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    28
    Jan
    2013
    12:23pm, EST

    Job seeker sells himself with viral Amazon resume

    In a tough economy, job applicants need to go the extra mile to stand out, and one man found a unique way to do that by putting together a resume that looks just like an Amazon.com product page.

    By Eun Kyung Kim, TODAY contributor

    Philippe Dubost wanted to sell prospective employers on his skills, so he came up with a creative solution — listing himself on Amazon.com. Sort of.

    The Paris-based web product manager created an online resume  that looks exactly like an Amazon page, offering himself up for sale.

    “Only 1 left in stock – Order soon,” the page, dubbed "An Amaz-ing Resume" urges viewers. “Ships from Paris, France. Gift-wrap available (frustration-free breathable packaging).”

    Prospective employers are invited to add Dubost to their shopping cart or wish list to get his contact information.

    Under “product details," visitors learn that Dubost is 186 cm tall (that’s 6 feet, 1 inch for you Americans), speaks three languages (English, French and Spanish) and earned two graduate degrees, one from Toulouse Business School in France and an MBA from University of Dayton.

    He cleverly includes a set of "customer reviews" to list his job history, which average five stars. And, just like a real Amazon page, Dubost asks users after each past employer listing: “Was this review useful to you?”

    Viewers are also invited to see Dubost's full work history in a more traditional online setting on his LinkedIn page.

    Dubost told TODAY.com he came up with the idea after seeing “all kind of smart or goofy resumes,” including one that resembled a Google results page.

    “And I thought, heck, how about an Amazon product page?" he said. "It all seemed so natural, there's a title, a picture, description, reviews."

    Dubost also sheepishly confessed: “I'm an addict shopper at Amazon, that may also be a reason why I thought of that.”

    It took him two days to build the site, and he kept adding "bells and whistles as inspiration came.” (Check out what the website generates when you try clicking "add to wedding registry.")

    He originally posted the resume last month, but it only started to grab online attention last week. The viral publicity has landed him about 100 work-related responses so far.

    “What I really had in mind was sending the link to the resume along with applications I would send to job offers, as a way to make my application different,” he said.

    His goal was to connect with companies in his field of interest and expertise. “I would never have sent that for a job application at an accounting company, for instance,” he said. “I thought, ‘Well, if they like that stuff, then it's a fun web company.’”

    Still, the attention his resume has garnered has left him stunned.

    "I really never meant, less expected, for the resume to go that crazy viral!” he said. “This is just unbelievable, crazy, and fun.”

    More from TODAY:

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    2 men sue Subway over missing inch

    13 comments

    Decent product, but not eligible for Prime? Come on!

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  • 26
    Oct
    2012
    8:11am, EDT

    Workers face tough choice as unemployment drags on

    Mike Segar / Reuters

    Job seekers wait to meet with employers at a career fair Wednesday in New York City.

    By Dana Macario, TODAY contributor

    One of the defining features of the current economic downturn is that when people lose their job, they tend to remain unemployed for a loooong time. Of the nation's 12 million unemployed workers, 40 percent have been unemployed more than six months, and the average duration of unemployment is nine months.

    Many workers inevitably struggle with the question of whether to strategically pursue jobs within their chosen field or just grab any job they can get.

    Obviously, if bills are piling up and you need to get food on the table, you happily take any available job. But what if you have some savings set aside and can afford to ride out your job search for a while?

    There aren’t any hard-and-fast rules in that case, experts said.

    “There is no one right answer. You need to do what’s best for you,” said David Palileo, a recruiter for Synapse Product Development.

    Cathi Hight, president of the Boulder Area Human Resource Association in Colorado, echoed Palileo’s comments, noting that both long employment gaps and unusual, interim jobs are increasingly common these days. “HR people are a little less judgmental, because a lot of people are out of work – a lot of HR people are out of work. They get it.”

    Whether you take any job you can find or hold out for something in line with your long-term career goals may depend on what industry you’re in. “Think about what industry you’re in – what’s the future for that industry? If you’re in a declining industry, you’re going to need to find some resources to switch industries, switch careers,” said Josh Warborg, district president at Robert Half International, a staffing firm. “However, if you’re in an industry like IT or health care, you may be better off staying in your field and hunting down an opportunity there.”

    However, Joe Bonura, author of the e-book “Throw the Rabbit and Get That Job In 30 Days or Less!,” advises job seekers to take any job they can get. He says it’s important to do something productive, even if it wasn’t what you were trained to do. “I would clean toilets in between [jobs] so I could keep my pride and keep earning money,” Bonura said. “While I’m cleaning toilets, I’d be thinking, ‘What am I going to do this afternoon so I can get the job I really want to do?’ And there’s no shame in that. There’s no shame in any labor. The big thing to do is maintain your self-esteem.”

    Whether you hold out for the job you really want or take any job you can get, experts recommend addressing that choice in your resume and cover letter.

    For those who take any job they can find, Hight recommends noting it as an “interim” position. Tell prospective employers that you had to make careful decisions during this difficult economic time. She notes that it’s important to mention something positive about that interim job in your cover letter. “Don’t make it sound like complete drudgery. Tell them you learned something new on the job. Then, potential employers can say, ‘Wow, this person made a hard decision, but they’re making the most of it and learning something.’”

