1   
  • In your growth journey one step prepares you for the next one. It matters where your footprints have been. Go for the new job, it’s not about money... but about your career growth and progression. more

  • Unless your family is going to work for you then they don’t have any say in it. Take the new job and see what happens.

  • Is it in your JD

  • Just laugh at him when he enters the party. He will definately laugh

8   
4   
  • He’s already on staff, did he accept the position for handling the documents? If so, then there’s nothing to explain. He accepted the role. People... need to learn to read.  more

  • Poštovani,
    riječ je o uistinu osjetljivoj situaciji, a već sama činjenica da ste se obratili s ovim pitanjem pokazuje visoku razinu profesionalnosti,... brige i empatije prema zaposleniku. U ovakvim okolnostima ključno je voditi razgovor s poštovanjem i jasnoćom, bez naglašavanja osobnih ograničenja, već s fokusom na organizacijske potrebe i profesionalne kompetencije.
    Poželjno je započeti razgovor priznavanjem motivacije i ambicije zaposlenika, kako bi se jasno dalo do znanja da se njegov angažman i želja za napredovanjem cijene.
     more

I applied for 900 jobs after being laid off at 62. AI made the search even harder.


He says AI might be helping recruiters, but it's causing good candidates to be overlooked.

This story is based on a conversation with Jim Herrington, 62, from Suffolk, UK. It has been edited for length and clarity.

When I was made redundant from my electronics marketing job in 2024 after the company downsized, the last thing I expected was that I would end up applying for 900 jobs before finally... landing a new one.

I put everything I had into my job search. I created tailored résumés, cover letters, and even presentations for individual roles -- without using AI -- and contacted employers directly, while also attending physical events to meet new contacts.

I treated each day like a workday -- often starting at 8 a.m. to search through job boards, then methodically selecting which roles to apply for based on relevance, industry, and location. I even sent my résumé to some trusted peers for feedback and refinement. I was also open about being happy to commute to an office up to an hour from where I live - in my early career, I would drive thousands of miles a year for work.

Throughout this entire process, my motivation and confidence took a significant hit, particularly due to the frustration of conflicting feedback. Some bosses wanted experience in their industry, while others were open to people from other fields. Some were open to senior marketers, yet others told me I was overqualified.

The feedback that I often got was, "You'd be bored in this job", but given my age, I think they were trying to say that they thought I was too old, rather than value my 40-plus years of experience, the awards I've won, and the teaching work I've done.

While AI may be helping companies streamline their recruitment processes, I believe it's actually causing more problems. Getting all the right buzzwords into your résumé and cover letter to get past AI screening tests seems to have become more important than whether someone is actually a good fit.

Now, with some companies even starting to use AI video interviews, that's only going to add to that mistrust and cause employers to ruin their reputation among candidates. Because if a business hasn't got the time or courtesy to speak to me themselves, then I'm just not interested.

In an interview, there would be so much that an AI could not possibly experience. To me, it shows a total lack of respect for the candidate who has taken the time and energy to apply.

But the problem is more complex than simply a tough market or lazy applicants who are using AI. In my experience, many employers simply lack clarity in what they're looking for.

When they don't list exactly what they are looking for, it's very difficult. If they want experience, then they need to say it. If you're looking for somebody who can bring fresh ideas and a new approach, then they need to say it. It is especially unhelpful when salaries aren't listed.

Instead of applying for 900 jobs, I could have applied for 100, because I would have known with 800 of them that I would have been wasting a lot of effort, as I would have had a better sense that I was overqualified for most of them. But a lot of job specs weren't written properly and didn't show everything they were looking for.

Finally, in December 2024, I was appointed as marketing director of Omega Diagnostics, a health testing company. They called me the day after I applied and said, "Wow, you have a great résumé. Can we talk to you?"

When you do 900 job applications, you start to question yourself, and you think, "Am I actually that good?" And you build up resilience.

For them, my seniority was a significant advantage, but they also appreciated the fact that I had been successful in other industries and could bring a fresh perspective.

So, finally, it has turned out well. I'm well paid. It's relatively local. It's an industry where there is a lot of change and a lot of activity. It's an industry that actually has a positive outcome on people's lives. I'm really happy that I can personally recommend something that I'm doing for work that will make a difference.
 
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Reducing Employee Burnout and Attrition: Strategies for creating workplaces where people can do their best work, and stay...


- Implementing flexible work arrangements can significantly enhance employee well-being and reduce burnout.

- Providing comprehensive support systems, including mental health resources and career development opportunities, fosters a positive work environment.

- Regularly measuring and addressing employee engagement and satisfaction are crucial for retaining top talent.

Understanding the Impact... of Burnout and Attrition

Workplace burnout and staff attrition are challenges that no modern organization can afford to ignore. Burnout, presenting as ongoing stress, mental fatigue, and waning enthusiasm, erodes individual productivity and organizational effectiveness. Attrition, defined as the gradual reduction of employees in a workforce, often follows when burnout and dissatisfaction are not actively addressed. When businesses proactively understand factors such as stress sources, support gaps, or organizational culture, they can better influence their attrition rate and build a more substantial employee experience.

The consequences can be severe: higher turnover costs, lost institutional knowledge, and an increased workload for remaining staff, all of which negatively impact morale and organizational culture. In competitive industries, attrition lessens your ability to innovate and maintain service standards, making it critical to pinpoint why employees disengage and leave.

Employee well-being isn't just a moral imperative -- it also drives productivity and resilience. Research by the American Psychological Association indicates that organizations prioritizing mental health tend to have more loyal, productive, and innovative staff. By taking steps to minimize burnout and attrition, leaders foster a healthier and more dynamic workplace.

Practical strategies to mitigate burnout and lower attrition range from rethinking how, when, and where people work to providing access to resources and support. Long-term solutions require organizations to address employee needs holistically, integrating flexibility, autonomy, and growth opportunities with practical resource support.

Implementing Flexible Work Arrangements

Adopting flexible working schedules -- such as remote work options, job sharing, or flex hours -- is among the most impactful tactics for reducing burnout. According to a recent Gallup poll, 76% of employees believe hybrid work models lead to improved work-life balance, which in turn fuels higher job satisfaction and lower stress levels. When employees have the freedom to structure their workdays, they can better harmonize job responsibilities and personal lives.

Remote work, compressed workweeks, and flexible start times empower staff to work during their most productive hours and adjust for individual needs. These adjustments can prevent chronic overwork and allow for much-needed downtime, especially for those managing caregiving responsibilities or other life priorities. Companies such as Microsoft and Salesforce have reported measurable reductions in turnover after rolling out these policies.

Providing Comprehensive Support Systems

Effective well-being strategies extend beyond superficial benefits. Organizations committed to reducing burnout must ensure that employees have access to mental health resources, counseling, and comprehensive career development opportunities. A study in the Harvard Business Review notes that employees want both the resources to manage stress and clear opportunities to advance professionally.

This means offering employee assistance programs (EAPs), mental health days, and robust learning and development initiatives. Clear internal pathways for advancement are crucial; when staff see opportunities for growth and support from their managers, they remain engaged and motivated. Companies that facilitate professional development and mentoring programs report stronger retention and overall employee well-being.

Encouraging Regular Breaks and Downtime

Organizations must not overlook the restorative power of regular breaks. Studies have consistently shown that taking short, frequent breaks bolsters focus and helps employees return to work refreshed. Designating relaxation spaces, supporting short walks, or encouraging "email-free" windows demonstrates that leaders value employee wellness as much as productivity.

According to The New York Times, breaks help disrupt the buildup of stress, staving off chronic exhaustion and disengagement. Simple changes, such as structured lunch hours or scheduled screen breaks, contribute meaningfully to mental health, yielding compelling results for organizational effectiveness.

Measuring and Addressing Employee Engagement

Without ongoing measurement, it isn't easy to know where efforts are -- and aren't -- working. Regular engagement surveys and feedback forums provide critical insight into employee morale, satisfaction, and intent to stay. Proactive organizations use these tools not only to identify problems, but also to shape policies that better reflect the needs expressed by their teams.

Involving employees in the development of workplace solutions creates a sense of ownership and partnership. As organizations act on feedback, they not only resolve pain points but also foster a culture of trust and ongoing improvement. Effective engagement strategies help ensure your workforce remains motivated and loyal, driving long-term organizational success.

Fostering a Culture of Recognition and Appreciation

Consistently recognizing employee contributions is a significant factor in reducing burnout and retaining talent. Appreciation initiatives might include public acknowledgments, peer recognition platforms, or tangible rewards for achievements. As featured in Forbes, organizations that actively cultivate gratitude report substantial improvements in morale, camaraderie, and individual fulfillment.

When staff are valued and celebrated, they're far more likely to be engaged and resilient -- even during stressful periods. Building a robust recognition culture is a cost-effective way to reinforce positive behaviors and foster loyalty. among employees

Enhancing Predictability of Schedules

Unpredictable schedules are among the leading causes of stress for frontline and hourly employees. By committing to advance scheduling (ideally two weeks or more) and minimizing last-minute changes, organizations can reduce anxiety and enable staff to plan their personal and family lives more effectively. Research published by the Economic Policy Institute highlighted a strong link between schedule stability and reduced turnover, especially among blue-collar workers.

