How To Navigate Long-Term Unemployment In Today's Job Market


Headline unemployment remains relatively low. And yet a growing share of job seekers have been out of work for six months or longer. For many, re-entry is proving slower and more disorienting than expected. As CNBC recently reported, long-term unemployment is becoming a status quo in parts of today's labor market.

If the economy is "fine," why are so many capable people stuck?

For those living... it, long-term unemployment is not a statistic. It feels like sending résumés into a void or being told you are "overqualified" one week and "not the right fit" the next. The system you knew how to navigate no longer operates the same way.

The easy explanation is cautious employers and longer hiring cycles. The harder explanation is structural: many professionals are looking for yesterday's job in tomorrow's job market.

How To Reposition Your Job Search During Long-Term Unemployment

If you have been unemployed for six months or longer and are wondering how to get hired again or survive long-term unemployment, the answer may not lie in sending more applications. It may lie in repositioning yourself for how today's job market actually works.

Treating the job search as a transaction -- find an opening, submit a tailored résumé and wait -- no longer works reliably because roles are evolving before they are formally defined. Organizations increasingly hire around emerging gaps that do not translate neatly into traditional job titles or prior experience.

That is why conversations matter more than applications.

Not the transactional "I'm looking for a job" call. Few people respond well to that. What you want instead are curiosity-driven conversations designed to understand where the work is moving, how problems are being framed and what capabilities are becoming more valuable.

Embark on a "coffee journey." Start with people you already know who are doing work that interests you. Talk to them about what is changing in their field. What new pressures are emerging? What tools are reshaping the way work gets done? What challenges feel unresolved? Then ask who else you should speak to.

This is more than networking. It is research.

As you expand your circle from people you know to people you do not yet know, two shifts occur. First, you begin to describe what you actually know how to do, independent of your previous title. In conversation, you naturally draw on past experiences to engage with current problems. You recognize where your experience is relevant, even if it once carried a different label. A former marketing manager may realize her deeper capability lies in translating customer insight into strategic decisions. An operations leader may recognize that what he brings is systems thinking across complex environments.

Second, you learn to tell the story of your skills in the language the market is using today. You discover adjacent spaces where that capability matters. The marketing manager who once saw herself narrowly as a brand lead may find opportunities in product strategy or customer experience. The operations leader may see openings in transformation initiatives or cross-functional redesign efforts. You begin to recognize needs before they are formalized into job postings. What once felt like a fixed career path starts to branch.

The coffee conversations lead you to a clearer understanding of where your capabilities intersect with emerging needs. They shift your focus from chasing openings to identifying opportunity.

How To Redefine Your Professional Identity During Long-Term Unemployment

Even with that clarity, long-term unemployment can destabilize identity. The longer someone is out of work, the more tightly they cling to their last title as proof of competence.

But employers are not hiring your past. They are hiring their future. That requires more than describing your experience. It calls for reframing how you understand and present your value.

Repositioning begins by asking different questions. What problems do you consistently solve well? What decisions improve when you are involved? What patterns do you see faster than others?

You are detaching your professional identity from job titles and anchoring it in transferable value. In a market where roles morph quickly, job titles are fluid. Capabilities are portable. The ability to synthesize information, manage ambiguity, design processes, build trust or interpret data travels across industries. Over time, that clarity becomes your personal brand, grounded in value and trust, and it opens doors to new possibilities.

How To Upgrade Your Skills For Today's Job Market

Professional stagnation used to be a hidden risk of long-term unemployment. Today it can become an opportunity. Work inside organizations continues to evolve. AI tools are being integrated into daily workflows. Teams collaborate across geographies and time zones. Data fluency is becoming expected rather than optional. If you are out of work, you have something many employed professionals lack: time to learn deliberately.

Employers are far more likely to hire someone who can elevate the team's capabilities, not just fill a slot. That means demonstrating familiarity with emerging tools, new operating models and the changing language of your field.

In a market that rewards learning velocity, forward motion signals adaptability. Experiment with AI tools in your domain. Take on short-term or project-based work that stretches your exposure. Volunteer in a nonprofit navigating digital transformation. Write publicly about how your field is evolving. Teach what you know in new contexts.

Even modest forward moves signal adaptability. And adaptability is increasingly the currency of employability.

How To Make Money And Stay Motivated During Long-Term Unemployment

Financial pressure is real. If you are asking how to make money while unemployed, the answer may not be waiting for the next full-time role.

Project-based consulting, fractional roles, teaching, advisory engagements and contract work can generate income while expanding your network, exposing you to new challenges and accelerating your learning. You do not need to decide that you are done with salaried employment. But you also should not confine yourself to one narrow version of what your next step is supposed to look like.

Careers are becoming more portfolio-based over time. Many professionals will combine employment and independent work across a lifetime. Long-term unemployment can become the moment that opens that broader model.

The key is to treat interim work as strategic, not temporary. Instead of asking, "How do I get back to where I was?" begin asking, "Where does my capability create leverage in the opportunity that is emerging?"

Those who treat this period as repositioning rather than waiting often discover it becomes an inflection point. In a world where careers will stretch across multiple identities, industries and models of work, learning to reposition may be the most important skill of all.
 
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  • Nicely put!
    Perspective shift is critical in navigating long-term unemployment.
    Thank you for such great insights.

4   
  • Go to the doctor, or the hospital.

  • Your colleagues are at risk too...see a doctor and get an excuse ..A healthy mind and body lead to optimal performance.

2   
  • Don't say anything, go to the bathroom, go to your car. It's easy to kill time. Get on your phone with head phones, or listen to music to drown out... the noise. Lunch isn't a long time. There easy ways to use up time. It's not that bad. You still have a job.  more

  • Follow your heart, and utilize your time productive but do not exclude yourself from others thought it might be bothering ... Get them some time where... you share feelings, talks, meals ect.... but not every day.
    Without a company .... Life is nothing !
     more

Cooperation and Competition: The Hidden Tension Inside Software Teams


Cooperation and Competition: The Hidden Tension Inside Software Teams

Organizations are built for collaboration, yet individuals are promoted, evaluated, and hired in competitive markets. This essay examines the structural tension between team-first cooperation and individual career survival in a global job market. It explores whether internal competition is inevitable, whether suppressing it... harms excellence, and how excessive rivalry corrodes trust and system health. By analyzing how recognition systems translate contribution into advancement, the essay argues that the real problem is not competition itself but misalignment: when organizations fail to reward the work that actually sustains teams, individuals are forced to choose between collective success and personal viability. The solution lies in designing environments where advancing oneself and strengthening the team are not opposing strategies but reinforcing ones.

When we put people into teams inside organizations, we usually say the purpose is cooperation. We say that together they can do what none of them could do alone. That is often true. A modern software system is too large, too interdependent, too exposed to changing markets for a single person to carry it in their head. So we create teams, define roles, and talk about collaboration.

But we rarely ask a simple question: is cooperation the whole story?

If you look closely, you see another force running underneath it. Individuals are not promoted as teams. Salaries are not negotiated by collectives. When layoffs happen, it is not "Team Delta" that leaves; it is names on a list. And in a global job market, especially in software, people are constantly compared with others they have never met. Their reputation travels through résumés, LinkedIn profiles, conference talks, GitHub repositories, and private references.

So while the organization speaks the language of collaboration, the individual lives in a world of competition.

Is that a problem? It might be. But before we decide, we should examine the structure carefully.

Imagine a team where everyone truly puts the team first. They share credit, they avoid visible heroics, they help others quietly, and they make sure that success is collective. Inside the organization, this looks healthy. There is little internal friction. Knowledge spreads. No one is hoarding information.

Now imagine the same individuals in the external job market. Recruiters do not promote teams; they hire people. Hiring managers look for signals: what did you lead, what did you build, what impact can be attributed to you? If someone answers every question with "we did this," it may sound noble, but it is hard to evaluate. The market rewards identifiable contribution.

This creates a tension. If you fully dissolve yourself into the team, you may weaken your personal market position. But if you optimize for personal visibility -- choosing tasks that are high-profile, avoiding unglamorous maintenance work, guarding expertise to stay indispensable -- you may weaken the team.

It is tempting to moralize this. Some will say competition is bad; others will say it is natural and healthy. But neither reaction helps us understand the mechanism.

The first step is to ask: is there really competition inside teams, or is this exaggerated?

There is competition for scarce things: promotions, raises, recognition, influence. Even in organizations that claim to avoid internal rivalry, these resources are limited. If one person becomes a principal engineer, another does not. If one person gets the visible project, another does not. So even if people are polite about it, there is selection happening.

Now consider what happens when this competition is suppressed entirely. Suppose management insists that everything is purely collaborative and discourages any individual differentiation. Promotions become opaque. Feedback becomes vague. Recognition is evenly distributed regardless of contribution.

In such a system, high performers may quietly reduce effort. If extra effort yields no additional recognition or reward, rational people adjust. The team may look harmonious, but its performance can flatten. The most capable individuals either disengage or leave for environments where their contribution is visible.

On the other hand, consider a system with intense internal competition. Rankings, stack ratings, forced distributions, constant comparison. Now individuals optimize for themselves. They choose work that maximizes measurable impact, even if it fragments the architecture or burdens others. Knowledge sharing declines because knowledge is leverage. The team becomes a set of loosely cooperating individuals, each guarding their own position.

In both extremes, the organization suffers.

So perhaps the question is not whether competition exists, but at what level it becomes productive rather than destructive.

There is another layer to this. The market outside the organization is not neutral. It is increasingly global. A developer in London is competing, indirectly, with developers in Warsaw, Bangalore, São Paulo, and San Francisco. Salaries, opportunities, and reputations circulate internationally. This external competition shapes internal behavior. Even if a company tries to create a purely cooperative culture, individuals know they must remain employable beyond the company's walls.

Now here is the paradox: could someone who fully puts the team first actually limit their own career prospects, and by doing so, ultimately weaken the team and organization?

Let's examine that carefully.

Suppose an individual consistently takes on invisible but essential work -- refactoring, mentoring, stabilizing systems, documenting knowledge. The team benefits enormously. But if these contributions are not legible in the promotion system or visible to the market, the individual's growth stalls. Over time, frustration builds. They may leave. The team then loses precisely the person who made collaboration possible.

