Sunday, May 17, 2020
Why Job Hunting Just Became Easier (and Safer)! - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Why Job Hunting Just Became Easier (and Safer)! - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Yes, you read the headline correctly! Job hunting did in fact just become easierâ"and safer! I know what youâre probably thinking . . . Skip, have you completely lost your mind?! Donât you know whatâs been happening on Wall Street?! Donât you read the bleak âjobs reports?!â Donât you know there is genuine fear that we could have a âdouble-dipâ recession?! Are you aware that consumer confidence is at historic lows?! Donât you know that the âskyâ may actually be falling?! Yes, yes, I know all of that but I still stand by the headline: Job hunting has become both easier and safer. I have two very good reasons for saying this: The field of job hunters has suddenlyâ"and somewhat unexpectedly!â"become smaller, i.e., fewer people are now looking for new jobs. Companies that are hiringâ"and there are companies that are still hiring!â"are genuinely serious about filling their positions, so there is far less risk today of new jobs being âtemporaryâ or short-lived. The thinning ranks of job hunters The job hunt has just become easier because of the reduction in the number of âcompetitors,â i.e., other job seekers, out there in todayâs job market. (Again, you are probably thinking that I have lost it here, but please bear with me.) When most people (perhaps you included) think of the numbers of job seekers in todayâs job market, they almost always focus on the figure of about 15 million, the âofficialâ number of unemployed workers. In fact, until just recently, the more realistic figure to focus on was about 135 million! Thatâs because there are an estimated 120 million currently employed people whoâ"again, until just recentlyâ"have been saying, largely because of dissatisfaction with their current employers, that they are also ready to make a move and look for a new job. The chaotic events of recent months, though, have served to weaken the resolve of a significant portion of the currently employed who were contemplating new jobs. Here is the kind of thing weâre routinely hearing today from this segment of job seekers: âI think I need to just âhang in thereâ for the time being.â âI donât want to take the risk of leaving my current job, which is reasonably sound, for a new job that might last just a few months.â So, for the time being at least, with the exodusâ"temporary though it may prove to beâ"of a sizable segment of currently employed people from the job market, the ranks of job seekers have been substantially thinned. That means that for those job seekers who are bold enough, courageous enough, and who can effectively brand themselves as being among âthe best of the bestâ job candidates, the job hunt just got a little bit easier! Think of it this way: Like Wall Street, when stock prices take a deep tumble, most people become fearful and âbail out!â Those who are somewhat bolder and possess the ability to see âbargainsâ in significantly reduced prices of quality stocks, later are among those few who ultimately prosper! A new job today is a much safer bet The reason job hunting is safer today is because companies are far less prone to bring on a new hire unless they are absolutely certain that they really need that person. The lay-offs and downsizings of the past three years have now brought most companies down to a baseline in regard to staffing levels. And most companies today are taking the attitude that they would rather take the risk of having too few people than the cost risk of having even one too many people. So, when a company today states that they need to hire someone, they generally really need to hire someone! Let me share some recent business experience in our executive recruiting firm to bolster this fact. As âheadhunters,â our executive recruiting firm does have a somewhat clearer view into âthe crystal ballâ than is the case with the typical job hunter. Here is an anecdotal glimpse of what weâre now seeing just in our firm alone: In the last 60 days, only three of the 40+ positions we are currently working on have been put on hold. Only one is due to the company wanting to take a âwait and seeâ attitude on the economy. The other two are on hold now due to a merger. We have already filled three positions this month and have just had an offer accepted on a fourth position. In the last two weeks alone we have received calls from companies asking us to work on eight new positions. What this all means, of course, is that, if one takes a new job today, there is far less risk that the new job will turn out to be merely temporary or short-lived. It gets messy for companies to have to lay off newly hired people. It not only can hurt their brand and public image, it also can have a very negative impact on current employees, already fearful that the âaxeâ may soon fall on them too. So, when one accepts and starts a new position with a company today, more often than not, they can feel far more confident that the position will last (as long as they perform satisfactorily, of course), since most companies have already deeply and thoroughly assessed whether or not they actually need the position filled in the first place. Hiring still somewhat of a drawn out process Significant to note here, however, is that I am not saying companies that are hiring today are going to be filling their new positions quickly. Today, the hiring process is still rather elongated by historic standards, taking (from start to finish) about four to six months. Am I saying that getting a new position has all of a sudden become just a âbreeze?â Of course not. But for those candidates who are savvy enough to recognize that a sudden, somewhat unexpected, shifting of the job market landscape has in fact recently taken place, there are increased opportunities. But these increased opportunities still come with a cost. Only those candidates who have branded themselves as deserving to be among the elite group of candidates will be able to fully capitalize on these opportunities, and the time to âstrikeâ is now, before this rather unexpected âwindow of opportunityâ suddenly closes again! Author: Skip Freeman is the author of âHeadhunterâ Hiring Secrets: The Rules of the Hiring Game Have Changed . . . Forever! and is the President and Chief Executive Officer of The HTW Group (Hire to Win), an Atlanta, GA, Metropolitan Area Executive Search Firm. Specializing in the placement of sales, engineering, manufacturing and RD professionals, he has developed powerful techniques that help companies hire the best and help the best get hired.
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