There are far too many college students who believe that it
will be easy to find a good job after graduation. They think
that they will simply submit ten or twelve resumes, take a few
interviews and somebody will offer them a good paying
job. These students are wrong.
Many students may also have unrealistic ideas about the
starting salaries they will receive, their job duties and
responsibilities or their status within the organization. They
may imagine a short commute, a luxurious apartment, a new sports
car and plenty of money for vacations, entertainment and
electronics. These students may even turn down job offers that
require them to relocate, work long hours or start at the
bottom.
Students like this can’t imagine sending out one hundred
or more resumes and being disappointed every time. They
don’t see themselves accepting a low paying job, living at
home with their parents and struggling to make payments on their
student loans. However, students with unrealistic expectations
will be disappointed more often than those who understand their
prospects in a tough job market, are willing to make some tough
decisions and are ready to fight to succeed.
Realistically, there will always be a finite number of good
paying jobs with the most respected employers, within any field of
interest. In tough times, there will be even fewer
jobs. Within the hardest hit industries and the hardest hit
regions of the country, there may be few or none at
all. That’s why wise students use their junior year to
investigate and try to understand the employment picture in their
field of interest. That early research will enable them to
anticipate employment problems, modify their job search strategies
and adjust their senior year expectations and
plans. Importantly, the most proactive students usually adopt
an “I’ll do whatever it takes” attitude.
When students have unrealistic beliefs and expectations for
their job search results, they can fall into one or more of the
following traps. They:
- Don’t do their best in their
classes.
- Fail to participate in campus, work
and community activities
- Fail to build an impressive list of
accomplishments
- Don’t understand that they
have to compete for good jobs
- Ignore the need to research
employer needs and expectations
- Fail to prepare an impressive
resume
- Don’t bother to practice
their interviewing techniques
- Don’t find a way to
differentiate themselves
- Fail to devote enough time and
effort to their job search
- Ignore their network
- Fail to obtain enthusiastic
references and recommendations
- Wait too long to get
started
Unfortunately, when these students are unable to quickly land
the job that they expected, they typically:
- Develop a long list of
excuses
- Complain that they didn’t
know how tough it was
- Try to explain why something was
unfair
- Place the blame with
others
- End up in dead end jobs,
or
- Give up
The only time that it can be somewhat easier to land a good
job is when students have:
- A CUM that puts them in the top
quarter of their class
- A major that is in
demand
- An impressive list of
accomplishments
- Great references and
recommendations
- Effective communication
skills
- A great network
- An impressive resume
- Outstanding interviewing
skills
- A clear way to differentiate
themselves
- A positive attitude and great
personality
- An enthusiastic, powerful and
comprehensive job search
- A willingness to be
flexible
All students should take a careful look around to assess their
own degree of readiness for their job search and do some research
to determine the employment climate in their own field of
interest. Then, with the assistance of the Career Services
Office, students can lay out a comprehensive plan that will lead to
greater success.
Since the best employers have tough standards and the
competition is stiff, it’s not easy for students to find a
good job. That’s why savvy students begin to prepare for
their senior year job search from the very first day they enter
college. They know that it starts with a goal and a plan that
carries them from semester to semester, one that gives employers
exactly what they need and expect from students.