In that sense, self-sacrifice that is structurally unrecognized is unstable. It depends on personal virtue rather than system design. When that person leaves, the organization is surprised and says, "We didn't know how much they were doing." That is already a sign of failure.

So the real issue may not be competition itself, but misalignment between how value is created and how value is recognized.

If organizations reward only visible, high-impact features, individuals will gravitate toward them, even if the long-term health of the system requires maintenance and coordination. If organizations reward only individual metrics, collaboration becomes costly. If they reward only collective metrics, individual excellence becomes invisible.

A stable arrangement likely requires a balance: individuals must be able to build identifiable reputations while contributing to collective success. This means recognition systems that make invisible work visible. It means promotion criteria that include mentorship, architectural stewardship, and long-term system health, not just feature count.

It also means intellectual honesty about competition. Pretending it does not exist does not remove it. It only drives it underground, where it manifests as politics and subtle sabotage.

There is another important test. Can an individual advance by making others stronger? If the answer is yes, then cooperation and competition are partially aligned. If the answer is no -- if advancement requires standing out at the expense of others -- then the system encourages zero-sum behavior.

We should also question one assumption: that putting the team first necessarily harms the individual. In many cases, deep expertise, reliability, and the ability to elevate others are precisely what make someone valuable in the market. The problem arises when those qualities are hard to signal externally. If the industry values only visible artifacts and titles, then individuals adapt to that valuation.

So the conflict is not simply psychological. It is structural. It emerges from how organizations allocate rewards and how the external market interprets signals.

In conclusion, cooperation and competition are not opposites; they are intertwined forces. Eliminating competition entirely is unrealistic and may suppress excellence. Allowing it to dominate corrodes trust and collective performance. The paradox of the selfless individual arises when recognition systems fail to capture the real sources of value. A well-designed organization does not ask individuals to choose between personal survival and team success. It aligns them so that strengthening the team is one of the most reliable ways to strengthen one's own position. When that alignment breaks, both the individual and the organization pay the price.
 
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AI-written résumés frustrate employers, blur talent


Job seekers remain divided, with some crediting AI for efficiency and others finding more success after abandoning it.

As part of a job search, outsourcing and offshoring company Oceans asked candidates to make a video answering one question: What is your most controversial personal conviction about the workplace? The company received more than 300 responses and most of them were eerily... similar.

"It was abundantly clear it was [artificial intelligence]," Matt Wallaert, Oceans' chief experience officer, said of the repeated answers, which also followed the same structure. It was like "you did the laziest possible ... you failed the basic task of sharing your personal beliefs."

The situation left Wallaert and the hiring team bewildered on how to evaluate the candidates, as even some of the most qualified blended together.

Job seekers are turning to AI to help them land jobs more quickly in a tough labor market. With a plethora of AI tools, some employers may be screening applicants' résumés, deprioritizing them as candidates. Employers say that's having an unintended consequence: Many applications are looking and sounding the same. AI has complicated the process for both employers and job seekers leaving both sides at odds over how to get what they want.

It's easy to spot when candidates over-rely on AI, some employers said. Oftentimes, executive summaries will look eerily similar to each other, odd phrases that people wouldn't normally use in conversation creep into descriptions, fancy vocabulary appears, and someone with entry-level experience uses language that indicates they are much more senior, they added.

It's worse when they use auto-apply AI tools, which will find jobs, fill out applications and submit résumés on the candidate's behalf, some employers said. Those tend to misinterpret some of the application questions and fill in the wrong information in inappropriate spots. If these applications were evaluated alone, employers say they'd have a harder time identifying AI usage. But when hundreds of applications all have the same issue, they said, AI's role in it becomes obvious.

Joseph Eitner, chief human resources officer for New York-based investment firm Eaton Capital Management, said he has no issue with candidates turning to AI to add some keywords, clean up their grammar, or even help them think through a question on the application. But ultimately, he said, candidates should do the writing themselves, express their own ideas and personalities, and take the time to manually submit their applications.

"If that's how you apply and how you work, I don't want to hire you," he said. AI auto-apply services are "snake oil. It's a disservice to yourself and to the people you're applying to."

Not all employers rely heavily on AI to screen applicants, according to Ron Sharon, chief information security officer in Denver at financial advisory firm PTMA Financial Solutions, and some only use it to help them prioritize people with the necessary experience. Sharon said he uses an AI tool that assigns percentages to candidates based on their qualifications. Anyone who hits a 75% or above will be considered for the job, he said, but AI never automatically rejects a candidate.

"I use AI as a tool to help me augment what I do," he said. "Job seekers should use it to help them augment what they do. They shouldn't use AI for the complete process."

But some job seekers say the ways that employers started using the technology to rank candidates prompted them to adopt it.

Stephen Harris, a 37-year-old in San Antonio who's seeking a job as a tech support specialist, said he'll stop using AI to write his résumé once recruiters stop using AI to evaluate it.

"You're saying, 'You shouldn't be doing this' when I know a good chunk of them do this," Harris said.

Employers are often focusing too hard on finding the perfect candidate and losing some of the most adaptable ones in the process, he said. And while he still tries to stand out by sending his résumé via mail, he says using AI to quickly tailor his résumé makes it easier to be among some of the earlier applicants.

Job seekers say one of the benefits of AI is it can help people make ideas flow better, punch up their words and fill in blanks they may struggle with. But some employers say they'd much rather see the person as they are.

Prateek Singh, founder and CEO of the start-up LearnApp in New Delhi, said when candidates use AI for their applications, it doesn't allow him to evaluate what excites them about the job and what they're less interested in. In their cover letters, candidates are asking him to "chat over coffee," a phrase he said isn't common in India.

"This is the best time for you to stand out based on all of your flaws and eccentricity," he said. "If 100 applicants come to us with AI, and you are authentic, you stand out."

The advice rings true to applicants such as Sneha Sharma, who said when she stopped using AI for her résumé, she started to gain more traction in her job search.

In the course of about six months she had applied to up to 300 jobs, using AI tools such as ChatGPT and some that helped her find leads. She briefly tried an AI application that auto-applied to jobs for her but gave up on that in a couple weeks. But she couldn't land any interviews.

After taking a break, she adopted a new approach: She stopped using AI, built a couple of résumés from scratch, adding a little personality such as including details about her move to the United States, cold calling and emailing recruiters. Within two weeks she landed seven interviews, and in less than two months, she had a job.

"Don't be blinded by the internet and that ChatGPT will do everything," she said. "Use your brain, keep changing and experimenting."

Wallaert, the Oceans executive, said the company planned to reach back out to qualified candidates who used AI to tell them to try again. The company also plans on updating the application's instructions to ask that candidates not use AI for their video response. Wallaert has faith that eventually the problem will solve itself, but in the meantime, he feels badly for candidates who may lose out because of relying too much on AI.

"This gap will close over time but at what cost?" he said. "That's the bummer."
 
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  • Durable drinkware or "legendary monster/creature?"

  • And what difference would your answer made to the job you were applying.

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Gen Z parents are calling recruiters, joining job interviews and negotiating salaries


Getting a job earlier meant "adult enough" to handle responsibilities. But the situation at present is definitely not a rosy picture to be cherished but a murkier one, where everything seems to be uncertain. At a time like this, parents are turning into saviors for their kids.

Gen Z, much renowned for its not-so-ubiquitous gimmicks, has once again been in the headlines for its frivolous talks. We... all do remember when we used to accompany our parents to school to complain about that bully friend of ours. What if we could walk with them inside a job interview hall and let them do the talking? Well, you might giggle at the idea, but the present generation has taken this seriously.

According to Zety's Career Co-Piloting Report, nearly half of Gen Z workers, 44%, say their parents helped write or edit their CVs. More strikingly, one in five admits a parent has contacted a potential employer or recruiter on their behalf. "Will talk to your parents" seems to be a new normal for the corporates. The question is not only how it is changing the colours of boardrooms, but the concerning point is the over-dependence of the present generation on their guardians.

Getting a job earlier meant "adult enough" to handle responsibilities. But the situation at present is definitely not a rosy picture to be cherished but a murkier one, where everything seems to be uncertain. At a time like this, parents are turning into saviors for their kids.

Zety career expert Jasmine Escalera describes the phenomenon as "career co-piloting," a model in which parents play an active, hands-on role in shaping early professional decisions. In an uncertain labour market marked by layoffs, contract roles, and rising expectations, many Gen Z graduates appear to see job hunting as a collaborative family project.

The numbers underline the scale.

It is easy to mock this trend as "helicopter parenting." But that would be simplistic. Many Gen Z graduates entered adulthood during a pandemic, watched hiring freeze overnight, and saw stories of AI reshaping industries. Their caution is not entirely misplaced.

The pattern continues beyond interviews. Nearly 28% report parental involvement in salary discussions,18% received advice, while 10% say their parents negotiated directly with employers.

Negotiation has always been uncomfortable, particularly for first-time job seekers. But the data suggests that Gen Z may feel especially underprepared for conversations about pay and benefits. Parents many with decades of work experience are stepping in to fill that knowledge gap.

This raises a pressing question: Are parents empowering their children, or delaying their independence?

There is a thin line between guidance and substitution. Advice strengthens confidence. Direct intervention can weaken it.

Perhaps the most telling statistic is this: when asked who has the greatest influence over their career decisions, 32% of Gen Z respondents chose their parents, 35% chose their boss, and 34% said both had equal influence.

In effect, parents rival managers as career anchors.

Even more revealing, 67% say their parents regularly provide career advice, and more than half have had parents visit their workplace outside formal events. Yet, Gen Z also draws boundaries: 55% would feel embarrassed or upset if their parents contacted their boss without their knowledge.

To understand this shift, one must look beyond the job market. Gen Z was raised in an era of hyper-involvement -- parents monitoring school portals, tracking grades in real time, guiding extracurricular choices, and even shaping university applications. Career co-piloting may simply be the continuation of a long-standing dynamic.

But the workplace operates on different rules. Employers expect autonomy. Professional credibility is built on direct communication. When a recruiter receives a call from a parent, it can subtly alter perceptions. Fairly or unfairly, independence is often equated with readiness.