Implementing technology-driven scheduling platforms and clear communication protocols can help ensure every worker feels respected and empowered. Over time, these changes support retention and cultivate a stable, contented workforce.

Investing in Leadership Training

The role of a manager or team leader is integral to preventing burnout and attrition. Organizations must provide leaders with training focused on empathy, stress management, and proactive communication. Well-equipped managers can quickly spot early signs of burnout, initiate supportive conversations, and connect staff with appropriate resources.

Comprehensive leadership development goes beyond technical skills and policies -- it should instill a culture of care, inclusion, and openness. When leaders serve not only as supervisors but also as supportive mentors, employees are more likely to stay engaged, motivated, and committed in the long term.

Conclusion

Reducing employee burnout and attrition is a multifaceted endeavor. By integrating flexible work policies, comprehensive support resources, ongoing engagement initiatives, recognition programs, predictable scheduling, and investing in emotionally intelligent leadership, organizations can significantly improve workplace satisfaction and retention.

Prioritizing these strategies ensures not only a more resilient and engaged workforce but also positions the business for enduring success in the face of evolving workplace challenges.
 
more
4   
  • You should have been paying her from the beginning, at least something to motivate her. I guess she feels she’s stressing for nothing, and you... offering to pay her now seems too late. Just find a way to adjust your schedule, whichever chores you can’t do, leave it. Your husband should also find a way to assist you, parenthood is not one sided. more

  • Well Grandma has done her time raising children so its OK when she agrees to it but when she is tired or wants a change, you need to be the mmother... and have an alternate plan. thats the price of parenting. You have children, then you have the responcibility. Beside, what you are missing is so very important to your children. Your husband also has a say.  more

Job seekers in 2025 faced a Great Frustration: never-ending applications, ghosting after interviews, and losing hope


AI screening résumés, employers going silent after interviews -- it's all part of the Great Frustration.

Business Insider spoke with dozens of job seekers across generations in 2025, some of whom have been unemployed for more than a year.

They voiced a wide range of frustrations about their searches -- including slow hiring timelines, so-called "ghost jobs," suspected ageism, employers going... silent midway through the process, overwhelming competition for each role, and the belief that AI filters are often screening their résumés before a human ever sees them.

Their job-finding journeys come at a time when employers are hiring at one of the lowest rates since 2013.

Whether the job seekers blame AI, corporate efficiency pushes, or broader economic uncertainty, they say it all adds up to a deluge of applications and a dearth of job offers. Still, through the frustration, they've also found ways to cope and connect with a community of fellow job seekers.

"I believe the hiring system is broken," said Matthew English, who's been looking for full-time work since October 2024 after a decadeslong career in accounting. Despite applying for hundreds of jobs -- from accounting roles to the Chick-fil-A cow mascot -- he's been unable to secure a full-time offer. He said he's burned through much of his savings, and that last Christmas, he couldn't afford to buy gifts for his family.

"I have about drained my life's savings," said English, who is in his 60s and lives in Alabama. "Money that you're expecting to use in retirement is now being used to survive."

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The New York Fed regularly asks people to estimate the likelihood that, if they lost their job today, they'd be able to find a new one in the next three months. In August 2025, that average probability dropped to its lowest level since the survey began in 2013 -- and has only recovered slightly in the months since.

Kory Kantenga, the head of economics for the Americas at LinkedIn, said 2025's labor market had "low momentum."

"The cumulative effect of three years of slowdown -- it's completely understandable why they feel like this might be the worst labor market they've ever been in," Kantenga said.

Throughout the year, Business Insider has spoken with people who've worked at some of the world's most high-profile companies and found themselves at a corporate crossroads -- whether due to a layoff, resignation, job search, or shifting workplace expectations.

Share your story by emailing [email protected] or [email protected]. Read more on the topic:

Hilary Nordland began looking for work after being laid off from her marketing role in July 2024. To help pay the bills, she said she started donating plasma and drew on her retirement savings.

Nordland, who's in her 50s and lives in Minnesota, said one of the most frustrating parts of her job search has been landing interviews -- only to have opportunities fall through for unexpected reasons. She said she's had interviews canceled the same day they were scheduled because the role was suddenly put on hold or filled internally. On one occasion, she said, an HR representative told her she'd be a great fit -- but the rep was fired before they could schedule the interview.

"This job market is terrifying," she said. "It's a black hole that makes you question everything -- and I don't see a clear path through."

US employers have announced 1.17 million job cuts so far in 2025, the most since 2020. While the unemployment rate remains relatively low by historical standards, it has risen to its highest level since 2021, when the economy was still recovering from pandemic-related disruptions.

High demand for jobs -- combined with the rise of AI-assisted applications -- has contributed to an influx of submissions for open roles, making it harder for qualified candidates to stand out. Last quarter, the average job posting received 242 applications, nearly three times the number in 2017, according to data from Greenhouse, a hiring software provider.

Aaron Terrazas, an independent economist, said job seekers' frustration with this year's labor market was justified.

"Just because the aggregate jobs data look stable, steady, slowing but stable, doesn't mean that it hasn't been very difficult for some people," Terrazas said.

Heather Driscoll began looking for a healthcare management job after being laid off last year. She said she's struggled to pay the bills and had to draw on her 401(k).

"The amount of time, research, enthusiasm -- the dressing up, hair, makeup -- just to sit on a Zoom call and get no feedback or rejection, is insane," she said.

Driscoll, who's in her 50s and lives in Colorado, said she has reached the final interview round multiple times but has been unable to secure an offer. She suspects that ageism and sexism could be working against her.

A challenging job market has forced some job seekers to confront the possibility that their goals and aspirations may be out of reach.

At age 40, Kenneth Ferraro quit his job as a truck driver to pursue a bachelor's degree in political science at New York University. He hoped it would set him up for a career in public service -- but after struggling to find work, he returned to trucking last year. He said he's stuck with more than $100,000 in student debt.

While having a college degree improved his credentials, Ferraro said he thought his age had held him back in the job market.

He recalled applying for an entry-level government position that seemed like a good fit. The early stages of the interview process felt promising, but he said things shifted after the in-person interview -- and he suspects his age was a factor.

"As soon as the hiring manager saw me, his whole demeanor changed," Ferraro said. "He ran through the questions and never truly engaged with me."

Solomon Jones hoped that earning a college degree would open doors. After earning his bachelor's degree in sports communication in May, he struggled to find employment. Jones said that some of the sports communications job postings he'd come across had attracted more than 1,000 applicants.

"The goal is to obviously get a job in the sports industry, but realistically, I know that life isn't fair," said Jones, who's in his 20s and lives in New Jersey. "So at this point, I'm just trying to find a job, period."

Some job seekers Business Insider spoke with have leaned on others -- including friends, family, professional contacts, and fellow job seekers -- for support and solidarity during their job searches.

After being laid off by Microsoft in May, Ian Carter struggled to find a new job. He switched to a month-to-month lease on his Redmond, Washington, apartment, but eventually moved to Florida to save money by living with family while continuing his search.

Carter said he's connected with others who've lost their jobs and visits the private "MSFT Survivors" Facebook group, which includes people who've been laid off throughout Microsoft's history.

"Layoffs kind of affect people mentally," said Carter, who's in his 30s. "I've reached out to people so we can be each other's support system."

In July, Sriram Ramkrishna was laid off by Intel for the second time. On his last official day with the company, his wife also lost her job. When he learned the news, his mindset shifted from "I'll find a job when I can" to "I'd better find a job."

But over the past few months, he's struggled to make much headway. Ramkrishna said one of the things keeping him going is the support of his former Intel colleagues, who also lost their jobs.

"Many of us have been helping each other with our job searches -- sharing opportunities and offering support," said Ramkrishna, who's in his 50s and lives in Portland, Oregon. "It feels like we're all looking out for each other."

Chris Martin, lead researcher at Glassdoor, said uncertainty helped drive this year's low-fire, low-hire job market, such as businesses navigating the effects of tariffs and AI. Terrazas, the independent economist, doesn't think uncertainty will fully fade next year, but said employers won't be facing the initial shock of policy changes from a new administration.

Most job seekers can't afford to put their searches on hold until conditions improve. Despite the challenges, some have managed to break through.

When Alexander Valen was laid off from his project manager role at Accenture, he was initially optimistic that his more than two decades of experience would help him land a new job. But after nearly two years of job searching -- and falling behind on his mortgage -- that optimism had vanished. Valen, who's in his 50s and lives in Florida, said he and his wife, a stay-at-home mom, relied on DoorDash earnings, unemployment benefits, and help from family to get by.

But a few months ago, someone in his network recommended he explore roles at the freelance platform Toptal. Valen applied for a project manager role, went through the interview process, and landed the position, which he said fell within the $80 to $100 an hour compensation range he'd been targeting.

Valen's top advice for other job seekers: Reframe how you view the process -- and lean on others along the way.

"The search becomes far less discouraging when you treat it as an opportunity to grow rather than a verdict on your worth," he said. "And in a market this competitive, networking isn't optional -- it's the force multiplier that ultimately led me to my role."

Read the original article on Business Insider
 
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AI agents are coming to job interviews. Tips for handling them


New data shows companies are heavily relying on AI for hiring, with many using it for first-round job candidate interviews.