    While Hight advises applicants to address their interim position in the cover letter, she says it’s important to talk about the job they are applying for as well. Many cover letters and resumes are scanned and filtered by computers before a human ever sees them, so it’s important to include the right keywords for a particular job in those documents; otherwise, Hight cautions, computer filters may dismiss a resume before a real person ever has the chance to lay eyes on it.

    Palileo agrees that it’s important to address both gaps in employment and those interim jobs on your resume. If you took a job just to get through a tough spot, Palileo says, it’s important to put the right spin on it, both on your resume and in an interview. “How do you encapsulate that [job] into your story? Rather than say ‘barista,’ say that you’re a java addict who dove into the subculture of coffee houses.”

    Dana Macario is a Seattle-area writer.

    While the rest of the nation suffers with a jobless rate of around 8 percent, South Dakota's is about half that. And there's a range of jobs, from IT to banking to engineering.

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    80 comments

    It would be interesting to see how many people think that the government can somehow make the situation better by additional involvement in businesses. There is a saying that seems to sum up this recession. "Government shouldn't be in business and business shouldn't be in government."

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  • 4
    Oct
    2012
    7:39am, EDT

    'Discouraged' workers face tough road back to employment

    Sean Gardner for NBC News

    Indelethio Nebeker spent five months chasing one job, only to be disappointed. He works odd jobs intermittently while trying to get the career he wants on track.

    By John W. Schoen, NBC News

    In 2008, Marcey Carver lost her job in the finance department of a Vermont car parts maker that closed its doors after the auto industry went into freefall.

    With a degree in molecular biology, an MBA and a master's in accounting, Carver, 58, spent the next year and a half working temporary jobs, landing full-time work in October 2009 as finance director for a small non-profit. After 11 months, she was laid off again.

    Since then she’s had temporary jobs, but her search for full-time work has run into a major roadblock.

    “You can’t get the job you’re qualified for," she said. “But you can’t get a job you’re overqualified for because they think you’re going to quit as soon as you find something else.”

    Carver doubts she'll ever land full-time work and now focuses on just making enough money to pay the bills.

    Millions of other Americans have come to the same conclusion as the worst economic recovery since World War II has left them sidelined and unable to replace the job they lost to the Great Recession.

    Many have given up altogether, left behind by the economy and left out of the government’s employment statistics. In fact, so many people have given up looking for work that the official jobless rate fell to 8.1 percent last month from 8.3 percent, even though the economy is not adding nearly enough jobs to absorb the growth in working-age population.

    With the presidential election just weeks away, President Obama and former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney squared off Wednesday night in the first of three campaign debates. The discussion focused heavily on which candidate has the better plan to spur the economy and create jobs more quickly. 

    On Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics will report September employment data and is expected to show another month of modest job growth that will leave the unemployment rate little changed.

    Nobody knows exactly how many people have given up looking and left the workforce. The BLS monthly household survey has a relatively large margin of error, and the pool of "discouraged workers" is not static – people move in and out of the category from one month to the next.

    But the pool is growing. Since last August, the official count of people who have left the work force but still want a job has risen by a half-million, to just over 7 million. That doesn't include the roughly 8 million "underemployed" people with part-time jobs who want full-time work, double the number when the 2007 recession began.

    Missing Workers

    Most of the 86 million people outside the government's official labor force count say they don't want a job. Of the six million who do, here are the reasons they're not included in the monthly tally. (2011 data)

    Millions of retirees also have left the labor force this year. That category has been growing as the outsized baby boom generation grows older.

    But relatively few boomers approaching the phase of life traditionally called “retirement” can look forward to the pension checks that helped past generations pay the bills in their "golden years." For many, the individual retirement accounts that were supposed to replace pension incomes have been severely damaged by the financial collapse and by the drain on savings from extended unemployment since.

    Older workers on the sidelines say that without that financial cushion, their current status can hardly be thought of as "retirement."

    “It means no vacations, no repairs to my house, almost never eating out, no going out to a movie or other entertainment, no new clothes, dreading opening the mail, juggling paying bills, knowing every time you spend money, it is just adding to debt that there is little likelihood of paying off,” said Carver.

    As more baby boomers have left the official count of the labor force, a decades-long expansion of women working full-time has slowed. Those forces explain about half the shrinkage in the labor force participation rate, according to economists at the Chicago Federal Reserve. 

    Sean Gardner for NBC News

    Indy Nebeker, 37, of Mandeville, Louisiana is one of of more than six million workers who are not listed in the official tally of the government's jobless labor force. Many of these people still badly want, and need, to find work.

    The rest of the drop is the result of the grim prospects job seekers face in the current stagnant economy, according to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke.

    “Some people, because they have essentially given up or at least they're very discouraged, have decided to leave the labor force," he told reporters last month. 

    The high level of unemployment "imposes hardship on millions of people, and it entails a tremendous waste of human skills and talents," said Bernanke."As the skills of the long-term unemployed atrophy and as their connections to the labor market wither, they may find it increasingly difficult to get good jobs, to their and their families’ cost, of course, but also to the detriment of our nation’s productive potential."

    Concerned about the long-term impact of long-term unemployment, the Fed has begun a new round of bond buying designed to lower interest rates and spur more hiring.

    With nearly three unemployed workers for every new job opening, it’s not hard to see why people get discouraged.  For many job seekers, the odds are much longer.

