There's just one thing I need
I don't care about the presents
Underneath the Christmas tree"
- Mariah Carey's All I Want for Christmas is You
Since being laid off, I've had the feeling that the job search has been easier as a professional than it was as a college student.
- Focus (Part I)- I have one goal right now. That goal is to find stimulating, challenging, full-time work in Worcester, Central Mass, Boston, or somewhere along the commuter rail line. That's it. It's all I do, save getting in a work out and subbing when I am called it. Subbing starts at 7:10 and ends at 1:43. It is not like I need to do homework, organize a philanthropy event, attend the Panhellenic Council meeting, or work on my senior project. After waking up, I hop on my computer and map out the strategy for the day's search. Anything else I do is icing on the cake.
- Focus (Part II) - When I was in college, I had no clue what I wanted to do. I had a vague idea of what I did not want to do (structural design, waste water) rather than what I did want to do (anything else within civil engineering). So this challenging work I want? I now know that I am seeking opportunity erelated to infrastructure and potentially involving water at some level. When I think of infrastructure, my focus is on transportation including airports, highways, and public transit systems. When I think of water, I am thinking anywhere between where does water runoff a surface all the way to watershed and water supply issues.
- Scheduling - Class at 9, 10, and 2 makes it difficult to schedule interviews without sacrificing time in class - with seven week terms missing one class sometimes felt like falling up to a week behind. ____
- Experience - I have about 18 months of professional, post-collegiate experience in addition to three summer internships. This puts me at a strange middle to apply for jobs, as I am within the 0-2 years of experience range, in addition to the 1-3 years and 2-5 years. However, being within that window I am far more open to other opportunities! Recently, I met with an organization for an informational interview. My belief was that I would only be eligible for X position. When they considered my experience and Engineer In Training certification I was suddenly an X+1 or X+2 position! I'd be cheap entry level labor, or I could come in at my own professional level and hold my own.
- Transportation - This time around, I actually own a car. I don't need to rely on the generosity and trust of my friends to borrow a car or ask for a ride. There is no need to throw off family schedules to get a car delivered.
- Networking - I had the opportunity to meet and develop relationships with some great people while I had been at WPI. Though the alumni is an amazing group of people, it is still a smaller corner of the world. Coming out of college everyone knows you are looking for work, but after a layoff there is considerably more sympathy. I've found this to be extensively so as the unemployment numbers worsened. I think it was also to my advantage that I was open to a lot more opportunities and was keeping positive about job prospects. Saying I had been "laid off and searching" garnered sympathy, but being "in transition" and "finding that open door" as well as understanding what I wanted to do seemed to throw open a few hidden doors. Thank you growing up in politics and sorority recruitment for helping me feel comfortable talking to anyone, anywhere, about anything.
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