This is where the generational tension lies. Parents see involvement as protection and mentorship. Employers may interpret it as immaturity.

It would be unfair to reduce this to overprotective parenting alone. The modern job market is brutal in ways previous generations did not face. Entry-level roles often demand experience. Salaries lag behind living costs. Career ladders are less linear.

In such an environment, parental support can act as social capital. Families with professional networks, negotiation skills, and industry insight provide an invisible advantage.

That advantage, however, is not evenly distributed. Career co-piloting may widen inequalities between those with informed, resource-rich parents and those without such backing.

At its best, parental involvement can be a bridge, helping young workers decode corporate norms, understand compensation, and build confidence.

At its worst, it risks becoming a crutch, postponing the uncomfortable but necessary growth that comes from making mistakes alone.

The data suggests Gen Z itself is aware of this balance. Most draw lines around employer contact without consent. Many seek advice rather than direct intervention. The majority, 72%, handle negotiations without parental involvement.

In other words, while the co-pilot is present, the young professional is still in the cockpit.

Every generation enters the workplace under scrutiny. Baby boomers were called rigid. Millennials were labelled entitled. Now Gen Z faces questions about resilience and independence.

Yet, perhaps what we are witnessing is not weakness, but adaptation. In a volatile economy, collaboration has become a survival skill. Family, once confined to the personal sphere, now spills into professional terrain.

The recruiter's phone ringing with a parent on the line may feel unusual. But it reflects a broader cultural truth: the boundaries between home and work are shifting.

The deeper issue is not whether parents should be involved. It is whether institutions, schools, universities, employers, are doing enough to prepare young adults for the realities of work before that first interview. If negotiation feels frightening, perhaps career education has failed.

If independence seems delayed, perhaps transition systems are weak. Gen Z is not rejecting adulthood. It is entering it with a support system close at hand.

The real test will come later -- when the co-pilot gradually steps back, and the young professional must fly solo.
 
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Why Your Best Angel Investors Are Founders Who Just Raised Their Series C


The right operator angels unlock signal, customers and future capital you can't manufacture after the round closes.

Early-stage founders tend to raise angel money from the easiest people to reach instead of the most useful ones.

You start with wealthy individuals, friends of friends or local angel groups. It's usually enough to close the round. But it rarely shifts your company's... trajectory.

There's one overlooked group of angel investors that consistently delivers outsize value: Founders who are two or three stages ahead of you and have just raised a significant round.

At Nacelle, I leaned heavily into this strategy across our pre-seed, seed and Series A rounds. The impact wasn't subtle. One angel helped reshape our product strategy. Another introduced us to the VC who led our $50 million Series B. A third brought us our first paying customer.

That experience changed how I think about early-stage fundraising. It has to be about more than closing a round. If you want to build something big, you need to think about assembling leverage.

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Traditional angels often bring impressive résumés. Many come from finance, legal or corporate leadership backgrounds. They can add value and open doors. But most haven't recently built a company through the terrain you're navigating now.

A founder who just went from Series A to Series C has current, relevant insight. They know when to hire executives, how to test sales strategies under pressure, what boards do in tough moments and which product bets actually pay off.

They also know the common mistakes. J.P. Morgan's Vice President in Startup Banking notes that there are "infinite mistakes a founder can make, and the best thing startups can do is surround themselves with networks including investors, advisors, law firms, financial institutions and peers -- that understand common pitfalls."

Use this simple filter when considering angels: Would this person's operating experience help us avoid a major mistake in the next year? If not, the check size matters less than you think.

Founders at later stages understand dilution. According to Carta, founding teams own 56.2% of their company after raising a seed round. That drops to 36.1% at Series A and falls again to just 23% by Series B. These founders have felt real dilution. Many have also taken some secondary capital along the way to offset that exposure and derisk personally.

That doesn't make them short-term focused. It often does the opposite. As Brian Halligan, co-founder and chairman of HubSpot, shared after his own experience with secondary during a later-stage round: "It 'stiffened' our backbone when it came to acquisition interest and kept us focused on building a company our grandkids would be proud of." He added, "It was likely one of the worst financial decisions I've ever made, but I don't regret it ... the pie's plenty big."

SaaStr featured the quote above while echoing that "Secondary sales done right truly align founders and the company and incent them to go long."

These founders tend to back early-stage companies where they can offer more than money. They invest where their experience can make a real difference.

You're also giving them access. You're offering a deal they might not otherwise see, at a stage where their input can shape outcomes.

When a respected founder invests in your company, others notice.

This isn't the same as a passive angel who writes dozens of checks. Operator angels bring domain expertise and hard-won credibility. VCs take that seriously. It compresses diligence, reframes risk and changes the tone of the conversation.

Founders talk. One high-signal name on your cap table can quietly open the door to a new tier of investor meetings.

If you're optimizing your angel round purely for check size, you're missing the compounding value of credibility.

There's a practical benefit that doesn't show up in pitch decks: actual business traction.

If your angel runs or has recently run a company in an adjacent space, you've built optionality. Whether through partnerships, integrations or customer intros, there's a real chance your angel can accelerate your go-to-market.

As J.P. Morgan says, there are many things to consider in your due diligence, and key public information "includes the investor's reputation in the startup community, areas of expertise and preferred level of involvement." That's not a nice-to-have. That's leverage you can't build later.

This strategy only works if you're deliberate.

Before you open your next round, build a list. Identify 10 to 15 founders who've recently raised Series B, C or D rounds. Look for operators two or three stages ahead of you, ideally in adjacent spaces. Crunchbase and tech press are useful tools, but your current investors and advisors are often the fastest path to warm introductions.

Warm intros matter. These founders are busy. Cold outreach sometimes works, but conversion rates are low. Be clear with your network about who you want to meet and why.

When you get to the meeting, lead with your product. A demo is more powerful than a deck. You're not asking for a favor. You're inviting them to engage with something interesting.

And a tip from experience: don't pitch the tax angle. Sophisticated founders already understand QSBS and secondary. If you have to explain it, you're probably talking to the wrong person.

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Most of these checks are modest, usually between $10,000 and $50,000.

The value is in insight, signal and leverage. Some angels may become active. Others might make one key introduction and step back. Both outcomes are valuable. Just be clear upfront about what kind of involvement you're hoping for.

What compounds is momentum. One smart, well-placed operator angel makes the next conversation easier. And the one after that.

Fundraising at the early stage isn't about stacking as many checks as possible. It's about surrounding yourself with people who increase your odds of success.

Series C founders are an underutilized category of angel investor. They're liquid, relevant, experienced and often eager to stay close to the early-stage building process.

Before you close your next round, take a hard look at your target list. If it's filled with people who can write checks but can't shape outcomes, you're leaving leverage on the table.

The best angels aren't always the wealthiest people in the room. Often, they're the ones who were in your shoes just a few years earlier.
 
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Top Tech Role Pays $775,000 Without Programming Skills


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Increased Demand for Communication Skills Amid the Rise of Generative AI

The surge in generative artificial intelligence (AI) has made vibe coding and AI proficiency sought-after qualifications on résumés.

Yet, an... intriguing trend has emerged: technology firms are increasingly willing to offer premium salaries for expertise in a timeless skill that transcends AI -- effective communication.

Last year, Andreessen Horowitz unveiled its New Media team with the objective of arming founders with strategies to "succeed in the narrative battle online." Similarly, Adobe is on the lookout for an "AI evangelist" to spearhead its "artificial intelligence storytelling" initiatives.

Netflix, which curates narrative experiences, recently advertised a director of product and technology communications position with a salary cap reaching $775,000. Microsoft also ventured into print by launching a magazine titled Signal, aiming to counterbalance the fleeting nature of digital content.

In a related move, Anthropic expanded its communications division, increasing its workforce to approximately 80 and continuing to hire, offering roles with salaries of around $200,000 or more.

OpenAI's communications postings list salaries exceeding $400,000. By contrast, the average director of communications in the United States garners approximately $106,000, as reported by Indeed.

In the wake of ChatGPT's mainstream adoption three years ago, outcomes have been varied: within tech entities, vibe coding appears to be diminishing the demand for entry-level software developers.

Across various industries, some employees resort to producing verbose and lackluster content rapidly generated by AI, leading to inefficiencies and fractures in workplace trust.

Sam Altman, OpenAI's CEO, remarked last year on the emergence of an "AI accent" affecting digital discourse, which many now perceive as disingenuous.

Amid widespread concerns regarding generative AI potentially displacing jobs, the ease with which AI produces content has paradoxically intensified the need for skilled human communicators.

Gab Ferree, founder of Off the Record, a community aimed at communications professionals, notes that one would expect the surge in AI-generated content to reduce the need for communications specialists. However, the opposite is unfolding.

Technology firms are actively recruiting writers, editors, and chief communications officers who collaborate closely with CEOs and so-called "storytellers."

According to a recent report by The Wall Street Journal, mentions of "storyteller" in job postings on LinkedIn have doubled between 2024 and 2025.

In an industry characterized by fierce competition, where startups strive for viability and major technology players vie for supremacy, a compelling narrative serves as a crucial asset. Ferree posits that consumers are willing to invest in authentic narratives due to the overwhelming volume of subpar content available.

The trend towards valuing storytelling and lucrative communications roles has been resonating for some time, according to Jenna Birch, founder of SISU, a consultancy for startups and venture capitalists.

As Silicon Valley's prominence has soared over the last two decades, tech companies have been poised to offer remarkable salaries amidst declining employment for journalists.

The rise of content marketing has underscored the necessity of building a strong brand presence on social media and optimizing blog entries for search engine visibility.

Recently, the demands placed on communications professionals have broadened considerably. They are now required to navigate large language models, oversee company blogs, develop comprehensive narratives that distinguish a firm from its competitors, and articulate their CEO's voice across platforms like LinkedIn and Substack.

A report from the Observatory on Corporate Reputation indicates that roles for chief communications officers, with expanded responsibilities incorporating marketing or human resources, grew from 90 in 2019 to 169 in 2024.

The median salary for a CCO at a Fortune 500 company now stands between $400,000 and $450,000 -- a notable increase of $50,000 from 2023, as noted by a Korn Ferry survey.