    Indelethio Nebeker, 37, with a degree in communications and experience as corporate trainer, has been looking for full-time work for several years. He recently was up against 700 other applicants for an opening at a Louisiana pharmaceutical company. The interview process took five months.

    After filling out an application, he got a call back and was asked to answer questions online. Then came a second call back for a preliminary phone interview, followed by a request to produce a five-minute video and write a personal statement. Then came a second phone interview, followed by a trip to the company for a 25-minute audition and a meeting with the hiring managers. More than a month later, a company manager called to break the news that they “had decided to go in a different direction.”

    Up for another entry level job with a different company, he said, the interviewer recently asked why he was interested in a job that paid less than someone with his experience would typically expect to earn.

    “I thought, ‘Because it’s the only one you’re offering. Have you looked around?” he said. “It seems like the people that are hiring have no clue about what’s going on out here.”

    In the meantime, Nebeker is doing odd jobs, including part-time work as a driver’s education instructor while he keeps up an intermittent job hunt.

    “I've stopped, I've started again, and I've stopped again,” he said. “It's a constant roller coaster.”

    George Morris, 30, has been looking for a full-time job in advertising since he was laid off from his last one in February 2010. Since then he’s been working a series of related odd jobs, including photographer's assistant and writer for a website. He’s also paying the bills with unrelated jobs, from getting paid as a clinical test subject to suing telemarketers for illegal calls.

    Those jobs are generating income. But they’re no substitute for the experience Morris needs to build traction in his career.

    “People were laid off during the recession with more experience than I have,” said Morris. "But I can’t get enough depth in my field to keep up because I can’t get a company to pay me a living wage.”

    For those sidelined from full-time work, odd jobs are critical to financial survival. But they also create an obstacle when it comes time to interview for the next full-time positions.

    “(Employers) look at my resume and say, ‘Could you go back into a full time position when you’ve been doing this other stuff for so long?’” said Nebeker. “I look at them and think. ‘What are you talking about? I need a job.’”

    Based on recent data, the odds of finding a job are improving – but very slowly. Since the recession ended in June 2009, roughly 140,000 net new jobs have been created every month. That’s barely enough to keep pace with the growth of the working-age population.

    Economists point to continued gains in productivity to explain how companies have managed to increase profits with so little new hiring. Some job seekers agree.

    “I think (companies) figure, ‘We’ve done so long without replacing all these positions, we’re just going to make people do more work so we don’t have to hire more people,'” said Nebeker.

    The search for a traditional, full-time job with benefits has become tougher as companies rely more heavily on short-term, contract assignments to fill empty positions until the economy is on a stronger footing. Many employers also complain that uncertainty about changes in tax policy and health care costs have forced them to delay hiring decisions until the outlook becomes clearer.

    Employers may also be slow to create full-time jobs with benefits because the large pool of jobless workers makes it easy to get the same work done with temporary and part-time workers at a lower cost.

    “The loss of unions has played a major part in it,” said Morris. “There’s no collective bargaining. It’s become a very asymmetrical: ‘Here’s what I’ve got offer. Take it or leave it.’”

    Morris is still hopeful the laws of supply and demand will eventually swing back in his favor. But it may take time.

    “When I was in college, the unemployment rate was at a 4 percent rate, and if you could spell your own name right you could get hired,” he said. “The pendulum has swung the other way. I don’t think the pendulum is going to fall off and go away. But I do think we’re looking at painful cyclical changes that are going to go on for some time.” 

    789 comments

    Here we are, literally years after the start of the "Great Recession", and we're still reading articles like this. I've definately had my share of disappointments in this economy with job losses and long periods of time between new jobs.

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  • 2
    Oct
    2012
    11:10am, EDT

    'Pink slip stigma' stronger the longer you don't have a job

    John Moore / Getty Images

    For the 5 million long-term unemployed, defined as those out of work for 27 weeks or more, it doesn't look pretty.

    By Ben Popken, TODAY contributor

    Call it "pink slip stigma." When you don't have a job, it's harder to convince a new employer to give you one. And we all know the longer you're out of the game, the harder it gets. What we didn't know was exactly how hard. Now, thanks to some sneaky economists, using 12,000 fake resumes, there's some solid data.

    A team of researchers sent out over 12,000 fake resumes to over 3,000 online job postings. They designed the resumes so that the candidates were all equally qualified. The only thing they changed was the length of time the fictional candidate was out of work.

    For the 5 million long-term unemployed, defined as those out of work for 27 weeks or more, it doesn't look pretty.

    "The labor market penalizes you for being out of work," Kory Kroft, co-author of the study "Duration Dependence and Labor Market Conditions: Theory and Evidence from a Field Experiment," published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, told NBC News. 

    From 0-6 months, the percentage of callbacks gradually declines from about 7 percent. But once it hits 6-8 months there's a steep drop-off. After 6 months of being jobless, there's only a 4 percent chance you'll get called in for an interview, a 45 percent plummet.

    What gives? Well, "There's two kinds of employees, productive and unproductive," said Kroft. "Firms will use the number of months you've been out of work as a "proxy" or "signal" of how productive you are."

    The idea is that when you're out of work, your job is getting a job. If you're not great at that job, you might not be great at the one the employer is hiring for. And the effect is greater the longer you've been out of work.

    One bright spot, if you can call it that, is that after 8 months the "pink slip stigma" levels off. So if you're sitting on a chair in a lobby waiting for a job interview next to a guy out of work for 14 months and you've been without a job for 34, he doesn't have any better shot than you just based on that fact alone.

