How I'd Do It - Jobseeker Basics V
What follows is Chapter 16 of A Career Breakdown Kit, my book on navigating the modern VUCA (volatile uncertain complex ambiguous) UK jobs market.
I'm conscious that one objection for careers advice is, "How can you know, you haven't felt the pain? You aren't in this market."
I do feel the pain daily.
Both in talking to candidates putting up best pretences, and often when I have to share feedback they were pipped to the post for some seemingly arbitrary reason (there's only one vacancy after all and too many good people even on the shortlist).
But also because of my personal situation as a mini business owner in an industry on the cusp of great change. My process for finding clients is broadly equivalent to what yours may be in your job search - though I need an ongoing client throughput while you need (probably) one job to be found in the jobs market unique to you and your context.
I find that I revert to my own advice when things go wrong, such as ensuring my strategy is fit for current purpose, nailing the basics, and doing those hard things I've been putting off in favour of pratting about on LinkedIn (strategically building my personal brand that is).
Advice that looks a lot like this:
16 - How I'd do it
Before we talk about you, let’s talk about me.
What would I do if I needed to look for work?
This book would be central to forming and executing my strategy.
I’ve run my own business since 2011. By my measure I’ve been pretty successful.
Although my measure is a little different to many. My goals are to support my family as well as I can, to be the person I aspire to be and to provide first class service to people I want to help. A consequence of that has also been a reasonable income.
I’m mindful that nothing is forever, nor am I completely closed to talking to an employer that does something amazing where I could contribute in a transformational way.
What would happen if the recruitment landscape changed irrevocably?
Would I follow my own advice?
It’s not as unlikely as I would like to think. As AI continues to improve, it has the prospect of radically changing the transactional aspects of recruitment medium term. There is a way to go - the tech isn’t ready and would need to be implemented, adopted then entrenched.
Though if that is the case, who knows what else would change?
I’m an advocate of negative visualisation. This establishes realistic worst case scenarios, so that I have a plan I can act on immediately should the need arise.
This is a promise to myself, should the worst happen and I need to look for a job.
Principles
If not recruitment, what else?
If not self-employed, what does employment look like?
How much would I need to earn to keep our family’s head above water? I’m fortunate that my wife’s career is going from strength to strength, though the only money we have access to is the money we’ve earned for ourselves.
I’ve jokingly said I’d be happy to be a gardener - this is true enough if needed. Would it cover our outgoings?
What would I enjoy doing? What could make a difference? What could I do sustainably?
What does this look like from an employment perspective?
I won’t speculate what that will look like now. These are questions to answer at the right time.
Philosophy
It wouldn’t be me who has failed. It would only be my business, which means there’s no reason I can’t find the right success in future.
Always be honest - with myself, my family, and the people around us.
Be proactive and persevere. Go get what you need and keep going.
Listen, reflect, learn, adjust, execute. Take a break when needed. Look after mind and body.
Pay it back, pay it forward, ask for help, tell people I’m looking.
Strategy
Build a sustainable plan:
- Learn the current rules, play the game well, and break the rules with integrity when possible
- Access all appropriate inbound and outbound channels to market: job boards, networking, doorknocking, recruitment agencies, consulting, freelancing, referrals and recommendations.
- Use a high conversion CV, LinkedIn profile, advertising / personal branding, CV databases, #OpenToWork
- Build a pipeline of short-term, medium-term and long-term activity so that they all come together long-term, yet may pay off asap
- Use any good news to galvanise more action: if I’m expecting a job offer, push harder elsewhere and ‘keep up with the joneses’
- Find my market value range and negotiate against that
- Get a job, then wait for the job
Execution
I’d go back through my own advice:
A resilient job search (p121)
LinkedIn profiles that convert (p187)
Principles of a good CV (p157)
Focus on applicable, not transferable, skills (p39)
Optimise my applications and use of job boards (p194)
Network (p219)
Keep working on online reputation / personal brand (p201)
Doorknock (p224)
Make sure I take advantage of interview opportunities, through preparation, delivery and follow up (p246).
I’m fortunate to know some brilliant career coaches - I’d ask for their help through these points and maybe call in some favours.
I’d work on the principles of continuous improvement, always challenging myself to improve - plan, do, check, act.
That would be my general plan, with the understanding any opportunities are likely at the behest of the state of the market and the competition I’m up against.
I’d try not to blame myself for the things I can’t control.
Where you see page numbers above, it's because this chapter is taken verbatim from the book. You can read unedited versions of all those chapters for free - I'll put a link in the comments.
Or you can support my work by buying a copy of the book.
Next week's Chapter to share is called 'Ouroboros pt 1'. It's a word I always fail to spell correctly, despite having written it hundreds of times.
Ourbsours is the notion that nothing is ever destroyed, it is instead recycled and reborn. Why it's pertinent to this book also relates to the process of your job search - strategy, experimentation, iteration, learning, innovation. But it also relates to the point that while a job search feels alien, you have skills from your career that can help you.
And those new skills you may pick up in a job search can also help when in work, with the further benefit of giving you inertia in the next unexpected job search.