If everyone's a writer, then nobody's a writer, and I think it's very evident right now.Cristin Culver, founder of Common Thread Communications

As the nature of communications roles evolves and the demand for narrative craftsmanship escalates, experts contend that the pool of professionals capable of adapting to rapidly shifting landscapes may be limited, prompting companies to offer substantial compensation to attract top-tier talent.

Similar patterns are emerging in the realm of AI specialists, further incentivizing tech companies to lure elite professionals from competing organizations.

While the salaries for communicators may not rival the astronomical figures seen in AI, Birch observes that creatives are progressively becoming "the high-value individuals in tech."

Historically, software developers were once viewed as the industry's most prestigious talent. Educational institutions and coding bootcamps sought to address workforce shortages, emphasizing coding as a pathway to lucrative careers.

However, as of 2023, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported a 6.1% unemployment rate for recent computer science graduates, juxtaposed with a 4.5% rate for communications majors.

Additionally, the number of job openings for software engineers witnessed a decline of over 60,000 from 2023 to late 2025, according to CompTIA. Some assert that obtaining a liberal arts degree may provide a robust shield against automation.

While AI simplifies content generation, it has yet to match the artistry of effective writing.

"If everyone's a writer, then nobody's a writer, and I think it's very evident right now," remarks Cristin Culver. The prevalence of AI-generated posts on LinkedIn often induces a sense of monotony for readers.

"Ironically, during this age of AI, the most compelling storytelling often emanates from those who have recognized the oversaturation of mediocrity and adapted to deliver targeted narratives," Culver states.

Anthropic has embraced such tactical storytelling, recently launching a pop-up venue dubbed the Claude Cafe in New York, designed to establish the chatbot as a collaborator and intellectual partner.

This initiative encourages in-person engagement, fostering a connection within a setting enriched by books and publications rather than screens (although the firm has also previously destroyed and scanned numerous books for training its model, a decision upheld by a judge as lawful).

According to Sasha de Marigny, promoted to the company's first CCO after heading communications, "Claude is a pivotal member of the team, with communications professionals acting as detectors of superficiality."

She emphasizes that critical thinking remains a distinctive advantage for humans. "I seek exemplary strategists who comprehend the evolving landscape and devise comprehensive plans to engage our target audiences." Anthropic chose not to elaborate further on its communications strategies for this article.

"We're witnessing a golden era for individuals who genuinely appreciate the art of communication," states Steve Clayton, CCO of Cisco.

Initially apprehensive about the potential ramifications of ChatGPT, Clayton has grown optimistic, recognizing generative AI as a means for communicators and storytellers to cultivate content that resonates authentically with audiences.

"In an environment where no one is wishing for more emails or podcasts, the real challenge lies in crafting something truly deserving of attention and engagement," he adds.

Positions where brands develop their own newsrooms are likely to be among the last to experience AI's encroachment into writing, asserts Noah Greenberg, CEO of Stacker, a content distribution firm.

Unlike traditional media, which hinges on clicks and advertising for revenue, "brands focused on strategic storytelling prioritize crafting several exceptional narratives monthly that establish their authority in their respective domains."

As with coding and image generation, large language models are poised to continue evolving. While LLMs may one day emulate human-like qualities in their writing, they inherently lack true cognitive processing.

A 2025 study from Columbia Business School indicated a bias in LLMs favoring initial options when selecting from multiple choices. For those engaged in communications, AI may increasingly serve as an ally rather than an adversary, as it enhances the visibility of their work.
 
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Doorbell cam captures toddler's reaction as dad returns from two-week trip


The heartwarming moment a toddler was reunited with her dad after he had been on a two-week business trip has been captured on camera.

Ring shared footage with Newsweek of the magical moment that was recorded on one of the doorbell cameras outside a home in Los Angeles.

Rebecca, a Ring customer and the owner of the doorbell cam, shared the story behind the heartwarming clip.

"My husband, Brock,... had to go to a work training in Ohio for two weeks -- the longest we've been apart since being married and having Rylee, our 1-year-old toddler," she told Ring.

"He finally got home after two long weeks and was reunited with us. Rylee ran out the door so excited to see her dada."

The life of a working parent is not an easy one. Finding the balance between building relationships with your family and providing for them is difficult and something many moms and dads struggle with.

In 2018, a Harris Poll of just over 1,000 U.S. adults in full-time work commissioned by job search platform CareerBuilder found that 38 percent had "missed a significant event in their child's life due to work in the last year."

Though being away from Rylee for such a long time would have undoubtedly been a wrench for Brock, seeing her reaction on his return would have made him feel so much better.

It was a reminder of the special bond they share and may well have served as a reminder to Brock of exactly why he makes the sacrifices he does to provide for his family: it's all for Rylee.

The footage certainly had an impact on Rebecca, who felt compelled to share the footage with Ring in the hope it might be seen elsewhere.

She told Ring how her "heart absolutely melted" when she watched it back and it's a video that the family have revisited many times since. "I sent it to our family and watched it over soooo many times," she said.

This isn't the first time a heartwarming family moment has been captured on a Ring video device.

In May 2025, a father-of-two heading out to work was stopped in his tracks after hearing "Wait!" coming from behind him.

Earlier this month, a new dad was tidying up after his toddler son when he spotted him doing something that stopped him in his tracks.

Then there was the dad who described the "overwhelming joy" he felt at finding a way to connect with his two young daughters while away with work.
 
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Joining The 5% Club - Paragon Traffic Management Ltd


We are proud to have joined The 5% Club, a nationwide movement of employers committed to developing skills, creating opportunity and strengthening the UK workforce through structured training and early career development.

For a company built around people, safety and long-term partnerships, this step feels like a natural fit. Our growth has always been about more than expanding depots and fleets,... it's about investing in people and building a stronger future for the industry.

The 5% Club brings together organisations that believe in creating real pathways into skilled careers. Members commit to developing talent through apprenticeships, graduate programmes and other "earn and learn" opportunities that allow people to build experience while gaining qualifications.

It's about giving people a way in, supporting their development and helping them build a career rather than simply filling a role.

While members aspire to have at least 5% of their workforce in structured training roles, we are proud to already exceed that benchmark.

Around 10%of our workforce are currently apprentices.

That isn't a statistic we chased it's a reflection of how we believe a business should grow: by bringing people in, supporting them and helping them develop lasting careers.

Traffic management plays a vital role in keeping infrastructure projects moving safely and efficiently. Developing new talent ensures the industry maintains high standards and continues to evolve.

For those joining Paragon, apprenticeships offer a practical, supported introduction to the industry. People learn on real sites, gain recognised qualifications and receive mentoring from experienced professionals who understand the realities of the job. More importantly, they gain confidence, purpose and a clear pathway forward.

Social value is often talked about in broad terms, but for us it starts with creating opportunities.

Providing structured entry points into skilled work supports local communities, improves social mobility and helps address the industry's skills gap. It also strengthens the teams delivering projects every day.

When people are given the chance to learn, progress and build a career, the benefits ripple far beyond the workplace.

Demand for safe, compliant and efficient traffic management continues to grow across the UK. Meeting that demand requires more than equipment and systems, it requires skilled, motivated people.

By investing in apprenticeships and early career pathways, we are helping ensure the industry remains strong, professional and future ready.

Joining The 5% Club reinforces what has always been central to Paragon: growth driven by people.

We believe businesses perform better when they invest in their teams, create opportunities and support progression at every stage. This commitment helps us deliver reliable service for clients while building a culture where people feel supported, valued and able to thrive.

Whether you're looking for a dependable traffic management partner or exploring a future in the industry, Paragon Traffic Management is committed to delivering safe, professional and people-focused solutions.
 
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  • Doesn’t that mean there’s no mountain in existence that you can’t climb?

  • Talked down to
    Not listened to
    Corrected without curiosity

ICareer & Technology Centre (CTC): Your Guide


Let's dive into the world of the iCareer & Technology Centre (CTC)! This place is a hub for all things career development and tech skills. Whether you're a student, a recent grad, or someone looking to switch careers, the CTC has something for you. We'll explore what the CTC offers, who it's for, and how you can make the most of its resources. So, buckle up, guys, and let's get started!

The... iCareer & Technology Centre (CTC), at its core, is a resource center designed to bridge the gap between education and employment. It's not just about finding a job; it's about building a career. Think of it as your one-stop-shop for career exploration, skill development, and job search assistance. The CTC typically partners with educational institutions, community organizations, and local businesses to provide a wide range of services tailored to meet the needs of its users. These services often include career counseling, resume and cover letter workshops, interview preparation, skills training programs, and job placement assistance. The ultimate goal is to empower individuals with the knowledge, skills, and resources they need to succeed in today's competitive job market.

The CTC acts as a facilitator, connecting individuals with opportunities and resources they might not otherwise have access to. For example, a student struggling to define their career goals can receive personalized guidance from a career counselor. A recent graduate lacking practical skills can enroll in a training program to enhance their employability. An experienced professional looking to switch careers can explore new options and develop the necessary skills to make a successful transition. The iCareer & Technology Centre also plays a crucial role in supporting local businesses by providing them with a pipeline of skilled and qualified candidates. By working closely with employers, the CTC can ensure that its training programs are aligned with industry needs, and that its graduates are well-prepared to meet the demands of the workforce. These centers are often equipped with state-of-the-art technology and resources, providing individuals with access to the latest tools and techniques. This can be particularly beneficial for those seeking careers in technology-related fields. Moreover, the CTC fosters a collaborative and supportive environment, where individuals can connect with peers, mentors, and industry professionals. This can be invaluable for building networks and gaining insights into different career paths.

The beauty of the iCareer & Technology Centre is its wide appeal. It's not just for one specific group of people. Students who are still figuring out their career path can use the CTC to explore different options, take career assessments, and get advice from counselors. Recent grads who are just starting their job search can get help with their resumes, practice their interview skills, and connect with potential employers. Professionals looking to make a career change can use the CTC to learn new skills, explore different industries, and network with people in their desired field. Even employers benefit from the CTC by gaining access to a pool of qualified candidates.