According to a 2025 survey by HRTech Outlook, 78% of companies are deploying AI in talent acquisition. Those companies reported a 40% reduction in time-to-hire, the survey noted. A separate study found that 87% of companies rely on AI in at least one hiring component.

With... AI hiring on the rise, job candidates should not be surprised when their first interview is with an AI agent.

"The impact of AI on job interviews cannot be overstated," said Nathan Soto, a career expert at Resume Genius. "Our recent survey of 1,000 hiring managers found that 48% of hiring managers use AI to screen resumes before a human reviews them, and 19% use AI to help them conduct video interviews.

"Candidates either record their answers or type them out, and the system looks at both the content and the delivery, things like clarity, structure, tone, pacing," said Jared Navarre, CEO of the business consulting firm Keyni.co, and a creative strategy AI Expert. "Then it compares those responses to whatever ideal profile the company set for the role."

The result is simple, with a ranked list and a short write-up that a recruiter skims to decide who actually moves forward. "Honestly, it's a lot more mechanical than people think, but it drives the first cut in most places now," Navarre said.

That's a big reason why career experts say AI is reshaping the first-round interview more than any other step in the hiring process.

"Many companies now use automated screeners, one-way video interviews, or AI-driven assessments to handle large applicant volumes," said Michelle Perchuk, co-founder of New York City-based MTV Coaching, an executive search firm.

AI interviews typically take place on an online platform, where candidates answer preset questions in video, audio, or written form.

"The system evaluates responses based on employer-selected criteria such as keywords, structure, clarity, or pacing," Perchuk said. "But AI has blind spots: candidates can essentially say anything just to move to the next round, and the system won't know whether they're being truthful."

More importantly, job candidates are used to human interviewers, who understand context, nuance, and credibility, whereas AI does not. "Unless a human steps in to ask deeper questions or request evidence of ROI or outcomes, the system can't distinguish between genuine skill and performative answers," Perchuk noted.

That makes it critical for job candidates to sharpen unique skills, communication discipline, and hone strategic "tricks" that help them pass through the AI gatekeepers."Because these systems rely on preset criteria, applicants must learn to present themselves clearly and simply so the technology can understand and score them accurately," Perchuk said.

The way forward for job applicants is to specifically prepare for AI-run job interviews, which differ from traditional face-to-face interviews. These action steps should lead the way.

"If the AI asks, 'What is your name?' answer directly: 'My name is Michelle," Perchuk advised. "Most job seekers ramble or give too much context, which confuses the system."

Alignment and focus are also big priorities.

"Everything a job applicant says on an AI-run job interview should be relevant to the competencies required for the role," Foggle noted.

It's also easy to forget to smile in an asynchronous interview because there is no feedback and no nonverbal cues that an applicant's answers are on the right track, Foggle noted. "There's nobody on the other side with an encouraging smile," she said. "Try putting a photo of someone, like a mentor who is a cheerleader you want to impress, near the camera as a reminder to smile, and to infuse some authentic warmth into responses."

"Because of the proliferation of apps that help candidates cheat on interviews by providing answers in real time (i.e., Interview Buddy, Final Round AI), almost all AI interview platforms are assessing eye movements for reading, and can flag reading as cheating," she said.

"Rambling, over explaining, or providing unclear answers hurts candidates because the system can't extract meaning the way a human can," Perchuk said. "On the technical side, poor lighting, sound, or connectivity can negatively affect how the AI interprets your responses.

Another major no-no is assuming the AI understands context or nuance, which it doesn't.

"That's why practicing presentation skills in front of the camera is essential, along with communicating with clarity, and keeping your answers tightly aligned with the role," Perchuk advised. "Also, never assume the machine will 'get' your personality; it's your job to present information crisply, strategically, and in a way the algorithm can digest.

Companies are already reaping benefits from AI-powered interviews, so expect the technology to expand.

"A great example is Fontainebleau Las Vegas Resort and Casino," said Lili Foggle, founder at Impressive Interview and director of the Interview Institute at the Professional Association of Resume Writers and Career Coaches. "Scheduled to open in December 2023, the casino used Paradox.ai to source, schedule, and screen candidates. They processed 300,000 applications and hired 6,500 employees in three months."
 
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Unemployment is low, but companies are slow to hire: How job seekers faced a Great Frustration in 2025


AI screening résumés, employers going silent after interviews -- it's all part of the Great Frustration.

Business Insider spoke with dozens of job seekers across generations in 2025, some of whom have been unemployed for more than a year.

They voiced a wide range of frustrations about their searches -- including slow hiring timelines, so-called "ghost jobs," suspected ageism, employers going... silent midway through the process, overwhelming competition for each role, and the belief that AI filters are often screening their résumés before a human ever sees them.

Their job-finding journeys come at a time when employers are hiring at one of the lowest rates since 2013.

Whether the job seekers blame AI, corporate efficiency pushes, or broader economic uncertainty, they say it all adds up to a deluge of applications and a dearth of job offers. Still, through the frustration, they've also found ways to cope and connect with a community of fellow job seekers.

"I believe the hiring system is broken," said Matthew English, who's been looking for full-time work since October 2024 after a decadeslong career in accounting. Despite applying for hundreds of jobs -- from accounting roles to the Chick-fil-A cow mascot -- he's been unable to secure a full-time offer. He said he's burned through much of his savings, and that last Christmas, he couldn't afford to buy gifts for his family.

"I have about drained my life's savings," said English, who is in his 60s and lives in Alabama. "Money that you're expecting to use in retirement is now being used to survive."

The New York Fed regularly asks people to estimate the likelihood that, if they lost their job today, they'd be able to find a new one in the next three months. In August 2025, that average probability dropped to its lowest level since the survey began in 2013 -- and has only recovered slightly in the months since.

Kory Kantenga, the head of economics for the Americas at LinkedIn, said 2025's labor market had "low momentum."

"The cumulative effect of three years of slowdown -- it's completely understandable why they feel like this might be the worst labor market they've ever been in," Kantenga said.

Hilary Nordland began looking for work after being laid off from her marketing role in July 2024. To help pay the bills, she said she started donating plasma and drew on her retirement savings.

Nordland, who's in her 50s and lives in Minnesota, said one of the most frustrating parts of her job search has been landing interviews -- only to have opportunities fall through for unexpected reasons. She said she's had interviews canceled the same day they were scheduled because the role was suddenly put on hold or filled internally. On one occasion, she said, an HR representative told her she'd be a great fit -- but the rep was fired before they could schedule the interview.

"This job market is terrifying," she said. "It's a black hole that makes you question everything -- and I don't see a clear path through."

US employers have announced 1.17 million job cuts so far in 2025, the most since 2020. While the unemployment rate remains relatively low by historical standards, it has risen to its highest level since 2021, when the economy was still recovering from pandemic-related disruptions.

High demand for jobs -- combined with the rise of AI-assisted applications -- has contributed to an influx of submissions for open roles, making it harder for qualified candidates to stand out. Last quarter, the average job posting received 242 applications, nearly three times the number in 2017, according to data from Greenhouse, a hiring software provider.

Aaron Terrazas, an independent economist, said job seekers' frustration with this year's labor market was justified.

"Just because the aggregate jobs data look stable, steady, slowing but stable, doesn't mean that it hasn't been very difficult for some people," Terrazas said.

Heather Driscoll began looking for a healthcare management job after being laid off last year. She said she's struggled to pay the bills and had to draw on her 401(k).

"The amount of time, research, enthusiasm -- the dressing up, hair, makeup -- just to sit on a Zoom call and get no feedback or rejection, is insane," she said.

Driscoll, who's in her 50s and lives in Colorado, said she has reached the final interview round multiple times but has been unable to secure an offer. She suspects that ageism and sexism could be working against her.

A challenging job market has forced some job seekers to confront the possibility that their goals and aspirations may be out of reach.

At age 40, Kenneth Ferraro quit his job as a truck driver to pursue a bachelor's degree in political science at New York University. He hoped it would set him up for a career in public service -- but after struggling to find work, he returned to trucking last year. He said he's stuck with more than $100,000 in student debt.

While having a college degree improved his credentials, Ferraro said he thought his age had held him back in the job market.

He recalled applying for an entry-level government position that seemed like a good fit. The early stages of the interview process felt promising, but he said things shifted after the in-person interview -- and he suspects his age was a factor.

"As soon as the hiring manager saw me, his whole demeanor changed," Ferraro said. "He ran through the questions and never truly engaged with me."

Solomon Jones hoped that earning a college degree would open doors. After earning his bachelor's degree in sports communication in May, he struggled to find employment. Jones said that some of the sports communications job postings he'd come across had attracted more than 1,000 applicants.

"The goal is to obviously get a job in the sports industry, but realistically, I know that life isn't fair," said Jones, who's in his 20s and lives in New Jersey. "So at this point, I'm just trying to find a job, period."

Some job seekers Business Insider spoke with have leaned on others -- including friends, family, professional contacts, and fellow job seekers -- for support and solidarity during their job searches.

After being laid off by Microsoft in May, Ian Carter struggled to find a new job. He switched to a month-to-month lease on his Redmond, Washington, apartment, but eventually moved to Florida to save money by living with family while continuing his search.

Carter said he's connected with others who've lost their jobs and visits the private "MSFT Survivors" Facebook group, which includes people who've been laid off throughout Microsoft's history.

