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The Bagley Center: Career Services

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Title: The Bagley Center: Career Services


1
The Bagley CenterCareer Services
  • Realistic Strategies for Career Search in a Tough
    Economy

2
Intro to Workshop series
  • These workshops are designed to instill some
    seriousness about what you will be facing as you
    move closer to graduation
  • To create an awareness and provide strategies for
    your career search
  • realistic salaries
  • job search strategy
  • networking and technology
  • and waiting out the tough economy with some
    possible sensible options

3
Workshop Schedule
  • Sept. 24 Realistic Income/Realistic
    Expenseson the website http//www.plymouth.
    edu/career
  • view as slide show
  • Oct. 15 The Practical Job Search
  • on the website http//www.plymouth.edu/career
  • view as slide show
  • Nov. 19 Networking Technology
  • on the website http//www.plymouth.edu/career
  • view as slide show
  • Dec. 3 Waiting out the Market Sensible
    Options http//www.plymouth.edu/career
  • view as slide show

4
Last in a series of 4 workshops
  • This is the last in a series of 4 workshops
    ----and for those who have been attending these
    workshops you have heard similar content in the
    beginning of each one
  • the Tools to prepare for the job search.
  • and then well focus on the workshop which is
  • --------
  • Waiting out the Market
  • Sensible Options

5
Tough job market be defensive!
  • This workshop series is essentially about being
    defensive in a bad market
  • The need for planning in a tough job market now
    more than ever you need an organized plan to
    attack the job market and secure employment
  • And what are your options if you dont get that
    job you are looking for within your occupational
    area or degree?

6
Employers projected overall increases in
college hiring (2004-2009).
  • What does the job market hold for members of the
    Class of 2009?
  • The good news? Employers responding to NACEs
    Job Outlook 2009 Fall Preview survey plan to
    increase college hiring for the sixth straight
    year. But how much?

7
Employers projected overall increases in
college hiring (2004-2009)
  • The bad news? For the first time in that span,
    the projected percentage increase in college
    hiring is below double digits

8
Employers projected overall increases in
college hiring (2004-2009
  • Current projections are not encouraging.
  • Original projections made in August 2008 for the
    Class of 2009 showed promise employers were
    predicting an overall increase in hiring of 6.1
    percent. However, in light of the economy, NACE
    polled respondents to the survey again in October
    2008, resulting in a projected hiring increase of
    just 1.3 percent.

9
Employers projected overall increases in college
hiring (2004-2009)According to National
Association of Colleges and Employers CHANGED to
1.3
10
Labor Market Demand vs. Supply
  • Economic environment moves in business cycles
  • Employment or the total number of jobs in an
    economy moves through economic booms and economic
    downturns or recessions, also known as business
    cycles

11
Workshop 4 Waiting out the Market Sensible
Options other than the Traditional Career Path
  • Core preparation
  • Sensible Options
  • Maintaining your skill set
  • Graduate study/advantage or not

12
Core preparation the connection
13
Core Preparation Resume Cover letter
  • Quality counts especially in tough times
  • Both the resume and cover letter MUST be perfect
  • --there is no room for error
  • --errors will disqualify you as candidate
  • How to keep your resume out of the trash
  • Video by Careertv.com
  • http//www.careertv.com/v2/CareerAdvice.aspx?searc
    hcategoryByCareerAdvicesearchitemResumeeidpara
    m2vidparam29
  • (1.37 min)

14
Core Preparation Resume Cover letter
  • Digital Resume
  • Give your resume some added punch against
    electronic screening
  • devices by Careertv.com (.30 seconds)
  • http//www.careertv.com/v2/CareerAdvice.aspx?searc
    hcategoryByCareerAdvicesearchitemResumeeidpara
    m2vidparam24
  • For resume guidelines visit the PSU Career
    Services website
  • http//www.plymouth.edu/career/career/resume/Digit
    alResume.html
  • Video Resume
  • The Vault Video Guide to Video Resumes
  • Want to get the edge on the rest of the job
    competition? Then check out this video and learn
    how to create your very own video resume and
    stand out from the crowd!
  • http//www.vault.com/multimedia/video-detail.jsp?v
    ideo_id3541cat_id200nameJobSearchandInterv
    iewAdvice
  • (Select watch in full screen/ 2.27 min.)