    So what advice is there for job-seekers? For one, check out the odds of getting a callback in response to an online job posting. You have a 93 percent chance of your resume getting deleted. That's a pretty strong testament to how you don't want to just blast out resume after resume in response to Monster.com posts. Chat up friends and colleagues, go to networking events, and look for ways to make human, in-person connections to get you your next gig.

    And if you're going to wallow in self-pity, make it quick. "Hit the ground hard early on," after losing a job, says Kroft, an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Toronto.

    Better yet, pay attention to common signals that you could be up for getting pushed out - like overall company layoffs, being left out of email chains and meetings, and people giving you pitying looks in the hallways - and start your job-search before you get called into HR.

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    86 comments

    Every time I hear someone talk as though unemployment is enough to live on, I want to scream! The MAX is $480 a week and that only goes to those whose wages are high enough to qualify as a max wage earner. Most people get around $300 per week. And that $300 is taxable.

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  • 20
    Jul
    2012
    10:38am, EDT

    Job-applicant background checks declining

    By Eve Tahmincioglu

    There's some good news for job seekers who have been faced with financial issues, or have had brushes with the law.

    Fewer employers are snooping into your criminal or credit background today.

    Criminal background checks have become increasingly popular partly because technology has made it easier to dig up dirt and partly because hiring managers want any tools to help them weed through the many applicants, given the tight labor market.

    But such reviews had a tendency to disproportionately hurt African-Americans and Latinos, according to many labor advocates. Not to mention the fact that lots of other job seekers from all groups who've faced unemployment, or underemployment, have faced money woes and may have had their credit histories impacted as a result.

    Steps by the federal government and states to crack down on the practice have gotten everyone looking more closely at the process.

    In April, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission approved new rules for employers who use criminal background checks, calling for careful consideration of how and when such reviews can be used in pre-employment screenings and in the workplace because of their potential to be biased against certain groups, such as racial minorities.

    A handful of states have moved to ban or curb credit history checks on jobs applicants, including Illinois that passed a law in 2010 prohibiting the use of such reviews. “A job seeker’s ability to earn a decent living should not depend on how well they are weathering the greatest economic recession since the 1930s," Gov. Pat Quinn said in signing the bill into law. 

    Employers are now scaling back their use as a job-screening tool.


    Follow @todaymoney

    "Some of the decline in the use of credit checks may be related to measures put in place by state governments and municipalities, as well as increased attention to the issue," said Mike Aitken, vice president of government affairs at the Society of Human Resource Management.
    The organization just released its figures on such background checks and found:

    More than one-half (53 percent) of respondents to a SHRM survey said they don’t use credit background checks in hiring. That’s an increase from 2010, when 40 percent of organizations reported not using credit checks, and from 2004, when 39 percent did not.

    "Employers – through their HR professionals – are continually evaluating practices and programs. And this is no different," Aitken said. 

    The SHRM survey also found that: 

    • Most employers focused on credit histories of two to seven years. Only 6 percent of organizations said that all years of credit history were equally important, a decrease from 17 percent in 2010.
    • Of the 34 percent of employers that conducted credit checks on selected job candidates, 87 percent did so for positions with financial responsibilities and 42 percent used them for senior executive positions. 
    • More organizations saying that complying with state law requirements was among the primary reasons criminal checks were done, up 8 percentage points from 2010 to 28 percent.
    • Fifty-eight percent of organizations allowed job candidates to explain the results of their criminal checks before the decision to hire was made.

    "We think employers are looking more closely at these practices," he continued. "They want to ensure that any screening or evaluation tool used during the hiring process is related to the duties of specific positions and consistent with federal law prohibiting job discrimination."

    Amen to that.

    (A version of this story first appeared on CareerDiva.net.)

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    101 comments

    I can understand the need for a criminal background check to determine if the perspective employee has a history of violence (or embezzlement/theft for financial positions). But credit checks for those who are unemployed or underemployed are absurd when the position is not financial in nature.

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  • 26
    Jun
    2012
    7:34am, EDT

    Summer help-wanted signs are still up

    Cary Anne Holton Photography

    Megan Tessmer

    By Eve Tahmincioglu

    Megan Tessmer loves her new summer job as a carhop waitress at Sonic Drive-In in Oklahoma City, and she’s happy she was able to find the gig easily despite the grim job market.

    “This was the second place I drove by,” said Tessmer, who will be returning to school at the University of Central Oklahoma in the fall to study chemistry. “We’re actually still hiring.”

    The job market for temporary summer jobs for high school and college students has yet to revive to pre-recessionary levels, but the picture is brighter than many think it is, depending on the industry. And for those who’ve remained on the sidelines because of dire forecasts, it isn’t too late to score a temporary gig as July, the typical peak for summer hiring, approaches.

    There are still jobs available for the hot days ahead, and many of the openings are in clothing stores, manufacturing and fast food outlets.

    During the last two summers, Sonic has increased its overall hiring, said Anita Vanderveer, the vice president of people for the company.

    “We are hiring,” she said, for everything from servers to positions at the company’s headquarters. “We have a clear strategy to ramp up prior to summer, but we’re always looking for people.”