Let's break it down further. Students can benefit immensely from the CTC's career exploration resources. Imagine being a college freshman, overwhelmed by the vast array of majors and career paths available. The CTC can help you narrow down your interests, identify your strengths, and explore different options that align with your goals. Career assessments, informational interviews, and job shadowing opportunities can provide valuable insights into different fields and help you make informed decisions about your future. Recent graduates often face the challenge of transitioning from academic life to the professional world. The CTC can provide them with the practical skills and resources they need to navigate the job market successfully. Resume and cover letter workshops, interview preparation sessions, and job search strategies can significantly increase their chances of landing a job. Career changers, who may be feeling stuck or unfulfilled in their current roles, can leverage the CTC's resources to explore new possibilities. Skills training programs, career counseling, and networking events can help them acquire the necessary skills and connections to make a successful transition to a new industry or field. The CTC also benefits employers by providing them with a pipeline of qualified candidates. By partnering with the CTC, employers can access a pool of skilled and motivated individuals who are eager to contribute to their organizations. This can save them time and resources in the recruitment process and ensure that they are hiring the best talent available. In short, the iCareer & Technology Centre is a valuable resource for anyone who is looking to advance their career or explore new opportunities.

The iCareer & Technology Centre (CTC) provides a diverse array of services aimed at empowering individuals in their career journeys. These services typically encompass career counseling, which offers personalized guidance to help individuals explore their interests, skills, and values to identify suitable career paths. Resume and cover letter workshops are also commonly offered, equipping individuals with the essential skills to craft compelling documents that effectively showcase their qualifications and experience to potential employers. Interview preparation is another key service, providing individuals with the opportunity to practice their interviewing skills and receive constructive feedback to enhance their performance in job interviews. Additionally, skills training programs are often available, offering individuals the chance to acquire new skills or enhance existing ones to meet the demands of the ever-evolving job market.

Job placement assistance is frequently provided, connecting individuals with potential employers and facilitating the job search process. These centers often host job fairs, networking events, and employer information sessions, providing individuals with valuable opportunities to connect with industry professionals and learn about available job openings. Career assessments are also commonly offered, providing individuals with insights into their personality traits, interests, and aptitudes to help them make informed decisions about their career paths. Furthermore, the CTC may offer workshops on topics such as job search strategies, salary negotiation, and professional development. These workshops are designed to equip individuals with the knowledge and skills they need to navigate the job market successfully and advance their careers. The availability of online resources is also a hallmark of many CTCs, providing individuals with access to a wealth of information and tools from the comfort of their own homes. These resources may include online career assessments, resume templates, cover letter samples, and job search databases. The iCareer & Technology Centre serves as a valuable resource for individuals seeking career guidance, skill development, and job placement assistance. The specific services offered may vary depending on the center and the needs of the community it serves, but the overarching goal remains the same: to empower individuals to achieve their career aspirations.

To really maximize your experience at the iCareer & Technology Centre (CTC), first figure out what you need. Are you totally lost on what career to pursue? Start with career counseling and those handy assessment tests. Need to polish up your resume or nail that interview? Sign up for those workshops! Keep an eye on their calendar for job fairs and networking events - these are goldmines for making connections. And don't be shy! Ask questions, get involved, and really take advantage of all the resources they offer.

Let's dive deeper. Start by identifying your goals. What do you hope to achieve by using the CTC's resources? Are you looking for a new job? Are you trying to change careers? Or are you simply exploring your options? Once you know what you want to accomplish, you can focus your efforts and make the most of your time at the CTC. Next, take advantage of the career counseling services. Career counselors can provide valuable guidance and support as you explore your interests, skills, and values. They can also help you identify potential career paths that align with your goals and help you develop a plan to achieve them. Attend workshops and training sessions. The CTC offers a variety of workshops and training sessions on topics such as resume writing, interviewing skills, and job search strategies. These sessions can provide you with the practical skills and knowledge you need to succeed in the job market. Network with other users. The CTC is a great place to connect with other people who are also looking for jobs or exploring career options. Networking can help you learn about new opportunities, get advice from experienced professionals, and build your professional network. Utilize online resources. The CTC often provides access to online resources such as job boards, career assessments, and resume templates. These resources can be valuable tools in your job search or career exploration process. Don't be afraid to ask for help. The staff at the CTC are there to support you, so don't hesitate to ask for help if you need it. They can answer your questions, provide guidance, and connect you with other resources that can help you achieve your goals. By following these tips, you can make the most of your experience at the iCareer & Technology Centre and take your career to the next level.

The iCareer & Technology Centre (CTC) is not just a place for job seekers; it's a forward-thinking institution that's preparing people for the future of work. In a world where technology is rapidly changing the job market, the CTC plays a vital role in equipping individuals with the skills and knowledge they need to thrive. This includes offering training in emerging technologies, promoting lifelong learning, and fostering adaptability and resilience.

Let's consider the impact of automation. As technology continues to advance, many jobs are being automated, requiring workers to adapt and acquire new skills. The CTC is at the forefront of this transition, offering training programs in areas such as data science, artificial intelligence, and cybersecurity. These programs provide individuals with the opportunity to learn the skills that are in high demand and prepare them for the jobs of the future. Beyond technical skills, the CTC also emphasizes the importance of soft skills such as communication, collaboration, and problem-solving. These skills are essential for success in any career, and they are becoming increasingly important as the workplace becomes more collaborative and interconnected. The CTC fosters a culture of lifelong learning, encouraging individuals to continuously update their skills and knowledge throughout their careers. This is essential in a rapidly changing job market where new technologies and trends are constantly emerging. Moreover, the CTC promotes adaptability and resilience, helping individuals develop the ability to bounce back from setbacks and navigate change. This is particularly important in today's uncertain economic climate. The iCareer & Technology Centre is playing a critical role in preparing individuals for the future of work. By providing access to training in emerging technologies, promoting lifelong learning, and fostering adaptability and resilience, the CTC is helping individuals thrive in a rapidly changing job market. These centers are vital in ensuring that individuals have the skills and knowledge they need to succeed in the 21st-century economy.

Ready to get started? Finding an iCareer & Technology Centre (CTC) near you is usually pretty easy. Check with local community colleges, universities, and workforce development agencies. A quick Google search with your city or region and "career center" or "technology center" should also do the trick. Don't hesitate to reach out and see what they have to offer - it could be the first step toward a brighter future!
 
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The Layoff Playbook: What Career Experts Say You Should Do in the First 72 Hours After Losing Your Job


The American workforce is bracing for another turbulent stretch. With mass layoffs continuing across technology, media, finance, and the federal government, millions of workers are confronting an uncomfortable reality: the pink slip can arrive at any time, regardless of tenure, performance, or loyalty. What separates those who recover quickly from those who spiral into months of unemployment often... comes down to what happens in the first few days after the news lands.

According to Business Insider, career coaches and outplacement specialists are urging laid-off workers to resist the impulse to immediately blast out résumés or accept the first offer that materializes. Instead, experts recommend a more deliberate, phased approach -- one that accounts for the emotional toll of job loss while positioning the individual for a stronger rebound.

The Emotional Reckoning That Precedes the Professional One

Losing a job, even in a mass layoff where the decision had nothing to do with individual performance, triggers a grief response. Career psychologists have long compared it to other major life losses -- the end of a relationship, a death in the family, or a serious health scare. The identity many Americans derive from their work means that a layoff doesn't just eliminate a paycheck; it disrupts a person's sense of self.

Kyle Elliott, a career coach based in Silicon Valley who has worked with executives at major tech firms, told Business Insider that the first step should be giving yourself permission to feel the full weight of the moment. "You don't have to have it all figured out on day one," Elliott said. He recommends taking at least a few days -- ideally a full week -- before making any major career decisions. The reasoning is straightforward: decisions made under emotional duress tend to be reactive rather than strategic, and reactive moves in a tight labor market can lock people into roles they'll want to leave within months.

Securing the Financial Foundation Before Anything Else

Before a single job application goes out, laid-off workers need to take stock of their financial position with clear eyes. That means understanding the full scope of any severance package, including how long health insurance coverage extends under COBRA, whether unused vacation days will be paid out, and what restrictions -- such as non-compete or non-solicitation clauses -- may be attached to severance agreements.

Filing for unemployment insurance should happen immediately. In most states, there is a waiting period before benefits begin, and delays in filing only extend the gap. The U.S. Department of Labor's CareerOneStop website provides state-by-state guidance on eligibility and filing procedures. Financial advisors also recommend building a bare-bones budget that strips away discretionary spending, giving the job seeker a realistic picture of how many months their savings and severance can sustain them. This timeline becomes the strategic framework for the entire job search -- it determines whether someone can afford to be selective or whether urgency must override preference.

The Résumé Overhaul: Why Your Old One Probably Won't Work

One of the most common mistakes career coaches see is the impulse to dust off a two-year-old résumé and start sending it out. The problem is that résumés age poorly. Job descriptions evolve, keyword optimization for applicant tracking systems shifts, and the accomplishments that mattered in a previous role may not align with what hiring managers are prioritizing today.

According to reporting from Business Insider, experts recommend rebuilding the résumé from the ground up, with a focus on quantifiable achievements rather than job duties. A line that reads "managed a team of 12" carries far less weight than "led a 12-person team that increased quarterly revenue by 18% while reducing operating costs by $400,000." The distinction matters enormously when a hiring manager is scanning dozens of applications in a single sitting. Career coaches also stress the importance of tailoring each résumé to the specific role, a time-consuming practice that nonetheless dramatically improves response rates.

Networking Without Desperation: The Art of the Warm Reintroduction

The data on how jobs are filled in the United States has been remarkably consistent for years: somewhere between 70% and 85% of positions are filled through networking and referrals rather than cold applications. Yet many laid-off workers treat networking as a last resort, or worse, approach it with a transactional desperation that repels the very people who might help them.

The recommended approach is more measured. Rather than blasting LinkedIn connections with "I'm looking for work" messages, career strategists suggest reaching out to former colleagues, mentors, and industry contacts with specific, low-pressure requests. A message that says "I'd love to hear about what's happening at your company and what trends you're seeing in the market" opens a conversation. A message that says "Do you know of any openings?" closes one. The goal in the first two weeks is not to land interviews but to rebuild and expand the professional network so that when opportunities do surface, the laid-off worker is already top of mind.

