Re: Finding a job sucks thread

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Ergh finding an employer willing to even interview me in Canada has been a pain - even in BC, which hires a lot of American social workers. If anyone has a lead for someone looking for a clinical social worker in Alberta, preferably near Edmonton, and is willing to hire an American (I've already gotten everything IRCC needs for a CUSMA permit)... I'm all ears! :D
Total_douche, MSW, LICSW (lulz)

Re: Finding a job sucks thread

286
We had a difficult all-hands today. It was explicitly and implicitly stated that due to the Trump administration's policies and cutting of funding and diversion of money away from education spending, and the difficulty that each state is facing in regards to education funding, that we didn't hit our target goals. We work directly with school districts, and schools have been hit pretty hard in this current economic situation. Anyway, the board of directors have made the decision to cut about 15% of the staff in the coming weeks. This sucks, because it was 3 months ago that they talked about having enough in the bank for a comfortable runway, but as things are in total chaos on the federal level and how it has been impacting school districts, that runway isn't as long as it needs to be.

It was a really emotional meeting for everyone. They haven't made any final decisions, but they've offered a decent severance package (not good enough, IMO, but at least it's something) and the offer for more if anyone voluntarily resigns. I think they're trying to do this in the most humane way possible, usually you don't see leadership in literal tears.

I don't know exactly where I stand. I don't think anyone does. I recently took over a team that is working on an expansion project that is at the heart of our future development. But, I wasn't instrumental in building it, I've only been tapped to take over some leadership duties on a team. I am trying to think, am I replaceable? I can only think of a few people that maybe are not replaceable. I could easily be replaced. If we have to cut 15%, that's about 25-30 people, depending on what the total salaries are. I don't know how many engineers are on that list, there's really only about 35 of us, so that could be 2-5 engineers slated for dismissal.

Anyway, I wouldn't be that worried if I wasn't the sole breadwinner trying to support a family of 4 on what seems like an ever diminishing dollar amount as costs rise. So, I might be right back where I started at the beginning of this thread. I don't know what the market is like right now, but I can only assume it's pretty bad and only going to get worse. I do think I'm employable, but I don't know how that's going to apply in the current market. I would hate to lose this job because I really do love it and I've been really trying to invest in the people around me and cultivate a long term position. I've been gunning for a promotion and more leadership, which I finally got a small slice of.

I haven't been part of a layoff like this in my career. I've usually left companies as I noticed the red flags, but this kinda came out of nowhere. It's a complete clampdown on spending, including not doing a retreat in 2026, no bonuses this year, and a somewhat reduced pay increase, which seems oddly timed. I always seem to get screwed when it comes to raises and bonuses, so it's just depressing to go through this again. It just makes me more cynical and I've really been trying hard not to be cynical. It's very hard not to be these days.

Re: Finding a job sucks thread

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Announcements came late yesterday, I am retaining my job. It was a very stressful couple of days. Later today, I will learn who is leaving and will be sad about it, because my coworkers are all pretty awesome. It's going to be another emotional week as we reel from this terrible news and start to pick the pieces back up.

Stay safe out there. I feel for those who've lost their jobs because of the chaos, who will be suffering as they try to find a new job in a very bad job market going into the holidays.

Update: they announced in my department who was laid off. Overall in the company, there was several volunteers, which actually reduced the loss on our department. We had to let go of four people, instead of six. One of them is an old colleague of mine. I suspect he was getting paid very handsomely, and unfortunately that's living on the edge. I lost an engineer on my team that was one of the first people hired on engineering. Again, I suspect it was salary based. The other two were newish, and I think maybe because of that they were let go. I gotta give the senior leadership a shoutout for their handling of such terrible things.

Re: Finding a job sucks thread

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Too Much Experience Hurts You in Today’s Tough Job Market
Overqualified job applicants are scaring off cost-conscious businesses
Callum Borchers, WSJ
Oct. 29, 2025
Belt-tightening is overused corporate jargon, but it is particularly apt at the moment. The midsection of America’s workforce is getting squeezed.

Not accomplished enough for senior leadership roles but too experienced (and expensive) for the front-line positions artificial intelligence hasn’t replaced, many mid-career professionals suddenly find themselves in no-man’s-land.

Amazon this week laid off 14,000 office workers in a step toward cutting as many as 30,000 desk jobs. Phrases like “reducing bureaucracy” and “removing layers” appeared in a memo to employees, so it is not difficult to guess which kinds of roles are likely to be eliminated.

Target, United Parcel Service and Booz Allen Hamilton are just a few of the other major employers to announce white-collar staff reductions recently.

This marks what could be a major turning point for the U.S. workforce. Gone are the days when employers would hoard talented employees or worry about being understaffed for the good times.

Now, cost-conscious businesses are trying to get flat, aiming to boost productivity. And when companies need to fill openings, they are eager to find people with just enough know-how—and no more.

This explains why I keep hearing from job seekers who say they’ve been rejected for being overqualified.

