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gravypod | 14 days ago
No one can truely understand how grueling this is until they see this happen. My girlfriend recently had a hard time finding a new gig. Entry level office jobs are doing >7 rounds. Phone, recruiter, HR, manager, manager + team member, manager + skip level, ... etc.
Whats even worse is all the people in your life who are older can't understand this at all.
I tried to explain getting ghosted, ghost jobs, online applying, multi-round interviews to my grandma. It just does not make sense. It has never been like this, why is it like this now?
lifestyleguru|14 days ago
That's people over 50. Millenials are basically out of job market once losing the current job. I haven't heard anyone from younger generations in my vicinity getting a serious stable job either, and there is nowhere to emigrate to this time.
> I tried to explain getting ghosted, ghost jobs, online applying, multi-round interviews to my grandma. It just does not make sense.
There is no job.
fuzzfactor|14 days ago
50 is not well-enough experienced.
You're talking to the ones who were not among this category of unemployment statistics.
Their experience is just as real if they never faced as tough a market personally, but it is pure survivor bias.
For many of the other over-70's now, the ones who are still living could often tell you how in the 1970's there would be hundreds of applicants for every entry-level job of any kind. Many with advanced degrees.
You want to work for minimum wage, bus tables in a restaurant or collect trash for the sanitation department? Too bad, the odds are overwhelmingly against you whether you have current experience in the field or not.
>There is no job.
Exactly. That's the way it was, only much worse then.
Still, right now things are looking gradually worse as misguided financial macro forces are gathering steam, without the more mature influence that would make a positive difference.
As for "status-quo" that actually can be something stable, and worth working your way up to reach sometimes. Although very often regarded as mediocrity OTOH.
This type of financial malfeasance is so familiar that I think the better terminology is the SNAFU.
Roger. Situation Normal: All Fucked Up.
There's just a new normal now you're expected to accept.
Same situation though :(
plorkyeran|14 days ago
anal_reactor|14 days ago
Imagine you have a hiring panel of 20 people, and you are a member of it. It's obvious that the whole process is completely broken. What's your correct move? If you improve the hiring process, the size of the hiring panel will be reduced from 20 people to 5, which means there's 75% chance you'll be fired. Congratulations, you played yourself. Instead, the correct move is to keep making the hiring process as bad as possible, so that the company expands the hiring panel even further, which lowers the risk of you being fired.
When you take a look at why soviet economy failed, the biggest issue was that the system actually rewarded inefficient institutions, allocating to them more resources, while punishing efficient institutions. Exactly the same problems exist within a single capitalist company.
On top of that, the employment has shifted from small business to large corporations. The best example is food delivery - 10 years ago you would've been hired directly by the restaurant, which means that either restaurants would freely compete for workers or workers would compete for restaurants, depending on the market. But nowadays either everyone deals with whatever bullshit UberEats pulls off or you're out of the game.
danaris|14 days ago
Wait, what?
That only makes sense if the hiring panel is made up exclusively of people whose job is nothing but hiring.
That has never been the case anywhere I have worked or seen.
alephnerd|14 days ago
It's much riskier to hire the wrong employee now. If a bad hire is made, it takes around 2 quarters to build the paper trail needed to be litigation-proof when firing.
Additionally, work is much more streamlined now - it is safe to expect that an employee can wear multiple hats. Engineers are expected to have basic Project, UX, and Product Management skills now. PMs are expected to have basic Project, UX, Sales, FP&A, Marketing, and/or Engineering skills now. Execs are primarily promoted from ICs and are expected to be able to dive into the coalface.
Furthermore, companies are now judged based on cashflow positivity, not just growth, so a hire has to be the right hire because tech salaries can make-or-break the P&L of a feature.
As such there is much less tolerance for the wrong hire.
Basically, modern hiring is about efficency and optimization.
You may hate it, but that's the reality. No one has a legal obligation to hire you or optimize for a simplified process.
You can't do anything about it, so you will have to think about how to find that edge.
Edit: can't reply
> There is a thing called employment at will. Particularly in California. Makes firing fast.
That doesn't protect you as an employer from litigation over Unfair Dismissal or Wrongful Termination
> There is nothing particularly risky about firing employees in many cases
Depends on how much documentation you have and how egregious of a mistake the offending employee has had, as the line between perf-based (allowed) and pretextual (not allowed) termination is thin
> economy covers basics, and not enough new companies appear to offer new good products.
A highly performant and impactful company is orthogonal to mass employment.
Compare Costco with Walmart - Costco pays superior salaries and benefits compared to Walmart with significant upward mobility and is able to outcompete Walmart's revenue per employee.
But Costco only employed 341k people compared to Walmart 2.1 million. The reality is Costco is very employer supportive but also significantly more selective about the employees they hire.
---
Life is competitive. You will have to compete no matter what.
avmich|14 days ago
There is a thing called employment at will. Particularly in California. Makes firing fast.
There is nothing particularly risky about firing employees in many cases. 2 months firing is a joke compared with 4 months at least, which those same companies spend looking for talent.
The main reason is not enough ideas what to do - economy covers basics, and not enough new companies appear to offer new good products.
nobody9999|13 days ago
Now? That's been the case since at least the 1980s, at least in non-union jobs.
What makes you think things were different before the "now" you reference?
_DeadFred_|14 days ago
array_key_first|13 days ago
My company, and no I won't say who, have fired hundreds of devs without recourse. And not in official layoffs, mind you.
Not to mention for the first 90 days or so you're fresh meat. Firing you is trivial. But, even past that, you don't need performance reasons to fire someone. You can fire someone for cultural fit, if you want. At will employment is the norm.
Companies are doing far, far too much. You don't need all those stacks of paperwork. You just don't. Am I saying that everyone company is wrong and stupid? Yes, I am. It's become a cargo cult, a self serving beast. You don't need it.