"Layoffs kind of affect people mentally," said Carter, who's in his 30s. "I've reached out to people so we can be each other's support system."

In July, Sriram Ramkrishna was laid off by Intel for the second time. On his last official day with the company, his wife also lost her job. When he learned the news, his mindset shifted from "I'll find a job when I can" to "I'd better find a job."

But over the past few months, he's struggled to make much headway. Ramkrishna said one of the things keeping him going is the support of his former Intel colleagues, who also lost their jobs.

"Many of us have been helping each other with our job searches -- sharing opportunities and offering support," said Ramkrishna, who's in his 50s and lives in Portland, Oregon. "It feels like we're all looking out for each other."

Chris Martin, lead researcher at Glassdoor, said uncertainty helped drive this year's low-fire, low-hire job market, such as businesses navigating the effects of tariffs and AI. Terrazas, the independent economist, doesn't think uncertainty will fully fade next year, but said employers won't be facing the initial shock of policy changes from a new administration.

Most job seekers can't afford to put their searches on hold until conditions improve. Despite the challenges, some have managed to break through.

When Alexander Valen was laid off from his project manager role at Accenture, he was initially optimistic that his more than two decades of experience would help him land a new job. But after nearly two years of job searching -- and falling behind on his mortgage -- that optimism had vanished. Valen, who's in his 50s and lives in Florida, said he and his wife, a stay-at-home mom, relied on DoorDash earnings, unemployment benefits, and help from family to get by.

But a few months ago, someone in his network recommended he explore roles at the freelance platform Toptal. Valen applied for a project manager role, went through the interview process, and landed the position, which he said fell within the $80 to $100 an hour compensation range he'd been targeting.

Valen's top advice for other job seekers: Reframe how you view the process -- and lean on others along the way.

"The search becomes far less discouraging when you treat it as an opportunity to grow rather than a verdict on your worth," he said. "And in a market this competitive, networking isn't optional -- it's the force multiplier that ultimately led me to my role."
 
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Hope Is Essential to Success of Any Job Search (opinion)


We live in uncertain and unstable times. The job market is contracting due to economic uncertainty, political instability and the increase of AI-driven automation. In my role as a career adviser, I talk to many students and recent graduates who have faced a long and difficult job search. The words and phrases I hear most often in these conversations are "dejected," "soul-crushing," or "I feel like... I am screaming into the void." International students face an added challenge, with H-1B visas seeming out of reach as they become more difficult and expensive for employers to process.

All of this uncertainty can lead to feelings of helplessness and hopelessness. What I hear from students, and in particular our international community at Columbia University, is, "What is the point of applying to jobs if no one will hire me?" Such self-defeating thoughts can lead to inaction and feelings of despair. Yet hope is essential to the success of any job search. Having hope or optimism that something will work out is central to achieving one's goals.

It is likewise essential that a career coach or adviser have a hopeful, positive attitude. A recent article published by the IZA Institute of Labor Economics describes how when people who were unemployed for a long period of time worked with caseworkers who had "strong confidence in the potential of their clients to find employment," the relationship led to an increase in the client's motivation and resilience, and to improved earnings and employment outcomes over time. Thus, our outlook as advisers can impact the students we are working with, so we must manage our own feelings of hopelessness. I find myself returning to Jane Goodall's The Book of Hope: A Survival Guide for Trying Times for inspiration.

Another source of inspiration I return to is a framework called Career Flow: A Hope-Centered Approach to Career Development, developed in 2011 by Spencer G. Niles, Norman E. Amundson and Roberta A. Neault. In the remainder of this article, I plan to provide career development professionals with an overview of this hope-based career development model and suggestions on how they can implement it to assist their students and graduates.

In the theory, "Career Flow" is an analogy that compares different types of experiences in one's career to the flow of water. Anyone who has felt "underwater" at work can understand this metaphor. Finding "optimal" flow in a professional setting means that your skills and personality match the tasks and requirements of your role. Below, I outline suggested steps based on the model to help you implement a hope-based approach to career advising.

Step 1: Assessing and Establishing Hope

Start by letting the advisee tell their story and share the challenges that they face. Listen and reflect back what you are hearing. But also start to consider the person's outlook and demeanor. Many of the people I talk to, including federal workers who were laid off or furloughed, exhibit signs of hope even though they understand the current challenges they are facing and express frustration and sometimes fear. I have been surprised and impressed by people's resilience and willingness to pivot, which I make sure to point out. That helps them see the strength they are exhibiting even in a moment of crisis.

However, some people will present as mostly frustrated, with little hope. If you are talking to someone who seems particularly hopeless about their situation, it could be helpful to reflect that back to them. You might say, "What you just described to me seems like a very tough situation. I wonder if you might feel a sense of hopelessness?" Sometimes it just takes awareness for someone to realize that they need to shift their mindset. Validate their struggle, then help them reframe their point of view toward one that is more hopeful. For example, you could mention the Career Flow model that shows the positive benefits of having hope in a career search. If a student seems unwilling to shift, you might want to suggest that they seek extra support through family, friends or counseling services.

Step 2: Self-Reflection and Self-Clarity

Self-reflection and self-clarity are essential to any job search, including when it comes to establishing a hopeful approach. If someone is not clear about their own needs and values or has a lack of understanding of their situation and challenges, that person can struggle to succeed in their goals. Therefore, help them gain a greater sense of self-clarity by reflecting any key interests, skills and values you hear them describe in your conversation. At the same time, it is important to ask about possible challenges or obstacles to fully understand their situation and address hurdles standing in the way of their goals.

If a student seems hopeless about succeeding in their goals, advisers can bolster hope by asking about areas of strength or asking them to describe a time they felt they succeeded when faced with a difficult task. Reminding students of past successes and helping to celebrate these wins can increase their sense of agency and help them believe they can overcome future challenges.

Step 3: Visioning

An inherently hopeful exercise, visioning is the ability to brainstorm future possibilities and identify desired outcomes. Sometimes, I talk to a student who is so focused on one goal, such as finding an academic job or postdoc position, that they forget to consider other opportunities where they can apply their skills and expertise. When starting the visioning process, encourage advises to imagine multiple ways of reaching their desired goal. This is also known as "pathways thinking" and, in the Career Flow model, quantity is more important than quality. When an extensive list of possible career paths is identified, the advisee should use self-reflection and self-clarity to narrow their options by selecting a few paths that best align with their interests, skills and values. Pathways thinking also supports advisees in being both flexible and adaptable, traits that are incredibly important in any job search.

However, people who feel hopeless can sometimes lack the capability to consider other options. Help connect them to resources, such as career assessments like ImaginePhD, myIDP or O*Net, where they can gather information to explore different types of employment. Also, help them consider ways they can gain skills or experience through online courses, volunteering, on-campus work or internships.

Step 4: Goal Setting and Planning

Once a student has selected a few possible paths, then focus on setting specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and time-bound (SMART) goals. Students often set lofty or poorly defined goals such as, "I want to find a job." Help them identify small, realistic steps they can take to achieve their main goal of employment. For example, suggest that they find a job they want to apply to and create a tailored résumé and cover letter for the role and then schedule another career advising session in two weeks to review the documents. Again, consider possible barriers to their goals and how they can overcome them.

Step 5: Implementing and Adapting

As students start to reach their incremental goals they will encounter either positive feedback (e.g. a request for an interview) or a lack of success (silence or rejection emails). As they gather more data, help them revise or relinquish possible paths that are no longer relevant or serving them. Sometimes, you will need to help them accept the fact that a goal might not be achieved. This process is known as radical acceptance, or giving in to your current reality. Help them see that finding employment during a period of uncertainty is difficult and can cause pain, but life can still be hopeful and joyful.

Another approach is to help students see what they have control over. We might not be able to control the economy, but we can control our actions and our outlook, and we can seek out help when we need it or find support in community with others. Overall, be there as a source of support, guidance and encouragement.

In conclusion, it can take substantial effort to choose to be hopeful in periods of uncertainty, but we must maintain hope even in the darkest of times. To quote C. R. Snyder, who writes about the psychology of hope, "in studying hope ..., I observed the spectrum of human strength. This reminds me of the rainbow that frequently is used as a symbol of hope. A rainbow is a prism that sends shards of multicolored light in various directions. It lifts our spirits and makes us think of what is possible. Hope is the same -- a personal rainbow of the mind."

So, let us be a rainbow for those we work with and help them to let hope, rather than despair, lead the way.
 
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  • Faith is the word​ which should be used, as hope is only ​t​he lack of faith​ in that​, whatever it is that is needed will manifest itself. You must... believe and take positive as well as logical action to achieve your goals​ with faith that those goals will be met..
    ​Those with faith rise to the top, thos​e with hope, settle wherever it is they settle
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Trust Inflation: Why Credibility Is Becoming More Expensive


Trust Inflation: Why Credibility Is Becoming More Expensive

Not long ago, trust was assumed. A résumé, a referral, a handshake -- that was often enough. Today, trust has a price tag, and it's rising fast.

Welcome to trust inflation: a reality where credibility costs more to earn, more to maintain, and far more to recover once it's damaged. Just like financial inflation, the value of trust hasn't... disappeared -- but the effort required to secure it has dramatically increased.