The LinkedIn Announcement: A Double-Edged Sword

Posting about a layoff on LinkedIn has become something of a cultural ritual, and when done well, it can generate an outpouring of support, introductions, and even direct job offers. But career coaches caution that the post needs to be crafted carefully. Venting about a former employer, even if the frustration is justified, almost always backfires. Hiring managers read these posts too, and a tone of bitterness raises red flags about how a candidate might handle adversity in a new role.

The most effective layoff announcements tend to be brief, forward-looking, and specific about what the person is seeking. They acknowledge the layoff without dwelling on it, express gratitude for the experience gained, and clearly articulate the type of role, industry, or company size that represents the next chapter. Posts that include a call to action -- "If you know someone hiring for X, I'd appreciate an introduction" -- tend to generate more meaningful engagement than open-ended appeals for help.

Upskilling and the Question of Whether to Go Back to School

A layoff can feel like an invitation to reinvent oneself entirely, and for some workers, that instinct is sound. But career experts warn against expensive, time-consuming educational programs unless the data clearly supports the investment. A six-month coding bootcamp might make sense for a marketing professional who wants to move into product management at a tech company. A two-year MBA is a much harder sell for someone who already has 15 years of management experience and needs to be earning again within six months.

The more targeted approach involves identifying specific skill gaps that are preventing a candidate from qualifying for roles they want. Free or low-cost certifications -- in project management, data analytics, cloud computing, or AI tools -- can be completed in weeks rather than years and signal to employers that a candidate is actively investing in their own development. In 2025, familiarity with artificial intelligence tools has become a near-universal expectation across white-collar industries, and candidates who can demonstrate practical experience with these tools hold a measurable advantage.

The Mental Health Dimension That Too Few People Talk About

Job loss is consistently ranked among the top five most stressful life events, alongside divorce and the death of a loved one. The isolation of unemployment -- the sudden absence of daily structure, social interaction, and purpose -- can accelerate anxiety and depression, particularly for workers who have been with a single employer for many years.

Mental health professionals recommend establishing a daily routine immediately, even if it feels artificial at first. Waking up at the same time, exercising, dedicating specific hours to the job search, and maintaining social commitments all serve as scaffolding for psychological stability. Support groups for laid-off workers, both in-person and online, have proliferated in recent years and can provide both practical advice and emotional solidarity. The National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) helpline and the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline are available for those whose distress becomes acute.

Playing the Long Game in a Market That Rewards Patience

Perhaps the most counterintuitive advice from career experts is this: slow down. In a labor market that remains competitive despite headline unemployment numbers that look healthy, the workers who fare best are those who treat their job search like a strategic campaign rather than a frantic scramble. That means being selective about which roles to pursue, investing time in interview preparation rather than volume, and maintaining the discipline to say no to opportunities that don't align with long-term goals.

The average job search in the United States currently takes between three and six months, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data, though that figure varies significantly by industry, seniority level, and geography. Workers who accept that timeline from the outset -- and plan their finances accordingly -- tend to make better decisions and land in roles that stick. Those who panic and take the first available offer frequently find themselves back on the market within a year, having burned through their severance and goodwill in the process.

The layoff itself is not the defining moment. What comes after is.
 
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It's Bad Out There


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"HOW CAN YOU go against the times?"

This is the question Yoo Man-su (Lee Byung-hun) asks during his final job interview in No Other... Choice (2025), the latest film from Park Chan-wook. As he says it, he laughs, beaming with the confidence of a man who knows he's crushed the competition. After having been unemployed for more than a year, his job search is finally reaching an end. Life is good. All it took was his soul, some light fraud, and a handful of strategic murders.

Anyone who has recently been unemployed can relate. The past year in particular was not kind to the job market. Thousands of people have been part of layoffs across industries, the latest high-profile instance being the gutting of The Washington Post, leaving January layoff plans at their highest global total since 2009. Secure employment no longer feels assured; in certain industries, it doesn't even feel possible. As we know, everything is shitty now, but being on the market feels even worse than that.

In an odd twist of fate, I saw No Other Choice on my final day of unemployment, on the eve of starting a new gig five months after the previous publication I worked at was bought and decimated by the new owners, who decided they didn't need about 95 percent of us (or our pesky union). No Other Choice is undoubtedly a tragedy, but I have to admit -- the experience was perversely cathartic. Here I was, watching a movie whose protagonist is rendered so desperate by unemployment that he literally kills his competition. Anyone who has spent time browsing new positions on LinkedIn would understand: who wouldn't kill to stop networking?

¤

No Other Choice starts relatively innocently, at least inasmuch as a story about a burgeoning serial killer can. At first, Man-su plans on killing just one man in order to steal his job. But at the last second he realizes that, even with that man gone, he will still have to interview for the position. To better his odds, he then decides to collect intel on his potential competition by soliciting résumés from a fake company, selecting competitive applicants, and offing them before even dispatching his initial target.

The story is based on Donald E. Westlake's novel The Ax, released in 1997. Westlake had written dozens of books before The Ax, and was dubbed the "Neil Simon of the crime novel" for the way he melded slapstick and one-liners with hard-boiled mystery. This sensibility pairs perfectly with Park Chan-wook, a uniquely gifted visual filmmaker who specializes in telling stories that find raw humor and lush humanity in unusually dire circumstances. Park first rose to prominence outside of South Korea with his Vengeance Trilogy. For most viewers, the trilogy was anchored by the twisted scheming of Oldboy (2003). Park established a reputation for depicting stark, brutal violence, artfully staged and momentously rendered. His earlier works, however, showed the dignity that carries through his entire filmography (even if they all still ended in despair), with films like Joint Security Area (2000) depicting friendship across the DMZ's Bridge of No Return with humor and humanity.

Park first read The Ax 20 years ago, and five years later, he decided he had to adapt it. Thus began more than a decade of not making it: in 2012, he set it aside to direct his first English-language film, Stoker, stating at the time that he'd need to attract more investors to make The Ax the way he wanted. He scouted locations in the United States and Canada before the production fell apart, and he went off to direct the John le Carré series The Little Drummer Girl (2018) instead. At the Busan International Film Festival in 2019, Park described his Ax adaptation to the crowd as a "lifetime project": he hoped to make the film his masterpiece.

The resulting combination of humor, humanity and despair does feel particularly apt for people trapped in a brutal, unfeeling capitalist system. Looking for work is just one of its most punishing rituals. But what else can you do? Communication becomes odd and unnatural. The process is full of empty chatter, and you suddenly become aware of how much gets said without really saying anything -- a cover letter, LinkedIn advice, an empty platitude, a "quick reach out." Connecting with people also becomes more fraught. At the start of my unemployment, for example, my laid-off colleagues and I initially swarmed LinkedIn like piranhas to share contacts, successes, dreams, and, depressingly often, letdowns. And then, slowly, people stopped sharing much at all. Peers who were still gainfully employed reached out to check in or catch up or "connect," but when I reached out, I was often met with gobsmacking silence. The lot of us laid off in May chatted about whether to use AI to punch up résumés or engage with the job transition team our former company had provided for us. It turns out that service actually consisted of just having someone else use AI on your résumé and give the same pat advice you'd find anywhere else. How can you go against the times?

In that light, it's not hard to see how a man like Man-su -- already too proud to ask for help -- could wind up feeling isolated and desperate. When you feel that exposed, merely seeking assistance can seem like a fatal blow.

Man-su feels that way even about his own wife, Mi-ri (Son Ye-jin). And there's a sense that she's holding something back as well: Mi-ri puts on a brave face when Man-su tells her about his layoff, and only deflates -- collapses, even! -- once she's off the phone. Aside from their discussions of how to cut back and their wounding fights, we rarely see them speak to each other directly or honestly. She chides him for being late; he makes fun of her boss and suspects her of an affair. She picks out a couple's costume for them; he thinks she's trying to make a fool of him. No matter how much they try, there's just a gulf there -- of pride, fear, hopelessness. Park's camera only reinforces their distance. When Mi-ri opens the letter notifying the family that they may lose their house, the camera swivels in an ominous low-angle shot, pulling the film closer to the horror movie it might easily become.

Man-su has no friends and no real attachments to ground him beyond his family, whom he constantly thinks he's letting down. So perhaps it's no surprise that Man-su finds his strongest connections with other people when he's in the middle of his murderous missions and trying to talk around something else. When stalking his second victim, he finds himself forced into conversation and speaks candidly about the challenges of raising a daughter whose life and development may actually depend on playing the cello, an expensive calling for any parent to tend. When he talks to his would-be victim, the angles are soft, each lost soul gently mirroring the other. The movie slows down, stripping away the ample tragedy and comedy of No Other Choice in favor of a somber connection between two men, down on their luck and eager for a break.

Perhaps the standout scene from the movie comes when Man-su is finally ready to pull the trigger on his first victim. He confronts the other man at home while he's listening to a record. The man mistakes Man-su for his wife's lover, and the two let loose on each other, explaining what they wish the other person could just understand. It's a delightful farce: his target's wife soon returns, and Man-su becomes a third wheel to his own crime. When she enters, Man-su is decked out in his instantly iconic killing outfit (maroon chest wader over a suit, with four layers of gloves on his gun hand), and the two men are forced to shout their conversation while Cho Yong-pil's "Redpepper Dragonfly" blares over the speakers. In these moments, perhaps because of all the space for confrontation and distraction, Man-su finally finds a way to talk: about his victim's shortcomings, the anxieties that mirror his own. The six-minute scene is a scramble, and it's Park at his apex: stylish but deeply felt.

Over and over, the film emphasizes how Man-su could relate to the people around him if he just let his guard down. Park has said that he envisioned Man-su as a man of pride, too busy watching shadows dance on the walls of his masculinity to see his situation clearly. It's hard to overstate how lucky he was to cast Lee Byung-hun as Man-su, though Park has jokingly complained about Lee's approach to the role. At the Q and A following the film's Aero Theatre screening, Park explained: "Byung-hun had too many questions for me. [...] So what he would tell me are things like 'I wouldn't become a serial killer just because I got fired.' So I had to keep telling him: 'But this is not your story; this is a person who would become a serial killer because they got fired.'" Lee is loose, almost vulnerably cringe at times, like if Bugs Bunny were anchored by the laws of physics and deeply anxious about it.

