cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/5144131

I’m Schedule A, have a few letters of recommendation, have my resume, and I’m getting my Bachelor’s degree in Communications in one month. I’m Latino or Latina (?) so I guess there’s some DEI service I can utilize.

…I can’t fucking wait. I need a job. I need income. I need a fucking car or transportation. I need to move from this place.

It’s Joever, folks… for Makan, ig? Idk, I had to squeeze in the current lingo there. But as the Joe(ker) himself said, the four-letter word on everyone’s minds is “Jobs! J-O-B-S!” (Yeah, I had to Segway to an old Biden gaffe there, you see).

Anyway, I’m not anti-work, like what they have on that subreddit… and I’ve never exactly been “neutral” on work either.

I’m “pro-work,” if anything. I want a career. I want a job or role I can take pride in. I’m disabled, yes. I’m Autistic, among other things. But gosh darnit to frick (I know, I know, naughty and vulgar language), I need a job. Maybe a union job with LiUNA or whatever. But I need a job.

But for the life of me, I suck at job-hunting.

I’m not sure what details to give to you all, but I need pointers on how to land a job, maybe you can all tell me how you were able to do it (…assuming you did, mind you)?

I just need advice…

  • PM_ME_VINTAGE_30S [he/him]@lemmy.sdf.org
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    4 months ago

    I gotta warn you, as an autistic person who graduated last year with an engineering degree…shit sucks. Half the applications are fake, half the interviews are fake just to scare the overworked employees. The hiring managers are perfectly willing to waste your fucking time justifying the existence of their jobs. I’ve applied for over 350 jobs and internships and gotten zero offers. Same with my classmates. Expect multiple rounds (3-6, maybe more) before getting an offer.

    And engineering was supposed to be a “safe” degree. I can’t imagine how much harder it is for humanities.

    It’s honestly about who you know, then how wealthy and privileged you already are, if you currently have a job, then how personable you are, then a whole bunch of factors I haven’t been able to identify, and then at the very end, how competent you’ll be in the role.

    Make sure to go to your school’s career fair. Dress up as much as possible and bring ~69 copies of your resumé (yes, around seventy, but I’m a manchild so I actually printed exactly 69 last career fair) and hand them all out to employers you can tolerate working for. Typically, you will be expected to know about their company’s work and what positions they have available. I noticed that a lot of companies are there just for brand recognition, i.e. they’re wasting your time. If they’re not wasting your time, there’s a good chance that the person standing there is either a braindead hiring manager or your direct supervisor, or anything in between. At my college, the companies actually list the positions they’re hiring for. If there are none, I don’t go to that company, because they’re wasting my time or aren’t serious enough to fill out the paperwork.

    If your school publishes the employers who will be at the fair, make sure to scan through the list and target employers you want to talk to. Many employers have long lines, so plan accordingly. As an anarchist, I also do a bit of research on each company to make sure they’re not defense contractors, police collaborators, prison contractors, etc. This eliminates a third to a half of the possible employers at my school.

    Career fairs are, from my experience, emotionally and physically draining events that need several days of preparation to get any benefit, and several days of recovery. They are surprisingly loud (bring inconspicuous headphones or earplugs).

    Make sure you have experience in the field you’re applying to work in, even if (especially if) a job posting says you don’t need it. They’re lying. They’re always lying. They basically don’t want to train you at all. Experience in my field is internships and other free work, or a previous job. Research does not seem to count as experience. I hope your field is different.

    Don’t give out your personal info over email to a job posting. Don’t do email interviews; make sure you see an actual moving human, be it over a video call or in person. Got my identity stolen that way. And don’t work for a company that will make you cash a big check (about $5000, right up to the deposit limit for online banking) for “office supplies”. It’s a scam. However, legitimate companies will also ask you for basically the same information and store it in an equally insecure plain-text database, and you’re expected to provide it.

    For DEI stuff, you can fill it out, or not fill it out, or whatever floats your boat. For example, I fill out that I am Hispanic, but not that I’m autistic. I dunno; I just don’t trust engineers to be cool with an openly autistic person based on literally every engineer or engineering-adjacent person I’ve ever met in person ever.

    Besides letters of recognition, make sure you have people you can use as references who are actually willing to be contacted by phone.

    Technically, you should tweak your resumé for every position. However, because I’m so done with this shit forever, I basically keep a few classes of resumé for different job types. For example, I have a “generic” electrical engineering template, a “control systems” template, and a “data science/software” template. If there’s an opportunity I really want, only then will I tweak it by mirroring the content of the job post. It’s super important for your resumé to be searchable, because the employer is probably going to just do a Ctrl+F to find relevant terms.