    Indeed, there are tens of thousands of jobs still available on Summer Jobs+, a government program set up earlier this year to help low-income youths get jobs this summer, said Jason Kuruvilla, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Labor. 

    Many companies went into the summer employment season ready to hire. Nearly 30 percent of employers had planned to hire workers this summer, up from 21 percent last year, according to a May CareerBuilder forecast. And among the industries looking to add summer jobs, manufacturing topped the list with 45 percent, followed by hospitality with 44 percent, retail with 34 percent and finance at 31 percent.

    "Confidence is up among the employers we most closely associate with summer hiring,” said Brent Rasmussen, president of CareerBuilder North America.


    Follow @todaymoney

    Last month, a host of sectors typically related to summer hiring, saw increases in job openings including clothing stores and eating establishments, according to jobs website Snagajob.

    “Even though May’s job numbers from the BLS were disappointing overall, there were bright spots in what are considered typical areas for seasonal employment,” said Courtney Moyer, a spokeswoman for Snagajob.

    The overall unemployment rate for May was still a disappointing 8.2 percent, with few increases in most industries, other than health care, transportation and warehouses, according the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    But there have been other pockets of opportunities for temporary summer work, Moyer pointed out, “clothing stores, food and beverage stores and restaurants all had gains. Government numbers also showed that 4.39 million teens ages 16 to 19 were employed in May (seasonally adjusted), which is an improvement over last year’s 4.26 million, a 3 percent increase. Also, already this season teens are doing better than last year’s peak summer employment, which typically comes in July and was also recorded at 4.26 million.”

    Don’t expect to get rich on the popular summer jobs though. According to Snagajob, retail sales jobs pay about $12 an hour and cashier positions at food outlets pay $9.73.

    If you are just starting your summer job search, Moyer offered some tips:

    • Young people cannot apply to five jobs and think that that’s going to be enough. Snagajob recommends, especially at this point in the season, that seasonal job seekers put in upwards of 25 applications. Consider areas that are strong in seasonal hiring such as retail, restaurants and leisure/arts and entertainment.
    • While you should apply to a job following a company’s preferred procedure – online, paper application, etc. – we recommend following up in person no later than a week after applying.
    • Use referrals. Help yourself get out of the application pile by using a personal connection. Maybe you have a friend who has already been hired by a company who can ask that a manager review your application. Lean on parents, friends and neighbors by asking them if they know of any companies that are still hiring.

    Bottom line, Moyer stressed, “there is hope.”

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    49 comments

    "there's still hope" the hope that you can land a temporary minimum wage job at a fast food place.... total freakin joke.

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  • 21
    Jun
    2012
    7:39am, EDT

    Defense cuts could further dim US jobs picture

    By Eve Tahmincioglu

    As the war in Afghanistan winds down, the impact on the nation’s employment picture goes beyond veterans returning home who are looking for work.

    There are thousands of civilian jobs related to the war effort, and cutbacks in defense spending have already led to reductions in these defense-related jobs, including direct government positions or those with defense contractors. The loss of these jobs isn’t good news for the still-dim employment picture.

    “It will create a greater supply of workers and create more pain overall for the U.S. work force,” said Gautam Godhwani, CEO of jobs website SimplyHired.com.

    For May, the number of openings for defense-related jobs across the Web, including job boards and company jobs sites, declined by 4.2 percent compared to the previous month, according to SimplyHired.com research. And unless Congress acts to curb some of the projected defense cutbacks, he added, things will only get worse next year.


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    Indeed, Boeing officials recently warned that any further cutbacks to defense spending could devastate the defense industry and lead to thousands of jobs lost. 

    The decline in defense and aerospace employment has already begun. Last year, contractors shed nearly 35,000 jobs, and through May nearly 11,000 more have already disappeared, according to a report from Challenger Gray & Christmas released this week.

    There has also been a significant downsizing of civilian workers at the Department of Defense, which saw its work force drop to 790,000 from more than 800,00 in fiscal year 2011, stated a report from the department's comptroller.

    And the number is expected to drop further. A story in FederalTimes.com from December reported that in the next decade the Department of Defense’s civilian work force will plummet by 20 percent to 630,000, “the smallest since the Defense Department's creation in 1947.” 

    The combination of the war winding down, vets returning to the work force, cutbacks in defense-related industries and the inevitable reductions by their suppliers, Godhwani said, all add up to a recipe for fewer job opportunities.

    But, he maintained, some states and occupations will benefit from the influx of more civilian workers with defense-related skills.

    For example, in cities such as Detroit and Las Vegas,  the number of workers for each job opening is about five to one, compared to Washington, D.C., and Boston where there are one or two individuals for every job, Godhwani said.

    Also, he added, workers with specialized skills in defense-related industries, including technology and engineering, could be hired by employers who are having difficulty filling jobs.

    Among defense-related occupations, all of the top 10 have been declining since 2009 and are expected to decrease even further through 2015, according to a 2011 Secretary of Defense report titled “Defense-Related Employment of Skilled Labor.” These occupations include business and financial, record-keeping clerks, construction trades, maintenance and computer specialists.

    Even if some of these workers are able to fill a talent gap in the civilian work force, overall it’s going to be tough to add more jobless individuals to the long lines of the nation's under- and unemployed.