When a job description calls for 10 to 15 years of experience, 25-year veterans aren’t necessarily seen as better-than-expected prospects. They’re often viewed as applicants who will ask for too much money and leave as soon as they find opportunities commensurate with their long CVs.

“This is a discouraging thing for me to say, but with the job market the way it is, employers can be very picky,” says Rachel Kargas, a recruiter in the Denver area. “There are so many applicants for every opening that they can find exactly what they want, and that might be a young person.”

Sell yourself short
Employers’ concerns about overqualified job applicants are understandable but can be unwarranted. Some people want less responsibility than in previous roles and are willing to take pay cuts accordingly. Others have been out of work for months and have no desire to job hop once they finally get hired.

To explain these motives, overqualified job seekers have to land interviews. Many don’t make it that far.

Anthony Nigbur, 41, has been a program manager for cybersecurity and healthcare companies. He’s been job hunting since a contract position ended in May, and is working with a recruiter who put him up for several openings.

“He has told me that some of the feedback he’s gotten about me is, ‘Hey, this guy looks great, he’s got all this experience, but we don’t necessarily need it or know how to use him,’” says Nigbur, who lives in Indiana.

He wishes he could talk to prospective employers about why he would be willing to take a job that seems beneath him on paper. He’s stepped into the lead parenting role in recent months while his wife, a nurse, has upped her hours and travel.

“A lot of people are looking for salary, but not everybody’s looking for that,” he says. “Sometimes it’s work-life balance.”

The way companies have hollowed middle management is so dramatic that a new study by the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce projects a shortage of 2,900,000 managers in 2032.

By then, middle management will be a hot job again, the study predicts. That doesn’t do people like Nigbur much good today.

Veteran sales manager Anne Marie Sterling found that playing down her experience was a key to landing her current job at a solar-energy company. The 55-year-old Florida resident tells me she had to “play dumb.”

“That happens a lot in job interviews. There’s no doubt about it,” she says.

To be clear, this doesn’t mean coming across as unintelligent. In Sterling’s case, it meant balancing her decades of sales experience with the fact that she had never worked in the solar industry. The idea was to put to rest any worry that she might parade in like a know-it-all.

How to break through
Kristen Fife, a recruiter in the Seattle area, used a similar strategy to place a software engineer in his 50s on a team of 20-somethings and 30-somethings. She got the hiring manager on board by stressing that this seemingly overqualified candidate was new to developing mobile applications.

Most job seekers don’t have someone like Fife to go to bat for them—not until they get through an initial screening, anyway. To reduce the odds of getting tossed out immediately, applicants should submit résumés that meet, but don’t vastly exceed, the listed requirements.

“Pull years of experience off,” she says. “Your résumé needs to clearly show your qualifications for the job, and it needs to show your experience over the last five to seven—no more than 10—years.”

Removing graduation years from the education section of your résumé is another way to fuzz up your career length.

This isn’t all about trying to appear younger, though it’s true that the “overqualified” label can be veiled age discrimination. Recruiters and hiring managers consistently tell me they are looking for depth, not length, on candidates’ résumés.

By the way, they also confess to occasionally fibbing about “overqualificiations” to spare job applicants’ egos. So, try to be honest with yourself.

Did you really miss out on that opportunity because you were too good or is it possible that the recruiter softened the blow with the professional version of a lame breakup line?

If you’re convinced that being overqualified is the problem, consider ditching the one-line summary of every job you’ve ever had. You might have better luck with detailed descriptions of the impact you made in only your most recent roles.

Re: Finding a job sucks thread

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hbiden@onlyfans.com wrote: Thu Oct 30, 2025 6:38 pm Too Much Experience Hurts You in Today’s Tough Job Market

This is my wife's (55yo) experience.

Yes, remove graduation year from resume, and yes, keep it to one page.

I did not see any mention of recruiters using LLMs to go through resumes, which is also a thing. These models probably are missing nuances and also are incapable of gathering any kind of "feeling" about a candidate by what and also how they write.

I feel bad for anyone looking right now.
Records + CDs for sale

Re: Finding a job sucks thread

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I was laid off Thursday with 25-30 others in a company wide reduction in force. This will be the first time I have looked for a job in my new career in IT. I got into IT because there were supposedly jobs. I have already been in touch with many of you and some have given me great leads and taken my resume. I am feeling ok but the despair and depression are visible right there on the horizon.

52 years old and out of work and no insurance just before the holidays. I've been fired by bigger, wealthier, and more important people than these clowns but it still fucking sucks. Any time a venture capitalist group buys into your company start looking because the lay offs are coming. This is the third wave this year because these greedy fucking assholes set short term unrealistic financial goals and then those of us doing the actual work get fucked when they don't make their quarterly investment goals. Fuck our system for tying insurance to employment, fuck the capitalists who rip away people's livelihoods and security in the name of quarterly profits. Fuck my former employer I hope they go bankrupt and all their homes burn to the fucking ground. Mass layoffs, aka reductions in force, due to budget issues are a total failure of leadership. Vulture capitalists are fucking evil.

I am not angry or bitter though. We have the greatest country and health care system and economy in the world. U-S-A! U-S-A!
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