got along and enjoyed each others company even thought times were tough.
I’ll bet there is a similar story in your family. Since I heard mom tell that story, I’ve been wondering “what can WE learn from those past experiences?” Well, several things. . .
I encourage you to talk to someone in your own family who has a memory of how things were a few generations ago. I think it will put perspective on the challenges we are all facing, and perhaps give us some hope to move boldly into the future!

When you go through a grocery line today the bagger asks you how you want your items packed. “Paper or plastic?” Many stores do not even offer us an option. They hand us our items bagged in plastic. There was a time when all groceries were packed into paper bags. Plastic bags were uncommon but not anymore. Today plastic bags are the norm.
Last week I stated that traditional jobs were going away. I recommended that it was time to change your career strategy and stop looking for jobs and start looking for work. The insight I want to share with you this week is that work used to be packed in paper bags but today it is being packed into plastic bags. There is work to be found but more and more companies are offering it in unconventional ways.
We are used to looking for work packed into job positions with clear cut duties. The jobs were offered in a paper bag called full-time, or permanent work. Today many employers are packaging work into plastic bags called projects, temporary work or contract work.
What is happening? Companies are finding that they have to be flexible and nimble in order to compete in today’s market. They need to enlarge their workforce on short notice in order to produce a product or service. Once they have achieved their objectives they need to reduce their workforce rather than pay out wages to idle employees.
Think about the difference between paper bags and plastic bags. A big paper grocery sack could hold a lot of groceries. You could pack many items neatly into one bag. The bags had a rigid shape and fairly predictable volume of room. Traditional jobs were like paper bags, sturdy and dependable.
But today employers are packing much of their work into plastic bags. Work today is much more flexible, odd shaped and comes in smaller units. Plastic bags are a better container for holding or assigning work.
Be careful that you do not overlook, ignore, or turn down work because it is being offering in “plastic” as contract work, temporary work or as a consulting assignment and not offered as “paper,” a full-time job. Plastic not paper is the new norm for work today.
So, which is it for you? Paper or plastic?
“How much did they pay you to give up on your dreams?”
That’s a direct quote from George Clooney in the movie Up In The Air. My wife and I saw it yesterday, and it really made an impact on me. One, because this is some of the work I have been doing for the last 16 months – not the firing part, but the part about helping people move past the job loss on to a new opportunity. Two, because it deals with an issue that more that 20% of us have had to face in the last 12-18 months — losing a job and its affect on our career, family, psyche and life.
I won’t spoil the movie for you. You should really go see it.
Now read this next part carefully, because if you don’t you may think I’m saying that working isn’t important. I’m not saying that at all. Our jobs allow us to exchange time for money. Money allows us to purchase the things we want and need — i.e. food, clothing shelter, and cool stuff like iPhones and computers. The problem is that too many of us take a job to pay the bills then end up settling for something less than we really want. We work our jobs and they consume us. We get tired and worn out. Something has to give, so we settle. We HAVE to have a job, so we give up on the one thing that really matters to us . . . our dreams.
If you have lost your job recently you have been forced into something that you didn’t want and which doesn’t feel very comfortable. The good news is that the time you have been given may just be the ticket you need to re-focus on what really matters to you. I hope you will take the time to do that, even though it may be uncomfortable (or even a bit painful).
When our clients are evaluating their next career position we coach them to look at 4 things:
When you evaluate your next position you should look for a balance of these 4 things. If you don’t, you will probably have an opportunity to do it again within 18 months. That’s because studies show that more than 50% of all employees are dissatisfied with their current job. Nearly half of them state that they are looking for a new position. I assure you, that will be YOU if you don’t try to balance job satisfaction, growth opportunities, proper environment and compensation within your next position.
You don’t have to settle. You don’t have to take a position that will suck the life out of you. You don’t have to give up on your dreams…and I hope you don’t, because life is just too short!
Happy Hunting!
In the spirit of Late Night with David Letterman, here is my Top 10 List for Job Seekers.
10) Get out of the house. Hey, you can’t effectively conduct a job search from your home office. Get away from the computer and go talk to somebody. Now! (Do that often enough and you won’t need to read the rest of this top 10 list.)
9) Remember, networking is NOT about YOU! Click here to read more about the importance of focusing on the other person in your networking activities.
Shine your shoes. Even if you are just running to the 7-11 for a Slurpee, you want to dress like a professional. You never know who you are going to meet when you are out.
7) Have a great elevator pitch. (If you aren’t sure what that is or how to get one, check out “Jim Nudelman’s 4 Step Process for Writing an Elevator Pitch.”
6) Have plenty of Business Cards / Contact Cards on hand.
5) Be memorable, and I mean this in a good way! One guy always wears a red sweater to these events. Then, when he contacts someone later he says, “I’m the guy in the red sweater you met last week at the networking meeting.” He’s pretty hard to forget!
4) Check your teeth before you leave the house. You don’t want some yucky-green thing stuck between your teeth! Bad first impression! (see #8)
3) Spend at least 90% of your time at a networking event listening and asking questions. Remember #9, networking is NOT about YOU.