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    222 comments

    this article and the premise behind it is a joke. it almost sounds like they are actually saying if we dont keep the war in afganistan going that the enonomy will greatly suffer? really? so extending vietnam 2.0 is good for the economy? what would make more sense is cut the military budget at least  …

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    Explore related topics: featured, military, jobs, defense, unemployment, boeing, aerospace
  • 20
    Jun
    2012
    3:39pm, EDT

    Jobless vets need to think outside military box

    By Eve Tahmincioglu

    Veterans have to get out of the military mindset if they’re going to adapt to the civilian workplace. And that means gearing up for a new outlook even before they leave the armed forces behind.

    While it’s important to be proud of military service, it’s also critical for a vets career to know how to play up and play down their years serving your country, advised Randy Plunkett, the director of community and government outreach for Military.com, during our live web chat Wednesday.

    “Two common mistakes transitioning military make are to not start early in transitioning and to use military jargon on their resumes,” he told readers.

    One reader, Phil, a captain in the Army with a degree in history from West Point, asked Plunkett: “What kind of jobs are available for someone with my background?”

    Plunkett’s response:

    “Think about your ancillary experience. Not only do you have a degree, you have more than just your army job. You are a human resources manager - talking with soldiers about their careers, you supervise and manage extensive training programs, you actively participate in performance reviews, and you have extensive diversity and inclusion workplace experience.”

    It’s all about taking your experience in the military, he explained, and pointing out how what you did can fit into the real work world.

    “We need a fundamental change in thinking,” he stressed. “Military members have to think in terms of their big picture, large category experience, not just their classification.”

    Here’s the entire Q&A with Plunkett:

     Join us next Wednesday for another live web chat with an expert that will address money or work issues.

    5 comments

    You know it sure is a shame how we do our soldiers. We send them overseas to fight wars we cant possibly win. they come home blown to pieces. Living with horrible nightmares, PTSD, they're having hard times finding jobs, rate of homeless vets vs civilian is double. are we really doing this to our mi …

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  • 20
    Jun
    2012
    7:03am, EDT

    Veterans return from war to find jobs gone

    Courtesy Andrae Evans

    Andrae Evans in Kandahar during humanitarian patrol in 2009.

    By Eve Tahmincioglu

    Members of the National Guard and Reserve sign up to serve our country as needed, and when they return home many expect to find their civilian jobs waiting for them.

    Unfortunately, that’s not always the case.

    Tim Hack

    Adrae Evans with his daughter Ariel, wife Kristin, and son Gabe, before his 4th deployment.

    Andrae Evans was an insurance sales manager and a member of the New York Army National Guard in 2004 when he was deployed to Iraq. When he was released from active duty in 2006 his former employer, MassMutual Financial Group, would not reinstate him to the position he left behind.

    “I hoped to work things out with MassMutual and believed, wrongly, that they would do the right thing,” said Evans, who's been unable to find work and recently took on a temporary National Guard assignment. He is now in Bagram, Afghanistan, and is suing MassMutual. The company says they were not required to reinstate Evans because he was an independent contractor, not an employee.

    In another case, a prosecutor for the Baltimore City State’s Attorney’s Office, Andrew Gross, signed up for the U.S. Army Reserve in 2009, and when he returned from a six-month military training program found his job wasn’t waiting for him when he returned.

    “I was told I’d have to go to the back of the line to get my job back,” said Gross, who sued the State’s Attorney's office and settled the case late last year.

    Mark Cheshire, a spokesman for the state’s attorney’s office, said the new state's attorney inherited the case from his predecessor and moved “to resolve the matter in an equitable fashion" when he took office.

    National Guard and Reserve soldiers have faced numerous deployments and calls to duty during the years of war over the past decade, and many have returned to find they no longer had jobs they expected to return to. Some contend they have faced  discrimination on their return, or retaliation for their military service.

    Such actions are illegal under the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act, or USERRA, which is supposed to help protect veterans when they return to the workforce. 

    Complaints brought under the law have escalated in recent years, mirroring the number of guard and reservists returning to their civilian lives.

    Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve

    Number inquiries from vets regarding USERRA and total number of cases taking on by the government.

    According to data from the Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve, inquiries under the law started to skyrocket in 2010, more than doubling to 34,612, compared with a year earlier. The number of Guard and Reserve members who came off active duty during 2010 also spiked to 91,931 from 48,702 in 2009 before dropping to 45,968 last year, according to the Defense Department.

    The number of USERRA complaints also dipped to about 30,000 in 2011, and shows signs of leveling off so far this year. But many veteran advocates expect the problem to continue as the drawdown from Afghanistan proceeds.

    “I think as the wars have gone on it has challenged, both spiritually and pragmatically, civilian employers' approach to USERRA,” said Ward Carroll, editor of the Military.com website and blog.

    While he’s empathetic to employers who’ve had to function without key employees during their deployments, he stressed the importance of complying with the law.

    “It’s part of your duty as an American employer to comply with USERRA and help citizen soldiers,” he said. “Between now and 2014, these challenges to USERRA will continue.”

    Steven D. Silverman, the attorney who represented Gross in his suit against the Baltimore City State’s Attorney, said he’s seen a doubling in USERRA claims in his practice over the past year. “I attribute that to the economy and ignorance of the law by employers,” he said.

    Indeed, a March survey by Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America found that nearly 40 percent of veterans polled felt their employer didn’t have enough information about their rights under USERRA.

    Gross said he doesn’t believe his managers wanted to undermine military service. “I think if they had an understanding of the law this wouldn’t have happened,” he said.