15
Core PreparationIf you dont have a job at
graduation.
  • Go to your Career Center Bagley Center or your
    hometown campus career center for reciprocal
    services
  • Make a plan dedicate effort to the plan map
    out the next weeks and months
  • Give it another try pull out the business cards
    from the job fair you attended and make contact
    with employers
  • NACE, Job Choices 2009

16
Core PreparationIf you dont have a job at
graduation.
  • 4. Consider jobs that get your foot in the door
    even if the job isnt a perfect fit
  • 5. Re-apply yourself go back to the employers
    that didnt select you as a candidate and
    re-apply stating that you are still interested in
    the company.
  • NACE, Job Choices 2009

17
Core PreparationIf you dont have a job at
graduation.
  • 6. Take an internship or volunteer position
    just because you graduated doesnt mean that you
    cant have an internship. Contact employers to
    tell them youd be interested in a short-term
    commitment and/or an internshipyou may even get
    paid!
  • 7. Consider a temporary job this will widen our
    network, and may put your foot in the door at the
    organization. According to the US Dept. of Labor
    many temp jobs are in occupations such as
    technology or health and can offer even higher
    pay.
  • NACE, Job Choices 2009

18
Core PreparationIf you dont have a job at
graduation.
  • 8. Consider part-time work or Contract work
  • Lower salary than expected
  • The point is to get in the door so that you are
    the flow of job information that becomes
    available and gaining valuable experience,
    contacts, and a broader network.
  • 9. Network, network.friends, relatives, parents
    of friends,alumni, professional associations,
    young professional groups, tell everyone in your
    network.
  • NACE, Job Choices 2009

19
Core PreparationIf you dont have a job at
graduation.
  • 10. Explore career options Being flexible if
    you cant find what you want right now careers
    that are related to your major or field use
    them as steps to where you want to go with your
    careerflexibility is key.
  • 11. Keep a positive attitudefinding a job is
    hard work!
  • NACE, Job Choices 2009

20
Change in BA Hiring by Region
  • Employment opportunities are shrinking around the
    country. No region seems immune. The large
    companies that recruit globally or across the
    entire U.S. are not decreasing nearly as much as
    regionally bound companies. While reducing
    available positions by 6 and 7, global and
    national companies still expect their average
    hires to be 169 and 106 individuals per firm
    respectively. Among the regions, the Great Lakes
    and South Central will shave 6 to 8 off last
    years recruitment levels. The remaining
    regional employers expect to drop 10 or more.

21
Change in BA Hiring by Region
  • In the past two years we have been able to
    identify specific regions that seem to be
    expanding at above normal rates of growth. Last
    year, we marveled at the growth in Minnesota,
    Wisconsin, Illinois and Iowa. This year proves
    these states are not immune from the contraction
    of the labor market. Few hopeful signs were
    found on the map except for hiring growth along
    the Atlantic seaboard from North Carolina to
    Maryland. Ohio and Pennsylvania also report some
    positive news. 

22
Change in BA Hiring by Region
  • Is there a correlation between employers hiring
    projections and the presidential election? We
    compared the hiring outlook in states that voted
    for President-elect Obama and those for Senator
    McCain. The outlook in the blue states shows an
    11 decline in bachelor level positions, compared
    to only a 4 decrease in the red states (which
    represented 20 of respondents).

23
Change in BA Hiring by Region
24
Sensible Options
  • Holding on to your career/Maintaining your skill
    set
  • Supplement your career skills
  • Learn a language
  • Shifting to a management role within your own
    career group
  • Deepen your credentials
  • Choosing recession-resistant careers
  • Relocating
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

25
Sensible options Maintaining your Skill Set
  • Holding Onto Your Career
  • According to career experts at Fortune magazine,
    you can help preserve your current career by
  • Aggressively networking your business contacts
  • And enrolling in certification or advanced career
    training courses to bolster your skills
  • the more hats you can wear, the harder you are to
    replace
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

26
Sensible options Maintaining your Skill Set
  • Supplement Your Career Skills
  • A way to increase your employment value is to
    train for work that crosses international
    borders.
  • For example, marketing or finance professionals
    can enroll in online language classes or
    e-commerce degree programs to qualify for
    international careers where the economy is not
    automatically pegged to the dollar.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

27
Sensible options Maintaining your Skill Set
  • Learn a language
  • For example you're in great shape if you already
    speak Chinese and have a business degree. Now
    you're a prime candidate for work with the
    fastest-rising economy on the planet. But you can
    also study Chinese online in your spare time, or
    study another language for work in Europe or
    Japan.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

28
Sensible Options
  • Shifting to a management role
  • within your own career group can also be an
    effective hedge against recession--providing the
    field is mostly recession-proof like health care.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

29
Sensible options Maintaining your Skill Set
  • Deepen your credentials
  • Since many employers in the finance, marketing or
    health care professions pay full or partial
    tuition for management candidates to pursue
    graduate business degrees, you should hop aboard
    ASAP and deepen your credentials for
    e-commerce.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