2) Go where the action is. Lots of job seekers hang out in groups with other job seekers. While that’s a good place to start and practice your elevator pitch, sooner or later you need to show up someplace where people who would hire you hang out.
and the number 1 tip for job seekers is . . . .
1) Have fun! My good friend Cleon Cox III leads a job finder’s support group. His motto is, “Have fun, meet people, and learn something.” I agree!
Welcome December! This month I am participating in a 30 Day Blogging Challenge with some other bloggers. As you know, this blog is all about helping people find a new job. Not just any new job, mind you, but rather, the perfect career. That’s why we write about acing the interview, cutting time off your job search, and using Internet job boards (like LinkedIn, Monster.com, and Twitter).
This 30 day blog challenge will allow me to develop some new material to use in the Careers 2.0 website. That means two things for you: 1) you get the opportunity to add your 2 cents to the conversation, and 2) you get it for free before everyone else! This blog is all about offering free job advice, free job resources, free resume examples, and much more. We deal with topics such as networking, building a personal brand, working with recruiters, unemployment, interviewing and salary negotiation. What would YOU like to see us cover during the 30 day challenge? I hope you will participate by adding your thoughts to the conversation. Actually, it won’t be much fun without you! Oh, and don’t forget to pass the links along to your fellow job seekers.
While the long term goal of this blog is to help everyone in America find the perfect career for this time in their life, my short term goals are a bit more attainable. Here are my goals for 30 day blog challenge:
Thank you for joining (and encouraging) me on this 30 day blogging journey. And don’t forget, happy hunting!
30 Day Blogging Challenge – day 1. Tomorrow’s post: “Do You Have A Professional Photo?”
What would you give to have a career – job or business – that made you want to get up in the morning and get to work? Would you take half of your old salary to wear casual clothes, learn from your team every day or be your own boss? Have you ever had a work situation that made you happy … contented?
These questions have been rolling around my skull during my months of unemployment and even prior to being laid off. Lately, I have been talking to a lot of people who are also pondering the balance between money and happiness. Just this week a friend said he’d be happy to have a full-time job at fifth of his old salary (he was a six-figure salesman) with benefits just for the security. But then he mentioned a position that didn’t fit him at all. So I asked, if you don’t care how much you make, why not do something you are passionate about?
It all goes back to how we search for our career. If I am a square peg, then why do I keep trying to shove myself into a round hole? Babies learn pretty quickly that the triangle doesn’t fit in the hexagon spot, yet we adults have a tough time using this metaphor in our own lives.
Before you can brand yourself using the tools in www.CareerAdvice4U.com, you have to explore your passions. That’s why “Career Crossroads: Finding the Perfect Career” starts with personal assessment.
I wasn’t surprised by the results of my Myers-Briggs Type and Keirsey Temperament Tests because I had already made a long list of my passions. I already knew some of the careers I fit from past experience.
So I continue to ask myself – “what am I worth?” and “what makes me happy?” I know I don’t want to go back to being a starving reporter, but I’m not sure I need to match my previous six-figure salary along with the stress, migraines and loss of sleep that accompanied it. I think I would accept lesser pay for a boss that doesn’t scream at me – or to be my own boss and solely responsible for my successes and failures.
Possibly we can all have the perfect career and make great money. Why not? I am just suggesting that if we seek jobs only because of pay, and not because of what we are passionate about, well, we will probably be doing this entire job-seeking routine again in a year or less.
I definitely deserve money. I also deserve to be happy in my work. So, my goal is to find the medium and have both. With guidance from the career wizards, I believe we all can.
Here is a video we have prepared on the three different types of resumes – a chronological resume, a functional resume, and a hybred version of the resume.
We have also included some suggestions as to where and when you would use each one. (Note – this information is found in Chapter 3 of the book “Career Crossroads”.)
We’ve all heard the advice. “You must have a great resume in order to get a good job.”
That piece of career advice is one of the reasons why resume writing services are so popular these days. Many professionals will shell out anywhere from $500 to $1,000 just to have a professional write their resume for them. I’m sure you’ve seen the websites for these resume writing services. They promise you will make over $100K or increase your income by $10k per year, just because you have a professional resume and cover letter. But do these resumes work any better at getting the job? I don’t think so, and here’s why.
In a traditional job search the purpose of a resume is to help you get an interview. Nothing more. A good resume gets your foot in the door and allows you to talk to the person (or persons) who make the hiring decision. In the old way of finding a job a resume is pretty much a blind introduction.
The problem with a blind introduction is that recruiters get more than 500 resumes for every posted position. There is virtually no way your resume will stand out in that crowd – no matter how well it’s written or how professionally polished it looks. If you want to get noticed you don’t need a resume, you need a personal introduction!
What if you could get an interview in a way other than by sending your resume? What if you could talk directly to the hiring manager and have them express their interest in you working for them BEFORE you ever sent a resume? If you could, then the purpose of a resume would be completely different, wouldn’t it? The resume would be more of a tool to help you seal the deal rather than a blind introduction. That’s what a personal introduction could do for you. That’s also why a strong network is so important.
So readers, here is a question for you – Have you ever used a professional resume writer? If so, what kind of experience have you had with your professional resume writing service? Did it help you get an interview? Did it help you get the job? Please post your answer so others can learn from your experience.