    In the case of Evans, who worked for MassMutual, his complaint is that he was not reinstated in the higher position he got before being deployed, said Michael Macomber, an attorney with Tully Rinckey who is representing him. The law, he noted, doesn’t just call for hiring employees back, but also keeping them in a similar position.

    MassMutual said in a statement it is “fully complying” with USERRA and will “vigorously defend” its position in court.


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    A tight job market has exacerbated the problem in recent years, agreed government officials and legal experts. The unemployment rate among veterans who've been on active duty since September 2001 was 12.1 percent in 2011, compared to 8.2 percent overall, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    Of course while business conditions may change, most employers want to do the right thing and comply with the law by hiring back returning veterans.

    “I believe our employers by an overwhelming vast majority are living up to their responsibilities under USERRA," said Ronald Young, director of family and employer programs and policy in the Pentagon’s Office of Reserve Affairs.

    While Young acknowledged some of the uptick in USERRA complaints might have resulted from employers skirting the law, a big chunk had to do with better tracking of cases and more outreach to employers and employees by the government.

    His agency recognizes employers that do a good job supporting National Guard and Reserve members by awarding them the Freedom Award. This year Intel Corp. made the list.

    Courtesy Mark Miera

    Mark Miera

    “We have tools in place to help managers fill temporary positions for whatever reason the position is open,” said Lisa Malloy, a spokeswoman for Intel, which employs 100,000, including about 3,000 who have been in the military. 

    Mark Miera, 43, a National Guard member in New Mexico who’s worked for Intel for 18 years, has had two deployments since 9/11, including a stint in Afghanistan that ended in December.

    When he was overseas colleagues messaged him about a position as manager of construction at Intel, and before he came back to work he ended up with a promotion.

    “Intel has always moved beyond the requirements of the law,” he said. “They don’t question protecting veterans returning from war and their positions.”

    (For more on this issue, join a live web chat Wednesday at noon ET with Randy Plunkett, Military.com's government relations and community director. Click here to join the chat.)

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    170 comments

    War is good for the corporations but not too good for the people asked to fight it. You took an oath to protect the constitution from all enemies foreign and DOMESTIC. The constitution has been made null and void by foreign emissaries (dual citizenship Israeli's working for US government )and their  …

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    Explore related topics: featured, military, unemployment, vets, national-guard, reserve, userra
  • 15
    Jun
    2012
    4:58pm, EDT

    College education not always ticket to better jobs worldwide

    Yannis Behrakis / Reuters

    Manolis Ouranos, a 30-year-old cook, works for the Mavros Gatos (Black Cat) tavern in Psiri neighboorhood in central Athens. Manolis studied at Athens Technology University (TEI) for four years where he received a degree in civil engineering. He hoped to find a permanent job in public sector infrastructure but has been working as a cook for four months instead. He now takes cooking lessons which he funds with his salary as a cook.

    Nearly 75 million people ages 15 to 24 are unemployed worldwide and the U.N. labor office predicts “the same high level” for at least the next four years.

    For eager university graduates in the crisis-hit European Union where one in five people under the age of 24 are out of work, finding a job is almost impossible. However, the problem isn’t confined to the EU. It’s a global problem and the U.N. expects 12.7 percent of youth globally to be unemployed in 2012. The International Labour Organisation also warns that many are trapped in low paid and low skilled jobs and others have simply given up looking.

    In order to illustrate the problem, Reuters photographed  portraits of graduates from around the world who have been unable to find work in their degrees and have ended up in service industry jobs.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Alessandro Bianchi / Reuters

    Francesca Baldi, 32, takes care of a seven-month-old baby in a private household in Rome on May 11. Baldi studied for five years at university in Pisa where she received a degree and a doctorate in literature and philosophy. She hoped to find a job as a teacher but has been working as a childminder for five months.

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Jessica Mazza, a 28 year-old waitress, serves a customer at Novel cafe in Santa Monica, Calif. Mazza studied for five years at Ball State University where she received a degree in painting and business management. She hoped to find a job as an artist but has been working in the cafe for just under a year. Picture taken, April 24.

    Noor Khamis / Reuters

    Denis Onyango Olang (right), a 26 year-old assistant cook, prepares food in a dimly lit kitchen at a hotel in Nairobi's Kibera slum in the Kenyan capital. Onyango Olang studied statistics and chemistry at Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology where he received a degree in science. He has been searching for permanent employment for two years but has decided to make a living working in the slums for the last eight months.

    Miguel Vidal / Reuters

    Tania Leon, a 29 year-old stewardess, poses for a picture inside a bus in Santiago de Compostela, Spain. Leon studied psychology at the University of Santiago de Compostela and received a degree in 2006. She was hoping to find a job as a psychologist but has been working as a stewardess for the last two years.

    Dado Ruvic / Reuters

    Almin Dzafic, a 30 year-old waiter, serves customers in the Galerija Boris Smoje cafe in Sarajevo. Dzafic studied for four years at Sarajevo University where he received a degree in civil engineering. For the last four years he has tried to find a job in art restoration but has been working as a waiter for two years. He sees his future outside of Bosnia and Herzegovina because he can not find a job.