30
Sensible options Choosing recession-resistant
careers
  • The following occupational areas are predicted to
    grow by 22 percent during the decade
  • Management Analysts-those who help businesses
    stay afloat or slenderize their operations during
    tough times are also going to remain in high
    demand.
  • Health care/Medical
  • Teaching/Education
  • Engineering
  • Public Safety/National Security
  • Environment
  • Manufacturing
  • Energy
  • Information technology
  • Sales
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

31
Sensible options Choosing recession-resistant
careers
  • Healthcare/Medical Careers
  • People will still need to appointments with
    doctor, the dentist, or the clinic -- none of
    which can be outsourced abroad or handled online.
  • If you're already a registered nurse, you can
    enroll in an R.N. to BSN degree program and
    increase your value as an administrator.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

32
Sensible options Choosing recession-resistant
careers
  • Healthcare/Medical Careers
  • If you already hold a bachelor's degree, consider
    a business degree like an MBA to qualify for work
    in hospital administration.
  • At the local level, the need for paramedics
    throughout the land is expect to grow 19 percent
    more jobs between 2006 and 2016, faster than the
    average increase for all occupations.
  • Many colleges and online schools offer paramedic
    or EMT certification training programs leading to
    an associate degree.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

33
Sensible options Choosing recession-resistant
careers
  • Teaching Careers
  • are going to rise by 12 percent during the
    2006-2016 decade, according to the U.S. Bureau of
    Labor Statistics (BLS).
  • BLS predicts that teaching jobs will be more
    abundant in southern or Sunbelt states like
    Arizona, Nevada, Georgia and Texas where the
    largest increases in student enrollment are
    expected.
  • However, the if you already hold a bachelors
    degree in any subject, you can enter the teaching
    profession. But you'll need a post-graduate
    certification or license to practice in the
    classroom.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

34
Sensible options Choosing recession-resistant
careers
  • Careers in engineering that withstand the
    recession.
  • The BLS predicts a healthy 21 percent increase in
  • bioengineering jobs through the next decade as
    the need for cost-effective health care and
    medical devices grows. You'll need more than a
    bachelor's degree, however, for the more
    competitive positions.
  • Civil engineers should also enjoy greater job
    opportunities, accounting for an 18 percent
    overall growth, as professionals are needed to
    design and oversee transportation, water supply
    and treatment and bridge and road construction
    projects.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

35
Sensible options Choosing recession-resistant
careers
  • Careers in public safety and national security
  • That means recruitment for border guards
  • Coast Guard officers
  • Transportation security workers
  • Customs and immigration staff
  • Police
  • Fire and rescue personnel will remain a priority
  • And you don't necessarily need a law enforcement
    degree to qualify.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

36
Sensible options Choosing recession-resistant
careers
  • Careers in public safety and national security
  • Many security recruiters are looking for people
    who complete associate or bachelor's degrees in
    other fields.
  • At the national level, for example, the
    Department of Homeland Security is hiring
  • recruiters (H.R. professionals)
  • I.T. staff (computer science majors)
  • program managers (business, management, finance).
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

37
Sensible options Choosing recession-resistant
careers
  • Environmental Careers
  • engineers should see the greatest job security
    of all the engineering disciplines -- with a 25
    percent rise in total jobs during the 2006-2016
    decade -- assisting private sector businesses to
    meet standards and comply with governmental
    regulations.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

38
Sensible options Choosing recession-resistant
careers
  • Environmental Careers
  • Careers in the Indispensable Infrastructure
  • Safe water
  • growing sources of energy
  • non-polluting cars
  • remedies for global warming
  • floodwater management
  • -- no matter what happens to the economy, the
    very planet needs tending. This means there will
    be a clamor for well-trained engineers.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

39
Sensible OptionsWhat about other Career Paths?
  • The Bureau of Labor Statistics produces the
    current information on all occupations in a
    publication called
  • Occupational Outlook Handbook
  • http//www.bls.gov/search/ooh.htm
  • This publication allow you to look at the current
    supply and demand in your occupational area as
    well as look at other career paths you might
    take. the training and education needed
  • earnings
  • expected job prospects
  • what workers do on the job
  • working conditions
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

40
Sensible OptionsWhat about other Career Paths?
  • For example History majors
  • http//www.bls.gov/oco/ocos065.htm
  • Nature of the Work
  • Training, Other Qualifications, and Advancement
  • Employment
  • Job Outlook
  • Projections Data
  • Earnings
  • OES Data
  • Related Occupations
  • Sources of Additional Information
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

41
Sensible Options Relocating
  • Relocating
  • Be open-minded dont limit your choices to
  • one job
  • one career
  • one industry
  • one city
  • or even one country
  • The market is global and your perspective should
    be as well.
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