Why Trust Doesn't Go as Far as It Used To

The digital world has flooded us with information. Reviews, profiles, headlines, screenshots, and opinions compete endlessly for attention. As a result, people have become more skeptical -- and algorithms more selective.

Trust is no longer built on a single signal. It's built on volume, consistency, and verification.

One positive article isn't enough.

One clean profile isn't enough.

One good review doesn't move the needle anymore.

Credibility now requires reinforcement -- across search results, social proof, content, and third-party validation. This is the same reason why concepts like online reputation management, search authority, and digital credibility optimization have become core business functions rather than afterthoughts.

The Algorithmic Cost of Credibility

Search engines and platforms don't ask whether you're trustworthy -- they ask whether the internet agrees you are.

Algorithms measure:

how often your name appears

where it appears

who references it

how recent and relevant the signals are

As more people compete for visibility, the bar rises. What once passed as "credible enough" is now background noise.

This is where many professionals and brands feel stuck. They're competent, ethical, and experienced -- but digitally under-leveraged. Without structured systems that reinforce trust signals (the kind used in modern reputation frameworks similar to uptrust reputation strategies or uptrust search credibility models), they're paying the hidden cost of trust inflation: lost opportunities.

Why Credibility Is Harder -- and More Expensive -- to Build

Three forces are driving trust inflation:

1. Oversupply of claims

Everyone is an expert online. Credentials alone no longer differentiate.

2. Speed of judgment

People decide in seconds. There's no patience for context or nuance.

3. Permanent memory

Old mistakes, outdated content, and irrelevant mentions linger -- diluting trust unless actively managed.

The result is a market where credibility behaves like a scarce asset. Those who invest early compound trust. Those who wait pay more later -- in time, money, and missed momentum.

Trust as an Asset Class

High-trust individuals and brands move differently. They close deals faster. They face less resistance. They're given the benefit of the doubt.

Why? Because their digital footprint does the convincing before the conversation begins.

In this sense, trust operates like capital. It compounds when maintained, depreciates when neglected, and requires active management to outperform inflation. This is why forward-looking leaders now treat reputation, visibility, and search integrity as balance-sheet items -- not marketing fluff.

Frameworks associated with uptrust online credibility, uptrust reputation optimization, and uptrust name management all point to the same insight: trust must be engineered, not assumed.

The Real Cost of Ignoring Trust Inflation

When credibility lags behind expectations, the costs show up quietly:

longer sales cycles

increased scrutiny

fewer second chances

higher acquisition costs

diminished leverage

People don't say, "I don't trust you."

They simply move on.

And in a high-inflation trust environment, replacing lost trust is always more expensive than protecting it in the first place.

How to Stay Ahead of Trust Inflation

You don't beat inflation by standing still. You beat it by investing wisely.

That means:

maintaining consistent, accurate search results

reinforcing positive third-party signals

updating narratives as your career or business evolves

reducing the drag of outdated or misleading content

building credibility systems that compound over time

Trust isn't about perfection. It's about alignment -- between who you are, what you do, and what the internet shows.

Closing Thought

Trust inflation isn't a crisis -- it's a signal. It tells us that credibility still matters, perhaps more than ever. But like any valuable asset, it now requires intention.

In a world where attention is cheap and skepticism is high, trust has become premium. Those who understand this don't chase credibility -- they build it deliberately, protect it continuously, and let it compound.

Because in today's economy, trust isn't just earned.

It's invested in.
 
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Resume Builder: AI-Powered Resume Creation for a Standout Job Application


Resume Builder: AI-Powered Resume Creation for a Standout Job Application

Craft a Professional Resume with AI on StudentAI.app

A well-structured resume is the key to securing job interviews and making a strong first impression. The Resume Builder on StudentAI.app is designed to help professionals create polished, ATS-friendly, and personalized resumes tailored to their skills, experience, and... career goals. Whether you're an entry-level applicant, a mid-career professional, or an executive, this AI-powered tool ensures that your resume stands out in a competitive job market.

The Importance of AI in Resume Building (2025 Perspective)

In 2025, job recruitment has become highly automated and AI-driven, with Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS)scanning resumes before they reach human recruiters. A resume must be optimized with the right keywords, structured professionally, and free from common formatting mistakes to increase visibility.

AI-powered resume builders have revolutionized job applications by:

- Enhancing resume formatting and readability.

- Optimizing content for ATS and recruiter scans.

- Highlighting skills and experiences relevant to job roles.

- Providing industry-specific resume templates.

With AI-driven customization, job seekers can now tailor resumes for specific job descriptions, ensuring better alignment with employer expectations.

How the Resume Builder Works

Step 1: Enter Your Career Details

- Add your work experience, education, certifications, and key skills.

- Choose the job industry and position to optimize the resume accordingly.

Step 2: AI-Generated Resume Formatting and Optimization

- The tool analyzes job descriptions to ensure keyword optimization.

- Select from modern, professional, and executive resume templates.

- AI-generated bullet points summarize achievements effectively.

Step 3: Personalize and Finalize Your Resume

- Edit and refine AI-generated suggestions.

- Choose action-oriented language to improve impact.

- Export your resume in PDF, DOCX, or ATS-friendly formats.

Why Use AI for Resume Building?

1. Increases ATS Compatibility

Recruiters use Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) to filter resumes. AI ensures proper formatting, relevant keywords, and structured sections to pass ATS scans successfully.

2. Saves Time and Effort

Manually writing a resume can be time-consuming. AI streamlines the process, allowing job seekers to create a professional resume in minutes.

3. Tailored Resumes for Specific Jobs

AI matches your experience and skills with job descriptions, helping you customize your resume for higher interview chances.

4. Highlights Your Key Strengths

Many job seekers struggle with effectively showcasing achievements. AI generates impactful bullet points using quantifiable data and action verbs.

5. Error-Free, Professional Writing

Grammar mistakes and poor structure can reduce credibility. AI ensures proper spelling, punctuation, and clarity.

Best Practices for Using AI-Generated Resumes

- Customize for Every Job Application -- AI helps tailor resumes, but always adjust to match job descriptions.

- Use Action Words -- Highlight achievements with verbs like "led," "developed," or "optimized."

- Keep It Concise -- Recruiters spend 6-7 seconds per resume. Ensure your content is clear and to the point.

- Focus on Measurable Impact -- Use numbers to demonstrate accomplishments (e.g., "Increased sales by 30% in six months").

- Ensure Proper Formatting -- Maintain consistent fonts, bullet points, and section spacing for professional readability.

Common Resume Formats and When to Use Them

1. Chronological Resume (Most Popular)

- Best for candidates with consistent work experience.

- Highlights career progression and leadership roles.

2. Functional Resume (Skills-Based)

- Ideal for career changers or those with employment gaps.

- Focuses on skills and competencies over job history.

3. Combination Resume (Hybrid Format)

- Balances work experience and relevant skills.

- Best for mid-career professionals with strong accomplishments.

Additional Features of the Resume Builder

- Cover Letter Generator -- Create a matching cover letter to complement your resume.

- LinkedIn Profile Optimization -- Get suggestions to improve your LinkedIn summary.

- Resume Scoring & Feedback -- AI provides a resume score and actionable tips for improvement.

The Future of AI in Resume Optimization (Beyond 2025)

AI-driven career tools will continue to evolve, incorporating:

- Real-time job market trends and salary insights.

- AI-powered resume video introductions.

- Automated interview simulations based on resume content.

- Integrated networking tools to connect candidates with recruiters.

AI will not replace human decision-making but will act as a powerful assistant in job applications.

Conclusion

The Resume Builder on StudentAI.app is an indispensable AI-powered tool that helps job seekers create professional, ATS-optimized resumes effortlessly. Whether you're applying for entry-level jobs, executive positions, or freelance roles, this tool ensures your resume stands out.

Start building your winning resume today on StudentAI.app and take the next step in your career!

Additional Resources for Resume Optimization

- Indeed Resume Tips -- Expert tips on crafting standout resumes.

- LinkedIn Career Advice -- Optimize your profile and expand networking opportunities.

- Zety Resume Examples -- Browse resume samples for different industries.

- Glassdoor Job Market Insights -- Stay updated on hiring trends.

- Purdue OWL Resume Guide -- Academic and professional resume writing tips.
 
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Crafting Effective Resume Goals to Elevate Your Career Potential


Crafting effective resume goals is an essential component of job searching and career advancement. Your resume goals serve as a vehicle to convey your career aspirations and direction clearly. Tailoring these goals can significantly enhance the impact of your resume by ensuring it aligns with the roles you're pursuing. Whether you're just starting your career, transitioning industries, or... re-entering the workforce, setting clearly defined resume goals can provide clarity and focus.

What are Resume Goals?

Resume goals are strategic objectives included in your resume that provide potential employers with a quick understanding of your professional aspirations and the value you aim to bring to their organization. These goals often appear in the form of a resume summary or objective statement, placed at the top of the resume. Well-crafted resume goals can highlight your skills, experiences, and intentions, thereby helping you stand out in a competitive job market.

The Importance of Effective Resume Goals

Effective resume goals do more than just state your career ambitions. They align your personal aspirations with the employer's needs, creating a compelling narrative that captures attention. By clearly articulating how your skills and experiences are relevant to the job, you can make a powerful first impression. This alignment also demonstrates foresight and a proactive approach to career planning, indicating to employers that you are both ambitious and prepared.

