Are Employers Not Hiring Anymore & Does Being Unemployed Hurt Your Chances of Finding a Job?

Question:

Is it just me, or are employers not hiring anymore?

A year ago, I decided I wanted a new job. I looked on Indeed.com and LinkedIn, applied for eight jobs and received four offers. That made me wonder what else might be out there, so I looked for a few more days and got two more offers. One was for considerably more money than the others, so I took it. The whole process took less than a week.

LinkedIn regularly sends job opportunities my way, and in the last three or four months, I’ve submitted my resume to several of them. I haven’t heard back on any of them. A month ago, I began searching in earnest because I’m not happy with my job.

I haven’t seen many opportunities that appeal to me—I also realize I have to be choosier than I was in the past so I can find an employer I’ll want to stay with. I’ve applied for more than a dozen jobs. I got one interview, and no offer. I’ve been told it’s easier to get a job if you’re employed when you apply for a new one. Is that true or am I better of leaving a job I don’t like so I can commit one hundred percent effort to landing a new job?

Answer:

You’re not alone, though you may own part of the problem.

According to multiple surveys, 72 percent of employers currently receive more applications from interested job seekers than they did in pre-COVID 2020, https://ivyexec.com/career-advice/2022/waiting-for-that-job-offer-too-long-heres-why/. As a result, employers are holding out for “dream” candidates with the skills and the characteristics they seek. Further, many employers have cut budgets and slowed or halted hiring due to the uncertain economic forecast.

The result?—According to the U.S. Department of Labor, 826,00 employees were out of work for three and a half to six months in December, a figure higher by 36 percent than in April of 2022, when only 526,000 employees were out of work for that long. The number of employees seeking ongoing unemployment benefits grew by 26 percent between the spring of 2022 and last December, https://www.wsj.com/articles/unemployed-americans-find-job-searches-take-longer-as-labor-market-cools-11674248887?mod=hp_lead_pos1.

The challenge facing you and other job seekers may get worse. Job openings have tumbled to their lowest point in two years, JOLTS report: Job openings tumble to lowest point in nearly two years | CNN Business. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal in January predicted that employers will cut jobs starting in the second quarter of 2023 through the end of the year, https://www.wsj.com/articles/unemployed-americans-find-job-searches-take-longer-as-labor-market-cools-11674248887?mod=hp_lead_pos1. The economists estimate a decline in payrolls of seven thousand monthly, and the resulting layoffs will flood the talent market.

Although you’re not doing your employer or yourself a favor by staying in a job you dislike, and you’ll free up time to be able to seek a new job, research shows hiring managers have prejudice against unemployed candidates. An analysis from the New York Fed reported that currently-employed applicants received half of all job offers even though they sent only twenty percent of all applications, https://www.topresume.com/career-advice/is-it-harder-to-land-a-job-when-unemployed. In another article summarizing research conducted by UCLA and the job search site Indeed, the writer reported that “being out of work is the main reason unemployed people aren’t getting hired,” https://www.businessnewsdaily.com/2919-unemployment-bias.html.

Finally, you may own part of this problem. While it makes sense you took the job offering the highest salary, did the job you accepted actually interest you? You began to check other jobs after being in the one you landed for less than a year. Does the rest of your resume paint you as a “job hopper”? If so, you might want to stay with your current employer at least another six months—and then—as you mentioned, choose a job and an employer you’ll want to stay with for a minimum of two years.

(c) 2023 Lynne Curry

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2 thoughts on “Are Employers Not Hiring Anymore & Does Being Unemployed Hurt Your Chances of Finding a Job?

  1. How much of your time at work is spent sending off your resume and applying for other jobs? I’m very tired of hearing about people applying for jobs, getting multiple job offers, leaving jobs after a few months, taking new jobs and then discovering that they don’t like them. Does this describe your dating behavior as well. How about your performance in a couple? Is there anything you stick to? What?? Why? Other than applying for multiple jobs, what have you accomplished lately? How do you work in a team? When researching a possible new employer–or do you even do that?–what’s most important to you about them? What do you have to offer?

    I’m disgusted with the approach described. It does not contribute to business wellness or progress, and it does not sound like somebody I’d like to work with.

    1. Terrific comments, Susan. Your answer is more fun than mine:) And like you, I get tired of knowing that some employees keep an eye on the job boards all day long.

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