Monday, July 13, 2009

Money & Business

Career Center: Laid off? Five steps to your next job

By Marty Nemko
Posted 3/7/06

Three months ago, GM announced 30,000 layoffs. Two months ago, it was Ford's turn: 10,000. Now AT&T has added 10,000 more to follow its merger with BellSouth.

Being laid off is one of life's most dispiriting events. Yet it can often be turned into a positive one. How to cope:

Step 1. Grieve quickly. I don't recommend taking more than a day or two to grieve your job loss. I've found that the longer you wait to get back on the bicycle, the more fearful you'll be to get on. Instead:

Step 2. Take inventory. Mass layoffs usually result from circumstances beyond any employee's control—such as a merger or business downturn—but there is often careful planning about who gets the ax. Most employers deliberately choose whom to keep and whom to let go. That usually means that if you're laid off, your employer wasn't thrilled with your skill set and/or personality.

That layoff can be a wake-up call to take a look at yourself:

Step 3. Aim for a better job than the one you lost. Having done your inventory and perhaps developed a self-improvement plan, identify a target job. This is the chance to shoot for something better than the position you lost. If you hadn't been laid off, inertia might have kept you in that ill-fitting job for years. If you can't come up with a specific job title, just identify your core skill and where you'd like to use it, for example, "use my communication skills working for a college."

It may also be a good time to consider working for yourself. Don't let the statistics about the high rate of business failure necessarily deter you. If you're a self-starter and a good problem solver, you have a good chance. And you don't need a lot of investment capital. Barbara Sher's Idea Book, available from www.geniuspress.com, is a compendium of simple self-employment ideas.

Step 4. Cast a wide net. Find on-target job openings by visiting lots of your ideal employers' Web sites. Employers hire people through their own Web sites more often than from megasites such as Monster, CareerBuilder, or HotJobs. Perhaps more important, tell everyone you know the sort of job you're looking for. Make sure your tone conveys that you welcome the opportunity to move on to something better. If you sound depressed or embarrassed, the person will assume you were at fault.

Step 5. Get off to a strong start on your new job. When you get hired, the best way to ensure you don't get laid off again is to get off to a good start. Upfront, negotiate your job description to accentuate your strengths. If possible, arrange to report to someone respected and kind. Also, remember that more people are laid off because of an annoying personality than incompetence. So, at the risk of sounding like a scout leader, resolve to be generous and helpful.

advertisement

advertisement

Special Reports

Paying for College

Paying for College

Colleges break links with lenders but now give less guidance to students on where to look.

NEWSLETTER

Sign up today for the latest headlines from U.S. News and World Report delivered to you free.

RSS FEEDS

Personalize your U.S. News with our feeds of blogs and breaking news headlines.

USNews MOBILE

U.S. News daily briefings are also available on your mobile device.

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.