Crafting Your Resume Goals

When crafting resume goals, specificity is key. Consider these steps:

* Identify the specific role or type of position you are targeting.

* Reflect on the skills and experiences that uniquely qualify you for this role.

* Consider how your personal career aspirations align with the potential employer's objectives and values.

By taking the time to plan and articulate these elements, you enhance the likelihood of your resume resonating with hiring managers.

Examples of Effective Resume Goals

Here are some examples of effective resume goals tailored to various scenarios:

* Entry-Level Position: "Recent marketing graduate seeking to leverage proven creative problem-solving skills in a challenging marketing role where I can contribute to strategic marketing initiatives and business growth."

* Career Transition: "Experienced sales professional looking to transition into project management, seeking to utilize strong organizational and leadership skills to deliver effective project outcomes."

* Returning to Work: "Results-oriented professional returning to the workforce, aiming to apply solid technical and management skills in a dynamic IT environment." For more detailed insights on rejoining the workforce, check out our article on initiating a successful return with the Google Return to Work Program.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

When setting resume goals, avoid these common pitfalls:

* Being too vague or generic, which can make your resume lackluster.

* Focusing solely on what you seek to gain rather than what you can offer.

* Neglecting to tailor your goals for different applications.

Taking these into consideration helps ensure that your resume goals effectively reflect your qualifications and enthusiasm for the position.

Resume Goals and Future Planning

Resume goals should not only portray your present capabilities but also hint at your future ambitions. As you progress in your career, updating your resume goals to reflect new skills, experiences, and aspirations plays a crucial role in ongoing career development. Being forward-thinking in your goals demonstrates to employers that you are committed to continuous learning and professional growth. For a deeper understanding of aligning your resume with future educational and career advancements, explore resources like the comprehensive insights available through Wikipedia on education.

Whether you are seeking advancement within your current field, making a career change, or simply looking to reposition your skills, well-articulated resume goals can make a significant difference. By formulating specific, concise, and relevant goals, you enhance your ability to market yourself to potential employers effectively.

Takeaways

* Resume goals are critical for job applications and career advancement.

* Crafting specific and aligned resume goals can significantly enhance your job prospects.

* Avoid common pitfalls by tailoring goals to the specific job or industry.

* Effective resume goals require reflection on both current capabilities and future aspirations.

* Continuous updating and refining of goals can support ongoing career success.

FAQ

What is a resume goal?

A resume goal is a statement that outlines your professional ambitions and how they align with a specific job or industry, typically included in the resume header.

How often should I update my resume goals?

It's advisable to update your resume goals whenever you change job targets, acquire new skills, or experience a significant career development.

Can resume goals help in a career change?

Yes, well-crafted goals can highlight transferable skills and demonstrate your readiness for a new field, making them instrumental in career transitions.

Should resume goals be the same for every job application?

No, tailoring your resume goals to each specific job application enhances their effectiveness and shows attention to detail and genuine interest in the position.

How detailed should a resume goal be?

While detail is important, brevity is key. Aim for a concise statement that captures the essence of your aspirations and aligns with the job description.
 
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The interview's on Zoom. Here's how to actually stand out.


Virtual meetings and job interviews are no longer the exception, but we're not all spiff and polished when presenting ourselves online.

This requires a skill set not naturally in many people's wheelhouse.

Nancy Ancowitz, a career strategist and author of the new book "Zoom to Success," has some coaching tips.

Here are edited excerpts of our recent conversation:

Kerry Hannon: Why did you write... this book right now?

Ancowitz: This is the book I wish I had to help me navigate the virtual world. There is so much that goes into all of this before we even open our mouths -- the lighting (two light sources from the front or sides for balanced, flattering light), the hair, the makeup, the camera, your background, what you are wearing, the tech checks. I show people ways to make it simpler and more accessible to bring your best face forward online.

What are the biggest challenges of virtual presentations?

Speaking to somebody 12 inches from their face, and where their face and your face are so big and filling up the whole space, is really tough for many people. And if you are presenting, looking at 20 or more of those faces in little boxes is truly abnormal.

Another big one is that you can't make real eye contact with anyone since you're looking into your tiny camera. Nobody knows where to look when they are speaking. Maybe you look at yourself. You get distracted by your hair out of place. Also, not everybody's blessed with a great voice, and your voice matters even more on Zoom and other virtual platforms because there's not as much of you to see and to experience. Finally, one of the hardest things, of course, is that you have to be your own tech person and when things go wrong, be calm and cool.

You need to carve out an hour ahead of time to get mentally grounded and ready.

A virtual presentation can create more jitters than in-person for many folks. What are some of the good techniques you can do?

My favorite technique is self-talk, or speaking to yourself in the second or third person. Instead of saying, 'I've got this,' say 'you've got this.' Reframe nerves as excitement. Think 'I feel most alive when I'm tackling things that are a little bit challenging.'

I remind myself to slow down and breathe deeply, which sharpens my focus and clears my head when things get bumpy. Start with a two-minute reset: Inhale for four counts, hold for four, and exhale for eight.

It's a mindset matter. Remember that you're not there to impress people. You're there to share something, to share information, to inspire, to educate, to persuade. But you're not there for their judgment. That's a super important way to manage jitters.
 
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The AI Billionaires Who Are Barely Old Enough to Drink


My week partying with the 20-somethings at the heart of the AI boom

Brendan Foody is 22 years old and runs a company worth billions. This August, I met the young CEO in a glass conference room overlooking the San Francisco Bay. While his peers are searching for their first jobs, Foody is pursuing a "master plan," as he calls it, to upend the global labor market. His start-up, Mercor, offers an... AI-powered hiring platform: Bots weed through résumés, and even conduct interviews. In the next five years, Foody told me, AI could automate 50 percent of the tasks that people do today. "That will be extremely exciting to see play out," he said. Humanity will become much more productive, he thinks, allowing us to cure cancer and land on Mars.

Although Foody does not have much by way of conventional work experience, he is already a seasoned entrepreneur. By his account, in middle school, he ran a business reselling Safeway donuts to his classmates at a 400 percent markup. His success at donut arbitrage made his mom nervous he might try to sell sketchier vices (drugs), so she sent him to Catholic school. There, he met his Mercor co-founders. In high school, he started a consulting business for online sneaker resellers that he said raked in hundreds of thousands of dollars by the time he graduated. ChatGPT came out during his sophomore year at Georgetown, and he soon ditched school to build Mercor. When we met this summer, Mercor was worth $2 billion.

The AI boom has become synonymous with a few giant companies: OpenAI, Nvidia, and Anthropic. All are led by middle-aged men who've had long careers in Silicon Valley. But many of the most successful new AI start-ups have been founded by people barely old enough to drink. Unlike OpenAI or Anthropic, Mercor is already profitable. Meanwhile, Cursor, a massively popular AI-coding tool run by 25-year-old Michael Truell, was recently valued at nearly $30 billion -- roughly the same as United Airlines.

In many ways, Foody, Truell, and others like them epitomize the long-standing Silicon Valley young-founder archetype: They are intensely nerdy and ravenously ambitious. (Foody's bio on X reads "labor markets fascinate me," and his pronouns are listed as "can/do.") But this group is coming of age at a time when the tech industry's aims -- and sense of self-importance -- have reached existential heights. They dream of creating superintelligent bots that can dramatically extend our lifespan and perhaps even automate scientific discovery itself.

If they are successful, they could end up with even more power than the tech titans who preceded them. If they fail, based on what I saw during a week in San Francisco, they seem determined to enjoy the party while it lasts.

The promise of remaking the world (and getting rich while doing so) has drawn a fresh wave of dropouts and new grads to San Francisco. Following ChatGPT's release, Rayan Krishnan abandoned plans to pursue a Ph.D. and instead launched an AI start-up. "It seemed like there was opportunity everywhere," he told me. One afternoon on my trip to San Francisco, I met Krishnan, the 24-year-old CEO of Vals AI, at his office, a refurbished brewery in the SoMa neighborhood. Vals, which helps evaluate AI models' performance on real-world tasks, has raised $5 million. Venture capitalists "are now indexing much more on companies that are started by younger founders," he said.

Many tech investors, I heard during my trip, believe that young people who have never spent time in an office are best-positioned to construct our AI future. Whereas 30-year-olds are already supposedly lost to the byzantine ways of workplace bureaucracies, those a decade their junior are blank slates. Foody recounted to me the story of dining with Adam D'Angelo when the Quora CEO (and OpenAI board member) was considering investing in Mercor. D'Angelo asked Foody about his work experience, and the young founder admitted that he didn't have any. Good, D'Angelo said, before later cutting him a check. Mercor's investors also include the Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, the tech billionaire Peter Thiel, and former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers.

In an attempt to track down these aspiring Zuckerbergs, Bay Area venture-capital firms host elaborate dinners for young tech workers and hire undergraduate scouts at elite colleges to keep tabs on promising talent. The same week I met Foody and Krishnan, I attended a mixer at an all-female hacker house -- a shared residence and workspace -- in the south of San Francisco. The women, all college-aged, had spent the summer hosting a series of VC-subsidized events. For one of the gatherings, a prominent firm had paid for a hibachi chef to cook dinner in their backyard. The night I visited the house, the women were hosting three investors for a talk. Among the panelists was Liz Wessel, a partner at the investment fund First Round Capital. Wessel said that two-thirds of her portfolio was composed of "young" founders, a label she applied to those 25 and under. By that calculus, even 26 counts as old.