    Amr Abdallah Dalsh / Reuters

    Wael Abo El Saoud, a 25 year-old farmer, harvests wheat on Miet Radie farm about 37 miles northeast of Cairo. Wael studied for four years at Benha University where he received a degree in commerce. He hoped to find a job as a bank accountant but has been working as a farmer for the last five years. He earns between 30 to 60 Egypt pounds a day but does not work all year round.

    Alessandro Bianchi / Reuters

    Francesco Foglia, 37, poses for a picture as he works as a street sweeper in downtown Rome. Foggia studied for six years at university in Rome where he received a degree and a doctorate in industrial chemistry. He hoped to find a job as a researcher but has been working as a street sweeper for Rome's municipality for two years. Picture taken on April 29.

    Peter Andrews / Reuters

    Marcin Lubowicki, a 28 year-old deputy manager of a McDonald's restaurant, shows his university diploma in front of the fast food chain in the Arkadia shopping mall, in Warsaw. Lubowicki, who has degree in Russian language from Warsaw University, has been working for McDonald's since 2007. He is planning to stay in his job.

    77 comments

    According to what's been posted so far, you might think this none of this has to with an imbalance between the number of professional jobs available requiring degrees and the number of qualified people there are to fill them. Maybe this situation has something to do with the fact that the "trickle d …

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  • 6
    Jun
    2012
    3:17pm, EDT

    Will an online degree help you get dream job?

    Allison Linn

    By Eve Tahmincioglu

    Some online schools are offering desperate jobs seekers the world. But don’t sign up before you do your homework.

    Promises you’ll end up in your dream job or make big bucks once you graduate, may end up to be empty, warned Allison Linn, TODAY.com’s senior reporter who has covered how degrees impact employability. She was on hand to answer readers’ questions about the topic during our live web chat Wednesday.

    Many readers wanted to know the real career value of online degrees, and some were considering the option after receiving tempting offers.

    Richard Keating wrote:

    “I just received a letter in the mail saying that I'm "pre-accepted" to an online university. They tell me that I can earn $50,000 to $80,000 more per year if I get an MBA with them and that I don't even need a bachelor's degree to start my MBA. Is this too good to be true?"

    To that Linn cautioned:

    “You know the old adage, if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. It's true that an MBA can advance your career, but most legitimate schools require a bachelor's degree first. In addition, no one should be guaranteeing you a salary bump without knowing anything about you.”

    Another issue plaguing the web chat participants was whether degrees from non-traditional universities were worth the money.

    Michael Bok asked:

    “How about a traditional brick and mortar school versus an online school or for-profit institution? Is my four-year degree from a for-profit institution going to be treated differently than a degree from a traditional school?”

    Linn’s response:

    “We are in a new world with the influx of for-profit and online schools. There are definitely legitimate online and for-profit programs, but you should vet them carefully and make sure you there isn't a lower cost option through a more traditional university. Although keep in mind that although things are changing, some employers still have a bias toward more traditional universities over for-profit and online.”

    If you want to find out whether the school your considering is accredited check out the Council for Higher Education Accreditation's site.

    Here’s a full transcript of our web chat with Linn:

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    5 comments

    Linn's answers sound like they are from a Monday morning quarterback.

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  • 16
    May
    2012
    3:21pm, EDT

    Long-term jobless need to be proactive

    Allison Linn

    By Eve Tahmincioglu

    Long-term joblessness can be one of the worst things a person has to go through, but job seekers have to brush aside the pessimism and take action.

    Economy reporter Allison Linn has covered the labor market throughout the tough economic times of nation has faced in recent years and Tuesday wrote about how the long-term unemployed were losing benefits. She was on hand Wednesday to offer some words of encouragement and some reality checks for readers who tuned into our live web chat looking for advice.

    One reader was down in the dumps about overall job prospects and asked:

    How do you stay encouraged when you've been unemployed or underemployed for a long time, and what's the best response to prospective employers who ask, "What have you been doing during your period of unemployment?"

    To that, Linn advised:

    That is such a good question and something that many long-term unemployed people struggle with. The first thing I would say is to expect that any employer will ask about your resume gap, so come up with a good answer. If you've done any volunteer work in your field, gone to school or really had anything happen that may seem relevant or make you look eager and hard-working, that will help.

    And, she added, “Don't dawdle on that answer, though. Address the elephant in the room and move the conversation toward what you can offer to the employer.”

    Linn, who you can follow on Twitter, took on topics ranging from updating your job skills to work-at-home scams.

    You can view the entire Q&A with Linn here:

     

    29 comments

    Sorry but I have ZERO sympathy for folks who have been COMPLETELY unemployed over the last 2 years. I was layed off when my defense contract ended. I temped, consulted, and took "permanent" jobs that ended after only a month or so because the funding or tasking never came through.

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John W. Schoen

John W. Schoen has reported and written about business and financial news for more than 30 years. He began his career as a newspaper reporter and editor in Connecticut, moving to Dow Jones as radio newscaster and writer for The Wall Street Journal. As a reporter for the CBS Radio Network and public radio's Marketplace, he covered Wall Street's insider trading scandals and the Crash of '87. He joined CNBC several months before it went on the air i …

Eve Tahmincioglu

Eve Tahmincioglu writes the popular "Your Career" column for MSNBC.com and her blog www.careerdiva.net, covers a broad range of career and labor issues. Her blog was named one of the top ten career blogs by Forbes, US News & World Report and CareerBuilder. Last year, she was named one of the top online business columnist in the country by the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. She's al …

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