42
Sensible Options Which Jobs Are Safest In Tough
Economy?
  • Which jobs are safest in a tough economy check
    out this article that supports
  • www.kirotv.com/save-money/17636330/detail.html
  • Management Analysts-those who help businesses
    stay afloat or slenderize their operations during
    tough times are also going to remain in high
    demand.
  • Health care/Medical
  • Teaching/Education
  • Engineering
  • Public Safety/National Security
  • Environment
  • Manufacturing
  • Energy
  • Information technology
  • Sales
  • Recession-resistant Careers for Tough Times by
    Gabby Hyman

43
Sensible Options Volunteer Services
  • Peace Corps
  • http//www.peacecorps.gov/?cidVMnational
  • National Service
  • http//www.nationalservice.org/
  • General Search for Volunteer Opportunities
  • http//myretirementshop.com/Volunteering.do?proces
    svolunteeringIndextypeVolunteeringsubType

44
Community Service
  • Why get involved in service projects or local
    organizations? maybe even find employment with
    a service organization!
  • Even if a project or agency refers to
    volunteers, there may be payment involved.
    Here are only a few websites that may be helpful
  • See Handout Community Service

45
Sensible Options What about Placement Agencies?
  • How can placement agencies or 3rd party
    recruiters help in my search for a job?
  • Tory Johnson is the Workplace Contributor on
    ABCs Good Morning America, where she reaches
    millions of viewers on a wide range of
    job-related issues and challenges. She is the
    anchor of Home Work on ABC News Now, the digital
    channel. http//www.plymouth.edu/career/video/inde
    x.html

46
Graduate Study or not?
  • The PSU majors vs. the Occupational Outlook
    Handbooks reporting what majors may require a
    graduate degree for career advancement or high
    pay scale.
  • Handout Is Graduate School suggested for your
    major or field?

47
Graduate School Advantage or not?
  • It's fairly obvious that we think you should give
    careful thought to your decision. Take action! If
    nothing else do some
  • Talking and questioningremember to listen to the
    advice and information others share with you.
  • Reality testingtest out your career interest
    before committing to a specialized graduate
    program.
  • Soul searching be certain this is your future
    goal and you are not motivated by something else.
  • http//www.plymouth.edu/career/career/grad/index.h
    tml

48
Graduate School Guideline
  • Graduate School process
  • http//www.plymouth.edu/career/career/grad/index.h
    tml
  • Related Links
  • What Graduate Programs Does PSU Offer?
  • So you want to go to graduate school
  • Using the Bagley Center
  • Choices 2009
  • Job Search with PlymouthCareers.com
  • Where do I look for graduate school information?
  • Finding the right program some considerations
  • Professional programs (law, medicine, etc.)
  • Entrance exams and test dates
  • Financial aid resources

49
Being smart with your money in a tough market
  • Focus on how to do a job search economically
  • Using the internet to save money in your job
    search electronically mailing resumes and cover
    letters scanning documents interviewing by
    webcam (practice!)

50
How am I going to begin?
  • View each of these career videos as a beginning
    of your job search process
  • Most videos are 3 to 5 minutes in length
  • Getting Started Marketing Yourself
  • How the Hiring Process Works Cleaning up your
    Digital Dirt
  • Find Yourself Online Identity
  • Employee Referrals Cold Calling
  • Placement Agencies Career Fair Tips
  • Preparing for an Interview Prepare Questions
    for Your Interviews
  • Negatively Phrased Questions Acing the
    Interview Part 1 2
  • The Thank You note
  • Negotiation Part 1 2 Mistakes Women Make
    Negotiating
  • Comeback Careers Part 1 2 Generational
    Diversity
  • http//www.plymouth.edu/career/video/index.html

51
Possibly treat this workshop as an assignment
  • Thoughts to walk away with.
  • Know your needs for a salary check cost of
    living
  • Begin my job searchmy timeline
  • how do I stack up against the market/competition
  • Establish my job search network
  • Know how technology plays a part in my job search
    strategy

52
What next?
  • Devote time each week to your job search and
    attend the next workshop
  • Waiting out the Market Sensible Options other
    than the Traditional Career Path
  • and mark your calendar for December 3rd for your
    next workshop

53
The Bagley Center
  • We are right here on campus bring your resume
    and cover letter to our office for a critique
  • Mon-Thurs 10 am to 4 pm an advisor is
    available to work with you on your resume and
    cover letter as well as your job search strategy.

54
Services to students
  • Open Mon-Fri, 8 a.m. to 400 p.m.
  • Located between Blair and Hall
  • No appointment necessary
  • Meet on a first-come first served, drop-in basis.
    Advisors do not counsel by email.
  • Open during Spring Break Summers
  • Services offered to graduate students and alumni
    of PSU.

55
Questions?
  • Do I have the answers?
  • rdecotis_at_plymouth.edu
  • Email me with your questions or comments.
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