Lee gives Man-su a smile like a Halloween costume, a grimace masquerading as something cheerier. As he continues through his mission, though, with more kills under his belt, his smile becomes more confident, and his actions more decisive. Such self-assurance would be all upside if it didn't come at such a cost.

¤

A criticism often leveled against Americans is that we overidentify with our jobs. I'll tell you personally that in the media, self and job are even harder to disentangle. All that time spent writing and thinking and refining -- so much of the work feels personal that it's almost impossible to unhook yourself from the product.

But again, what can you do? That principle is baked into No Other Choice's very title, like a wall as slippery as it is unyielding. It's the reason given when he and his colleagues are let go by the American company cutting costs at his paper mill ("I'm sorry, there's no other choice"). It's the quiet mantra Man-su whispers to himself before pulling a gun on a fellow down-on-his-luck job applicant ("No other choice; no other choice"). It's part of the movie's loudest betrayal -- even worse than the murders -- when Man-su convinces himself to break his sobriety to wear down his victim, despite knowing how much his sobriety means to his wife ("No other choice ...").

This isn't actually true, of course. There is a choice. When writing the novel, Westlake said he wanted his book to highlight the difference between the Great Depression his parents weathered, however miserably, with company, compared to the "isolated" nature of the tech layoffs that were happening around him in the 1990s. But that strikes me as a choice too. I doubt there's ever been a time when unemployment felt simple, when it was easy to feel so casually useless. Company isn't an easy fix. My partner and I both lost our jobs in May. As a unit, we managed to navigate the situation together, but even then, we sometimes felt isolated when talking to anyone else. A simple question -- "How have things been?" -- was like a bubble we had to pop in order to get any oxygen in the room: Professionally, life sucked; beyond that, doing alright actually! We'll let you know if there's anything to know. How about you, how are you doing?

I know, I know: It's foolhardy to overidentify with Man-su. Just as often as it mines his awkwardness for comedy, the film constantly frames his actions within the long arc of tragedy. As her husband digs a grave for one of his victims, Park overlays Mi-ri rolling over in bed as if into the hole. While Man-su drugs his final victim, the film cuts to Mi-ri on a swing pondering his actions; when it cuts back, the seat is still swinging but empty. As far as I know, those of us who were laid off this year fell more in line with Man-su's victims: plowing through, trying to stay above a void of depression. Amid the tragic downfall, Man-su's story does expose something real about the desperation that can set in: of course, murder is not a reasonable reaction to joblessness and dour economic prospects, but it can feel terrifyingly close when you're left with such emptiness.

Just as it highlights that emptiness, No Other Choice, in Park's knowing hands, turns technological isolation into text, constantly emphasizing the screens that "connect" us without bringing us closer. Man-su takes a video call from his wife in the middle of several compromising situations, including his final murder. By that point, she has figured out what he's up to and is trying to get to him before it's too late. But while her audio throughout the scene comes through crystal clear, his sounds staticky and processed, like listening in on a distant phone call. He's too far gone; he can't see the choices: You can choose to isolate. You can choose to tell the truth. You can choose to keep plugging away at job apps that might only be read by an AI screener. You can FaceTime your loving wife from a crime scene.

¤

In the end, No Other Choice has one more way to twist the knife: Man-su's final interview lands him a job, though it isn't the one he thought he was interviewing for. This paper company is looking for a foreman to oversee an AI-operated warehouse, one lone human among a nightmare ballet of automation. It's the final trick promised by the title, with execs sorrowfully insisting that they simply must rely on robots instead of humans -- "That's the whole point of the system. No other choice." When Man-su finally arrives for his first day of work, he cheers, and the film's final shot is a pan up to the robotic movements in a dark warehouse. It's a mirror to the ending of the opening scene, when Man-su's family hug panned up to a brilliant orange sky. But in that moment, the sun was setting, and now automation is here to carry us into the next age. After all, how can you go against the times?
 
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The AI-Powered Job Hunt: How the Smartest Applicants Are Quietly Rewriting the Rules of Hiring in 2025


The American job market has entered a strange new era. Applicants are deploying artificial intelligence to write cover letters, tailor résumés, and even rehearse interviews -- while employers, overwhelmed by a surge of AI-polished applications, are scrambling to distinguish genuine talent from algorithmically generated noise. The result is an arms race that is reshaping how people find work and... how companies decide whom to hire.

According to a recent report from Business Insider, iCIMS -- one of the largest talent-acquisition software providers in the United States -- has been studying how job seekers interact with AI tools throughout the application process. The company's findings, shared by its experts, reveal that the most successful candidates are not simply asking ChatGPT to spit out a generic cover letter. Instead, they are using AI strategically, treating it as a research assistant, a coach, and a mirror that reflects how their experience maps onto a specific role.

From Spray-and-Pray to Precision Targeting

For years, online job boards encouraged a volume-based approach: apply to as many openings as possible and hope for a callback. AI has supercharged that instinct. Some applicants now use bots to auto-apply to hundreds of positions in a single afternoon. But iCIMS data suggests this shotgun method is becoming less effective, not more. Recruiters, themselves armed with AI-powered screening tools, are getting better at flagging applications that look mass-produced.

The smartest job seekers, according to iCIMS experts cited by Business Insider, are doing the opposite. They use AI to deeply research a company before applying -- pulling together information about recent earnings calls, leadership changes, product launches, and cultural values. They then feed that research, along with the job description and their own résumé, into an AI tool and ask it to identify the strongest points of alignment. The output is not a finished application but a strategic brief that the candidate uses to write a highly targeted cover letter and customize their résumé for that specific role.

AI as Interview Coach, Not Interview Cheat Sheet

Interview preparation is another area where AI is proving valuable -- when used correctly. iCIMS experts told Business Insider that top candidates are using AI chatbots to simulate behavioral interview questions based on the job description. They practice answering questions about conflict resolution, leadership under pressure, and cross-functional collaboration, then ask the AI to critique their responses for clarity, specificity, and relevance.

This is a far cry from the candidates who try to use AI during the interview itself -- reading from AI-generated answers on a second screen during video calls, for instance. Hiring managers have grown wise to that tactic. Awkward pauses, eyes drifting to the side of the screen, and answers that sound rehearsed but lack personal detail are all red flags that recruiters now watch for. The distinction between using AI to prepare and using AI to perform is becoming one of the defining lines in modern hiring.

The Employer's Dilemma: Too Many Applications, Not Enough Signal

The flood of AI-assisted applications is creating real problems on the employer side. According to data from iCIMS, the volume of applications per open position has increased significantly over the past 18 months. Many of these applications are well-formatted and keyword-optimized -- because AI tools are excellent at matching language from job postings -- but they do not necessarily reflect the applicant's actual qualifications or genuine interest in the role.

This has forced companies to rethink their screening processes. Some are adding new stages to the hiring funnel, such as short video introductions, skills-based assessments, or asynchronous interview questions designed to test real-time thinking rather than polished preparation. Others are leaning harder on their own AI tools to score applications not just on keyword matches but on coherence, specificity, and evidence of genuine engagement with the company's mission and challenges.

The Skills Gap That AI Cannot Close

One of the more sobering takeaways from the iCIMS analysis, as reported by Business Insider, is that AI can help a strong candidate present themselves more effectively, but it cannot manufacture skills or experience that do not exist. Candidates who use AI to inflate their qualifications often stumble during technical interviews or on-the-job assessments. The gap between what the application promised and what the person can actually deliver becomes apparent quickly -- and it damages the candidate's credibility in ways that are difficult to repair.

This is particularly relevant in fields like software engineering, data science, and financial analysis, where employers increasingly rely on practical tests and live problem-solving exercises. A résumé that claims proficiency in Python or financial modeling will be tested. AI can help a candidate articulate their experience more compellingly, but it cannot write code or build a discounted cash flow model on their behalf during a live assessment.

What Recruiters Actually Want to See

Recruiters and hiring managers interviewed across the industry are converging on a similar message: they want authenticity, specificity, and evidence. A cover letter that mentions a company's recent product launch and explains how the candidate's prior work connects to that initiative will always outperform a generic letter, no matter how grammatically polished the generic version might be. AI can help generate the former, but only if the candidate invests the time to feed it the right inputs and then edits the output with their own voice and judgment.

iCIMS experts emphasized to Business Insider that the candidates who benefit most from AI are those who already have strong communication instincts and use the technology to sharpen their message rather than create one from scratch. In other words, AI is an amplifier. It makes good candidates better, but it does not transform unqualified applicants into competitive ones.

The Ethical Gray Zone

The rapid adoption of AI in job seeking has also raised thorny ethical questions. Where is the line between legitimate preparation and misrepresentation? If a candidate uses AI to rewrite their résumé in more polished language, most hiring managers would consider that acceptable -- no different from hiring a professional résumé writer. But if a candidate uses AI to fabricate work experiences or generate answers during a live interview, that crosses into dishonesty.

Companies are beginning to address this head-on. Some job postings now include explicit statements about AI use, asking candidates to disclose whether they used AI tools in their application. Others are designing their hiring processes to be more AI-resistant, emphasizing in-person interactions, spontaneous questions, and practical demonstrations of skill. The Society for Human Resource Management has been tracking these developments closely, noting that organizations need clear policies that distinguish between acceptable and unacceptable uses of AI by applicants.

A New Equilibrium Is Forming

The current moment feels chaotic, but a new equilibrium is starting to take shape. Job seekers who use AI thoughtfully -- as a research tool, a drafting assistant, and a practice partner -- are gaining a measurable edge. Those who use it as a shortcut to avoid the hard work of self-reflection and preparation are finding diminishing returns as employers adapt their screening methods.

For employers, the challenge is to build hiring processes that reward substance over surface polish. That means investing in skills-based assessments, structured interviews, and evaluation criteria that go beyond keyword matching. It also means training recruiters to recognize the telltale signs of AI-generated content and to probe deeper when an application seems too perfectly tailored.