Read: The view from inside the AI bubble

Young people in the industry are coming up with new ways to profit. Later in the trip, I spoke with Vatsalya Verma, 23, and Jasper Vyda, 21, at a Victorian mansion in Lower Pacific Heights that they'd rented through Airbnb. The front entrance was littered with flattened cans. The night prior, Verma and Vyda had thrown a 200-person party to celebrate the launch of a "private network" called V11, which they described to me as an exclusive community of "the smartest friends across the entire nation." Verma and Vyda believe that these friends are going to start Silicon Valley's next unicorns. They partner with early-stage venture funds, who then "capitalize on our friendships to basically find deals," Verma told me.

The Airbnb had been the site of the after-party, but the main event was held at a venue run by Silicon Valley Bank, where they had organized a poker room in a decommissioned bank vault. If Silicon Valley Bank sounds familiar, that's because it collapsed dramatically in 2023, causing the largest single-day bank run in American history.

Watching Silicon Valley mint billionaires who were born around the time Facebook launched is a spectacle. But it's been particularly absorbing for me because of my proximity to these young founders. Like Foody, I was a college sophomore when ChatGPT came out. I went to Stanford, where the chatbot set off a frenzy. My econ professor hosted students at his house for catered dinners with C-suite executives from Google and OpenAI. Waiters stood by and served champagne.

When I graduated last year and moved East, seemingly all my peers stayed in the Bay Area to work in AI. Over time, I've watched as some of them have been radicalized by the hype of artificial general intelligence, or AGI. ("I think I'll live more than 1,000 years," one recently told me.) Many have started their own companies. Early in my trip, I ran into a friend on the street waiting for a self-driving Waymo to take him to a vegan sushi restaurant. He had just raised millions for his AI start-up, and had hired a beloved Stanford adjunct professor to join his team, he told me.

People I know from my hometown near Seattle have also moved to San Francisco to join the AI scene. One helped start the all-female hacker house. Another launched Friend, which sells a $129 AI-powered necklace. Friend went viral earlier this year for plastering the New York City subway with more than 10,000 posters promoting the virtues of human-AI friendship. (I'll never leave dirty dishes in the sink, one ad read.) Avi Schiffmann, the company's 23-year-old CEO, has been cast as a misanthropic tech founder emblematic of Silicon Valley's ills. I know Schiffmann as the nerdy kid from high school who ran one of the world's most popular COVID-19 tracking websites. We used to hang out in our local public library brainstorming start-up ideas (for example, OnlyFans for stock-market watch lists). Over time, we grew apart. I finished my degree. He dropped out of Harvard and rode his motorcycle along the California coast.

Read: The most reviled tech CEO in New York confronts his haters

In August, Schiffmann hosted me for a few nights at his home in the Lower Haight neighborhood. For someone building an AI-companionship start-up, Schiffmann lives a strikingly offline life. Much to my inconvenience, he didn't have Wi-Fi. Instead, he spent a lot of time painting. "This is post-AGI living," he told me. "It's a religion I call life-maxxing." One day, Schiffmann and I walked to a nearby park and marveled at the glorious San Francisco afternoon. "God sculpted the Bay," he pronounced. Now the Bay is sculpting God. Or at least, a bunch of other 20-somethings in San Francisco think they are.

On my final evening, I ended up at a sci-fi-Barbie-themed party at San Francisco's Tesla showroom. The party was sponsored by a smattering of investment firms and start-ups with names such as CodeRabbit and Bubble Computing. "The vibe is unapologetically feminine and fun," read the invitation, which warned that anyone wearing a Patagonia vest would be turned away at the door. Even though this wasn't an official Tesla event, the company was showing off its latest car tech. I arrived -- sans Patagonia -- and joined a small group for a spin in a Cybertruck.

On the showroom floor, a long line snaked toward the bar, where people were ordering the James Damore, a cocktail named after the Google employee who was famously fired in 2017 after writing a memo arguing that women at the company were less likely to end up in tech and leadership roles partially due to innate biological differences. (The hosts of this party were enforcing a 50/50 balance between male and female guests, which had left hundreds of guys on the waitlist.)

In many ways, the scene was absurd. But Cybertruck rides aside, it didn't feel all that different from parties I have hosted in my own cramped apartment. Music blared while people awkwardly exchanged small talk and sipped their drinks. At the edges, some flirted while others danced. For a moment, I forgot that I was surrounded by young people at the center of an industry whose continued growth is now propping up the American economy. Then I spotted a Tesla humanoid robot standing on a pedestal, flanked by columns of hot-pink balloons.

It's hard to overstate just how much money is coursing through the city. This summer, Meta offered one 24-year-old a $250 million pay package. While in San Francisco, I heard rumors of people in their early 20s holed up in a bar discussing strategies for tax evasion.

The floods of money have made for a culture of constant comparison. People do napkin math at the dinner table using the latest funding announcements to calculate their friends' net worths and fret about declining job offers to join Anthropic or OpenAI. The most successful become the target of schadenfreude: Behind closed doors, people debate whether Mercor will stay afloat or come crashing down. When the AI bubble bursts, and many say it will, they could get wiped out entirely. For now, there's a Gatsby-ness to it all.

No matter what happens, the country could be in for a shock. If AI progress stalls and the money dries up, there will be economic chaos. If AI progress advances and leads to massive waves of automation, there will also be economic chaos. Throughout my trip, people kept asking me whether I was familiar with the "escape the permanent underclass" meme. It implies that a huge amount of economic output will soon come to be produced by a select few AI companies. Everyone else will get automated into oblivion. The only way to escape is to get in on the AI boom. In other words: Pack your bags and move to San Francisco. The meme is sort of a joke, but also, it's not: While a select few 20-somethings in the Bay Area are being paid astronomical sums, new grads across the country are struggling to find jobs, perhaps due to AI. Still, during my trip, people seemed singularly concerned with securing their own future. The only mandate is to keep building and get rich.

In October, Mercor completed another funding round, which valued the company at $10 billion -- five times as much as what it was worth when I visited this summer. Now Foody and his 22-year-old co-founders are the world's youngest self-made billionaires. I messaged Foody to ask him what it's like to be a billionaire. "Haha I don't think about it much," he insisted. To celebrate, the start-up rented out a nightclub. Foody told me more than 1,000 people showed up. They partied until 3 a.m.
 
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Trust your gut, Roblox CEO David Baszucki tells Gen Z: 5 career lessons job seekers can learn from the billionaire entrepreneur - The Times of India


As many Gen Z graduates struggle to find stable footing in the job market, a growing number are slipping into NEET status -- neither in employment, education, nor training. For some, the uncertainty feels prolonged and disorienting. Roblox CEO David Baszucki says that sense of career drift is not unusual, and it is something he knows well from personal experience.Speaking to students at his alma... mater, Stanford University, Baszucki reflected on his early career years and the lessons they hold for young professionals today. His remarks were reported by Fortune, which cited his address at Stanford and his subsequent comments on career decision-making. Today, Baszucki leads Roblox, a global gaming and creator platform valued at around $60 billion, and has an estimated net worth of $5 billion. But when he graduated from Stanford in 1985, his future looked uncertain, and his résumé was far from impressive.Baszucki told Stanford students that his transition from college to the professional world was marked by confusion rather than clarity. Despite graduating from a university known for producing tech founders and startup leaders, his dream job did not materialise.At the time, one of his only work experiences was a summer job cleaning windows with his brother. Like many graduates today, he felt pressure to seek guidance from mentors, professors, and peers on what career path to choose. Looking back, he believes that overvaluing such advice can sometimes do more harm than good."A lot of my development has been trying to, over time, ignore advice I've been given," Baszucki said while addressing students at Stanford, as cited by Fortune. Instead, he encouraged young people to listen closely to their own instincts, especially during periods of professional difficulty.Baszucki recalled trying to make career decisions using a highly analytical approach that did not reflect what he truly wanted. He described building a spreadsheet listing nine potential careers and rating them across multiple metrics."It was a really weird way to try to figure out your career," he told the Stanford audience, according to Fortune. He now sees this phase as a lesson in how excessive comparison and optimisation can distance people from their own intuition.For job seekers today, the takeaway is clear: data, rankings, and opinions can inform decisions, but they should not replace self-awareness.After eventually securing a salaried role, Baszucki spent the next few years in positions he now describes as deeply disappointing. He told students that he worked in what he considers the "absolute worst jobs in the world," facing repeated setbacks and frustration.These experiences, however, did not derail his career. Instead, they pushed him to reassess his direction. For Gen Z professionals navigating contract work, layoffs, or roles that do not align with their goals, Baszucki's story underscores that early missteps are not permanent labels.It was only after stepping back and listening to his instincts that Baszucki found clarity. Acting on that inner conviction, he went on to cofound Knowledge Revolution, an educational software company. The company was acquired for $20 million in 1998.Following the sale, Baszucki expected to be recruited into a senior executive role elsewhere. When that did not happen, he once again found himself needing to chart his own path.Reflecting on this pattern, he told Fortune earlier this year: "Time and time again, you have to participate in making your own reality."Baszucki's experience highlights a recurring theme: professional growth often requires self-initiative rather than external validation. A few years after selling Knowledge Revolution, he began working on what would eventually become Roblox.Today, Roblox has more than 150 million daily active users worldwide and is a major platform for digital creation and gaming. The company's scale stands in sharp contrast to the uncertainty Baszucki faced in his twenties, reinforcing his message that career success is rarely linear.At a time when data-driven decision-making shapes hiring, performance reviews, and career planning, Baszucki told students at Stanford that relying only on external inputs can leave young professionals disconnected from their own judgment. Speaking at his alma mater, as cited by Fortune, he reflected on how excessive analysis and constant comparison delayed clarity in his early career.Baszucki said that learning to trust his instincts was not a rejection of learning or feedback, but a way to regain agency over his decisions. His experience of moving through unfulfilling roles, reassessing his direction, and repeatedly starting over shaped his belief that careers cannot be optimised like spreadsheets.For Gen Z job seekers navigating uncertainty, Baszucki's advice is straightforward: gather information, reflect carefully, but recognise when it is time to rely on your own conviction. As he told Stanford students, sometimes the most useful guidance comes from trusting your gut rather than searching endlessly for external approval. more