    Make sure to also have a plain-text version of your resumé lying around. A common pattern is for the employer to have you upload a copy of your resumé and not even fucking attempt to parse it, meaning that you have to re-enter all its information by hand into their shitty form. Generally speaking, you should be expecting to spend about 15 minutes per application.

    Don’t put absolutely everything on the resumé. You need to leave some stories for interviews.

    Do your phone and Zoom interviews in front of a computer with a text editor open. I actually take notes during and after the interview, and then commit it to a remote repo so I can pull it onto any computer and get all my notes from all phone calls. You should also have a copy of the resumé you actually submitted to the company on hand.

    Technically also you should write cover letters for every position, but again because I’m so fucking done with this bullshit, I rarely do. If I’m feeling like doing a half-measure, this is actually an excellent opportunity to use ChatGPT or an open-source LLM to write for you, of course with proofreading, because this is an application where a bullshit machine IS FUCKING DESERVED actually works since they socially expect bullshit. Not like they’re reading it anyways.

    I’m “pro-work,” if anything. I want a career.

    Can I be honest? I desperately want to work too, but I’m slowly coming to the conclusion that it’s literally easier not to fucking bother and just live off the government, parents, rich friends, and/or stealing. I’m actually a lot worse off than I used to be before studying engineering. I’m overqualified for my old job, but underqualified for engineering and tech work, and all at the price of thousands of fucking dollars of debt. Turns out capitalist “efficiency” is making it harder for us to be put to work.

    Looking for work is a job in it of itself, except you don’t get paid.

    • Makan ☭ CPUSA@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      4 months ago

      Starring this.

      And yeah, career and job fairs might also be my best bet. Better to meet these people in-person.

      I understand the last part, but I want, in my life, to at least try a career, try my hand at it. Not sure how to explain.

      • PM_ME_VINTAGE_30S [he/him]@lemmy.sdf.org
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        4 months ago

        I understand the last part, but I want, in my life, to at least try a career, try my hand at it. Not sure how to explain.

        No I get it. I’m in the same boat, I’m still trying to get a job and I really just want to start participating in the engineering world. It’s just so hard to be allowed in.

        • Makan ☭ CPUSA@lemmygrad.mlOP
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          4 months ago

          Oh, fair. That I can understand. Me, I just want to promote things. I’m proficient in advertising. I’m proficient in Communications. Let me do that, world.

    • Makan ☭ CPUSA@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      4 months ago

      …That… last part is something I didn’t really think about.

      Ugh, I will definitely have to settle, I’ll say that much.

      • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        It sucks but the proper mindset is “building” not “settling”.

        Think leapfrog

  • LarkinDePark@lemmygrad.ml
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    4 months ago

    Everyone is hired to solve a problem that can’t be automated.

    When I’ve been involved in interviews, rarely, but sometimes, my only two questions are,

    1. Can you do the job?

    2. Can we get along?

    That’s it. If you can answer both questions you get the job (unless someone got there first, or beat you on unfair grounds like prettiness or race or something). The first can be answered quickly by any interviewer who understands the work. Shit engineers famously display their juvenile egotism by trying to impress each other with making the process of answering this question intricate and involved, with puzzles and shit. These people are morons.

    The second is answered by just getting the interviewee to talk, about anything at all, just to get the vibe. This is the more important question. Nobody wants to work with an asshole, except other assholes. Really good teams defend their vibe from assholes. Depending on the job question 2 might not be relevant at all. If someone just needs anyone to man a station then they don’t care because question1 is the only important question.

    As the job becomes more skilled and teamwork based, question 2 will be the more important thing. You wouldn’t be in the room if you didn’t already

    “Tell me about yourself?”, “What was the last book you read?” …interviews are invasive and demeaning. I fucking hate either side of the desk. But that’s just how it be.

    Again, “Everyone is hired to solve a problem that can’t be automated.” Identify the principal person bothered by this problem and speak your piece to them, and their headaches, directly or indirectly. And how you’re going to make everything aaalll right. With no fuss or drama and they can forget about you and get on with their own shit.

  • eldavi@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    Fyi: when you post something on the Lemmyverse everyone from the other instances can also see it and chime it. Which means everyone can see both of your posts on lemmygrad and hexbear.

    This doesn’t apply to the instances named lemmy.world and maybe sh.itjust.works since they’ve decided to stop sharing due to the leftist views that the lemmyverse was created to support. (We can see them but not the other way around).

    I’m bothering w any of this because I wish someone had told me; so I’m trying to pass it along and good luck w the new job search.