The hiring process has always been an imperfect system for matching talent with opportunity. AI is not eliminating that imperfection -- it is shifting where the friction occurs. The candidates and companies that adapt fastest to this new reality will be the ones that come out ahead. As iCIMS experts made clear in their analysis shared with Business Insider, the technology is only as effective as the human judgment behind it. That principle applies equally to both sides of the hiring table.
 
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How Cyber Attacks are Utilising AI to their Advantage | CWSI


To respond effectively, defenders must evolve at the same pace. Understanding how the AI threat landscape is developing and the specific risks it poses to your systems, people, and processes is essential to building a resilient security posture. In this blog, we explore how attackers are leveraging AI today and why a forward-looking defence strategy is more important than ever.

When discussing AI... threats, an important distinction must be made between system threats and ecosystem threats as confusing one for the other may lead to critical gaps in protection. System threats refer to issues such as security vulnerabilities. Examples include system compromise through cross-prompt injection attacks, user overreliance on AI-generated output, exposure to harmful content, or infrastructure compromise. These threats are typically contained within the IT environment itself and can often be addressed through technical measures, improved configurations, or better user safeguards.

Ecosystem threats, by contrast, involve attackers targeting the most vulnerable system across a broader network to achieve their goal. These threats include impersonation through deepfakes, large-scale harmful content production, nefarious knowledge acquisition, cyber threat amplification, and both direct and indirect social attacks. What makes ecosystem threats particularly challenging is that they often require defence mechanisms outside of the AI system itself.

As AI continues to drive efficiency for legitimate users, threat actors are exploiting those same capabilities as a force multiplier in their own operations. Their focus is increasingly on high-value individuals with privileged access to sensitive data, financial systems, strategic decision-making, and intellectual property that could offer significant advantage if compromised. AI dramatically reduces the time and effort required to identify these lucrative targets by automating the research process. The result is a faster, more scalable, and more precise form of targeting.

AI is transforming spear phishing and whaling by pairing intelligent automation with stealthy malware. These AI-powered tools can remain dormant on a device until they recognise a specific, high-value target only then activating to carry out their mission. This allows threat actors to launch highly focused attacks and extract only the most valuable information. In some cases, the malware quietly uses device features like cameras, microphones, or GPS to confirm the target's identity, all without the user's knowledge. By the time the activity is detected, the data has often already been exfiltrated.

Threat actors are leveraging AI to scrape keywords and qualifications from job postings and generate "perfect" virtual candidates tailored to match those roles. Using this data, AI can produce hundreds, if not thousands, of highly convincing, yet entirely fictitious, résumés designed to pass through automated recruitment filters. Some of these résumés even incorporate steganography techniques, embedding hidden information to increase their likelihood of being shortlisted, interviewed, and potentially hired. The goal is to place malicious insiders within organisations, gaining access to trade secrets, intelligence, or other sensitive data. In some cases, attackers may submit a small number of carefully crafted candidates alongside a flood of unqualified AI-generated résumés in an effort to overwhelm and exploit weaknesses in screening systems.

AI's ability to rapidly analyse vast amounts of data enables threat actors to gather detailed information about individuals and organisations at scale. This intelligence is then used to craft highly convincing social media personas to engage thought leaders, subject-matter experts, or other high-value targets for social engineering. These false identities are often supported by deepfake tools that create realistic images, voice, and video, sometimes impersonating people the target already knows.

Using AI bots, attackers can automate much of the communication process, only involving a real human once the target is engaged. With increasingly realistic deepfake content, this technique is likely to be used for fraud, identity theft, blackmail, and extortion, often so convincingly that victims comply even when they suspect the content is fake.

Nation-state threat actors, particularly those backed by Russia, Iran, and China, are increasingly using AI-generated or AI-enhanced content to boost the scale and sophistication of their influence operations. While the impact of this AI-driven content has so far been limited, its potential is clear. When combined with broader, more coordinated influence campaigns, AI could significantly enhance the ability of these actors to reach, persuade, and manipulate global audiences.

As the examples in this blog show, the misuse of AI is no longer theoretical. Threat actors are already exploiting its capabilities to automate attacks, scale social engineering, and blur the line between real and synthetic content. This calls for more than traditional cybersecurity practices. Defenders must embed AI awareness and resilience across their operations, understanding how these tools work, where they can be manipulated, and how to build systems that are robust against both system- and ecosystem-level threats.

Industry standards like the ISO/IEC framework are playing a crucial role in this effort. They offer practical guidance to help organisations improve AI transparency, address regulatory expectations, and embed best practices across their AI lifecycle. If you're looking to explore how ISO standards can support your AI risk management strategy, we've taken a closer look at how these frameworks can make a real difference in safeguarding your organisation in this blog post.

At CWSI, we help organisations turn awareness into action by embedding AI resilience into every layer of their cybersecurity strategy. Whether you're looking to assess your current risk posture, secure your AI systems, or align with leading standards such as ISO, our experts are here to guide you.

If you'd like to explore how we can support your organisation in strengthening its defences against AI-enabled attacks, simply fill out the contact form to speak with one of our AI security experts.
 
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Horse Week: CAFRE equine students develop interview confidence


Launching the day a series of mock interviews were conducted, delivered by panels of industry professionals representing a wide range of roles across the equine sector. These sessions gave students the opportunity to practise their interview skills, receive feedback, and gain an insight into employer expectations within the industry.

CAFRE places a strong emphasis on guiding students as they... progress through their studies. The mock interview programme enabled students to develop essential employability skills and gain the confidence needed to excel in future equine sector job interviews.

Event organiser and CAFRE Lecturer, Gayle Moane, commented: "We recognise that in a competitive job market interview experience is vital. That's why we encourage our final year equine students to take part in the mock interviews. The process offers them the chance to experience an interview panel in a supportive setting. Interviews can be challenging even for experienced professionals, so gaining this practice early is invaluable for newly qualified graduates."

Students were given the chance to interview for roles such as equine lecturer, competition groom, coach, nutritionist, and stud manager. This allowed students to showcase their skills effectively. The mock interviews allowed students to answer questions professionally and demonstrate their expertise to highlight their value to potential employers.

Feedback from both the panels of industry experts and students was positive.

Final year BSc (Hons) Degree student Grace Harrison commented: "I found the mock interview extremely beneficial. It offered a valuable opportunity to practise my interview skills and build connections within the industry. The experience has really helped boost my confidence, as the panel were very supportive and encouraging. The feedback I received will help me prepare for job interviews after my graduation."

Final year Level 3 Equine Management student Cara Mae O'Connor from Lisbellaw also commented: "I was nervous when I first sat down in front of the panel, but I settled into the interview environment quickly. The experience has really boosted my confidence and made me more aware of both my verbal and non verbal communication techniques."

Alison Morris, Senior Lecturer, added: "The strong links the college has established with industry provides CAFRE students with valuable opportunities to engage with potential employers. The mock interview programme supports students in developing effective strategies to refine their interview techniques and better equips them to secure their preferred roles after they complete their education with us. We are extremely grateful to all industry panellists for their time, mentorship, and the constructive feedback provided to our students at Enniskillen Campus."

Enniskillen Campus offers equine courses from Level 2 through to BSc (Honours) Degree level. The campus is hosting an Open Day on Saturday 7 March, book to attend by visiting the events section of: www.cafre.ac.uk.
 
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Techie shares life lesson on why not to burn bridges


A 34-year-old tech professional shared what he called "one of the strangest moments" of his career after walking into a final job interview and seeing a familiar face on the screen -- the same manager who had let him go during layoffs two years ago.

Even in today's fast-moving tech world, professional paths can twist in unexpected ways. Sometimes the job hunt brings surprises that are both... awkward and oddly rewarding. One tech professional recently shared a story of such a moment when he walked into a final interview and found himself facing a familiar face from his past.

A 34-year-old tech professional shared what he called "one of the strangest moments" of his career after walking into a final job interview and seeing a familiar face on the screen -- the same manager who had let him go during layoffs two years ago.

The story, posted on Reddit, quickly caught attention for the unexpected twist and the way it ended.

In his post, the man explained that he had been laid off from his previous company during a department-wide cut. His direct manager at the time, whom he referred to as "D," was the one who delivered the news. According to him, there was no conflict between them. The layoffs affected the entire team, and while it was difficult, he said there was no bad blood when he left. They simply lost touch.

Two years later, after applying to a mid-size tech firm, he moved through multiple rounds of interviews -- two phone screenings and a technical round. Everything had been handled by HR and a team lead he had never met. Eventually, he was told he would meet the hiring manager in the final round.

That's when things took an unexpected turn.

When the video call began, he immediately recognized the hiring manager. It was D.

He described the pause that followed, writing, "There was maybe a two second delay where we both just stared at each other. Then he laughed. Then I laughed. It was genuinely one of the strangest moments I've had in a professional setting."

Despite the awkward start, the conversation quickly shifted into something surprisingly comfortable. Because they had already worked together for two years, many of the usual interview questions were skipped. Instead, they focused on how he had grown since the layoff and what he had learned.

"It ended up feeling like a quiet reference check in real time," he later responded in the comments. "Guess leaving on decent terms really matters."

He added that seeing his former manager on screen initially felt like a punch to the stomach, especially since he had carried some emotional baggage from the layoff. Still, he said they were able to laugh about the situation and have a respectful, honest discussion about his progress.

The outcome was swift. He received a job offer the very next day and is set to begin the new role in three weeks.

Reflecting on the experience, he wrote, "I guess my takeaway is that your reputation follows you in ways you don't always expect, and that includes the good parts." He noted that he had chosen to leave his previous job professionally, even though it hurt at the time, and now he sees that it made a difference.

The post drew hundreds of reactions, with many pointing to a common theme -- professionalism matters. One commenter wrote, "as the saying goes 'Don't burn bridges'." Another added that it was good to see people behaving like mature and responsible adults in the workplace.

Several users also debated how the hiring manager did not immediately recognize his name before the interview, suggesting that hiring processes vary and resumes are sometimes reviewed right before calls. Others shared similar experiences, describing how former bosses later rehired them at different companies, reinforcing the idea that professional circles can feel smaller than expected.
 
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