Want a Job? Get Creative!

Take a look at this short video clip from a guy who’s one of 600 employees who’ve been made redundant by Vestas and is struggling to find work. He’s reading an advert from Job Centre Plus, talking about hoping to get a job in manufacturing, bemoaning his lack of training, the fact he hasn’t been paid any redundancy money and so on. He’s really downbeat.

Then look at this clip from a hotelier.

Notice anything? They’re both on the Isle of Wight. The hotelier says it’s been a good summer for tourism and many will be ploughing some of the profit back into the economy by refurbishing their properties over the autumn and winter months.

Hello??? That means work, doesn’t it? Unemployment is up by over 1,500 on the same period last year yet the unemployed guy looks to be fit. How many plumbers, electricians decorators and painters that will benefit from that increase in work do you think might need an extra pair of hands? And what might that lead to?

Not knowing the island particularly well, I Googled it and did some research. I couldn’t find one combination of towns that took more than 40 minutes to get to and from by car. If the unemployed guy doesn’t have his own transport I’m sure he could get a car share or maybe even do a rental at out of season rates.

And, at a push, the Fishbourne ferry to Portsmouth on the mainland takes under 10 minutes… what jobs might be there?

We’ll say it again: It’s time to get creative!

Job hunting right now? Inspiration starts right HERE

It’s Friday afternoon again (the weeks are zooming by)!

How’s the jobhunt/ setting up your new venture going?

If it’s a replacement job you’re looking for and some of the suggestions here are already pushing at the boundaries of your comfort zone here’s something that’s definitely not for the faint-hearted. But, boy, what pzazz and what results!

You’ll get the most by going to Susan hires a BOSS (the title’s a BIT of a giveaway…) and investing time reading the posts there.

She’s taken what we’ve said here and expand on in our book (you’ll see it to the right on this page) about uncovering hidden jobs/ creating your own role and added her own unique spin – and it’s worked for her within two months!

  • No more 300-applicants-chasing-the-same-job (whilst knowing that the best jobs AREN’T ADVERTISED)
  • No sending out résumés

She knew what she had to offer, the type of people and the kind of company she wanted to work with.

And she went for it.

She found a way to be creative that ‘fits’ her personality and met her needs: To get the best job she could, doing what she loves with people she likes.

Will you?

 

Unemployment Not Just Hitting Employees

2½ million unemployed across the UK is maybe too big for many of us to get our heads round, so let’s zoom in closer. I read this morning about unemployment in Barking, east London.

3.6% in August 2008 to 5.8% in August 2009 might not seem a lot at first glance yet it represents an increase over the last twelve months of 5,966 people out of work in one London borough alone.

According to a report on BBC News they include an estate agent who this January had to close the business he’d run for eight years – he effectively had to make his own role redundant! He says:

“It’s changed over the course of the year, because before you would get two or three people ready to take on a role, but now that’s more like 10 or 20.”

He, the truck driver, the student, the sound assistant and the building supervisor, ranging in age from 19 to 60, all want to work. The 39 year old forklift truck driver tells the tale we’ve heard many times from people who’ve been made redundant:

“You apply for jobs but none of them get back to you. I don’t know if it’s the recession but I am finding it a lot harder”

They’re not being picky or choosy. They each go regularly to the Job Centre, approach agencies direct and visit the library to search the local papers and the Internet for work. The 20 year old sound assistant has almost sussed it:

“I’ll take anything until I can find another sound job. When I’m working on a job I’m making contacts with other people in the industry, so I’ll contact the people I’ve met.”

Now, if he would just take this one step further, like the guy referred to here, he’d multiply his chances of getting a job that nobody else knows exists!