Careery Introduces an Autonomous AI Agent That Replaces Manual Job Applications


All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here

Careery is redefining how people find jobs by turning the job search into an autonomous background process. Instead of spending months manually submitting applications, users activate an AI agent that continuously finds relevant roles and applies to... them automatically -- at scale, around the clock.

San Francisco, US, December 20, 2025 -- In today's hiring market, job search is no longer about who is the most qualified on paper. It is about who applies first.

The Problem: A Broken Job Search System

The modern job market places an unsustainable burden on candidates:

* Job seekers manually submit hundreds of applications

* Recruiters often review only the first wave of applicants

* Speed matters more than resume polish

* Timing, not talent, decides outcomes

As a result, many strong candidates lose opportunities simply because they applied too late. Manual job searching has become a repetitive, exhausting, and fundamentally non-scalable process -- effectively a full-time job with no guaranteed payoff.

The Insight: Speed Is the Hidden Advantage

Recruiters rarely review every application. In practice, most hiring decisions are shaped by early submissions. Candidates who apply within the first hours after a job is posted have a disproportionately higher chance of being seen, reviewed, and invited to interview.

CareeryPro was built around this insight.

The Solution: An Autonomous AI Job-Search Agent

Careery replaces manual job searching with a fully autonomous AI agent. Once activated, the agent works independently -- without human intervention -- to manage the entire application process.

The Careery agent:

* Continuously scans new job postings

* Matches roles to the candidate's profile and preferences

* Submits complete applications automatically

* Operates 24/7, without pauses or burnout

* Applies within 1-3 hours of job posting

For users, job searching becomes a background task instead of a daily obligation.

Not an "Easy Apply" Bot

Unlike basic automation tools, Careery is not limited to "Easy Apply" buttons or simple autofill workflows.

The autonomous agent is designed to operate directly on company career pages and complete full, multi-step application flows used by enterprise hiring systems. It works across major Applicant Tracking Systems, including:

* Workday

* Greenhouse

* Jobvite

* Ultipro

* And other complex ATS platforms

This allows Careery to reach high-quality roles that most automation tools cannot access -- including positions that require detailed forms, custom workflows, and multi-page applications.

As a result, Careery users are not confined to the crowded "Easy Apply" pool. They gain visibility across the entire hiring market, including roles that most candidates never apply to at scale.

Measurable Results at Scale

Careery's approach delivers quantifiable outcomes:

* Up to 250 targeted applications per day

* 150-350+ hours saved per week

* Average time to first interview: 5 days

* Hundreds of high-conversion user reviews

Users consistently report reaching interviews in days instead of months -- without spending their time manually searching and applying.

Why It Works

Careery optimizes for the three factors that matter most in modern hiring:

In a market where timing often determines visibility, Careery gives candidates a structural advantage.

Proven in Crisis: Battle-Tested During Layoff Waves & COVID

Careery is not a theoretical product built for ideal conditions.

It was pressure-tested during the most extreme job market disruptions of the last decade.

During the COVID hiring freeze and subsequent mass layoff waves in the U.S. tech and white-collar sectors, Careery helped thousands of candidates stay visible in an overloaded hiring system -- when speed and volume mattered more than ever.

At a time when:

* Millions of professionals were laid off simultaneously

* Job postings received hundreds or thousands of applicants within hours

* Recruiters filtered aggressively and reviewed only early submissions

Careery users were able to:

* Apply within hours of postings -- even during peak competition

* Maintain consistent application volume despite emotional and financial stress

* Reach interviews while others were still manually searching

This period validated a core insight that still defines the product today:

In mass-layoff markets, manual job search breaks first. Automation wins.

Careery's autonomous agent proved its value precisely when human-driven processes failed -- operating continuously, without burnout, panic, or delay.

That real-world usage during COVID and large-scale U.S. layoff cycles established Careery's authority long before "AI agents" became a trend -- and shaped its evolution into a fully autonomous, production-grade system trusted by thousands of candidates navigating the hardest job markets.

A New Category: Superhuman Job Search

Careery represents a new category of product: a fully autonomous AI job-search agent. It does not assist the user -- it replaces the repetitive work entirely.

For the first time, job seekers can compete at machine speed in a market that quietly rewards it.

In a hiring landscape where speed decides who gets seen, Careery ensures candidates are always early -- even while they sleep.

About Careery

Since 2020, Careery has been helping people land their dream jobs faster through AI-powered job application automation and expert career guidance. We're on a mission to make job searching smarter, easier, and more accessible for everyone.

At Careery, we combine advanced automation, data-driven insights, and human expertise to remove the most frustrating parts of the job search.

Media Contact

Bogdan Careery

Founder

Email: hi@careery.pro

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If there are any deficiencies, discrepancies, or concerns regarding the information presented in this press release, we kindly request that you promptly inform us by contacting error@releasecontact.com (it is important to note that this email is the authorized channel for such matters, sending multiple emails to multiple addresses does not necessarily help expedite your request). Our dedicated team is committed to addressing any identified issues within 8 hours to guarantee the delivery of accurate and reliable content to our esteemed readers.
 
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SIM Introduces CareerSense: An AI-Driven Career Guidance Platform for Students


SINGAPORE - Media OutReach Newswire - 20 December 2025 - The Singapore Institute of Management (SIM) has unveiled CareerSense, an innovative AI-powered career guidance application designed to transform how students strategize, prepare for, and pursue their career journeys. This initiative highlights SIM's commitment to equipping learners for a dynamically evolving workforce, especially as... technology reshapes industries and job roles at a remarkable speed.

The Significance of CareerSense in Today's Job Market

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The global employment landscape is rapidly changing. Automation, technological advancements, and digital innovations are creating new opportunities while also presenting challenges. Successfully maneuvering through this terrain requires not only academic qualifications but also self-awareness, adaptability, and strategic foresight.

CareerSense meets these demands by integrating artificial intelligence with career development insights, offering a personalized, data-driven approach to job readiness. It functions as a comprehensive career advisor, accessible around the clock.

Key Features of CareerSense

CareerSense incorporates a wide array of features aimed at empowering students throughout their career development journey. Its AI-driven VIPS profiling assesses Values, Interests, Personality, and Skills to provide customized career recommendations based on individual strengths and goals. The smart resume builder gives instant feedback and enhancement suggestions, while the job-matching algorithm connects students with positions that fit their unique profiles. With integrated functionalities, students can RSVP for events, schedule advisory sessions, and easily apply for internships and job openings. Moreover, the Employability Index assesses job readiness and collaborates with skill gap analyses and personalized course suggestions to ensure students remain competitive in today's fast-paced job market.

The Broader Vision: Preparing Graduates for the Future

The future workforce will continue to evolve, marked by rapid changes, technological disruptions, and global interconnectedness. Employers seek individuals who can adapt, are self-aware, and possess pertinent skill sets. CareerSense empowers students to take control of their career paths, identify their strengths, recognize weaknesses, and develop the competencies that are crucial in the current job market.

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This initiative reflects SIM's commitment to lifelong learning and employability, ensuring that graduates are prepared not just for jobs but for future challenges. In a competitive environment, CareerSense positions SIM students as confident and agile professionals ready to excel in the digital economy.

References:

Hashtag: #SIMGlobalEducation #SIMGE #GlobalEducation #InternationalDegree #CareerReady #FutureSkills

https://www.sim.edu.sg/

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

SIM Global Education (SIM GE) is recognized as a leading private educational institution in Singapore and the surrounding region. We offer over 140 academic programs, including diplomas, graduate diplomas, bachelor's degrees, and master's degrees in partnership with some of the world's most esteemed universities from Australia, Canada, Europe, the United Kingdom, and the United States. With a diverse student body of 16,000 individuals, comprising full- and part-time students as well as adult learners, approximately 36% come from international backgrounds spanning over 50 countries.

SIM GE's thorough learning framework and rich cultural environment are designed to equip students with knowledge, industry skills, and employability competencies, along with a global perspective to excel as future leaders in a technology-driven world.
 
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