05/17/2012

How To Find A Job After Multiple Layoffs  

Article by Heather Eagar

Conducting a job search is tough enough when you know you’ve been laid off of one job, so you can imagine the challenge of searching for work after being laid off from two. The sad fact is that multiple layoffs are becoming more and more common.

Of course, the economy is very often to blame for this difficult situation. Unfortunately, your potential employers are more apt to see problems with laid-off workers than problems with the economy. Is there a way to get an employer to overlook multiple layoffs? Here are a few tips to consider …

Think About Taking On New Prospects

Whether you consider taking on new training to enhance your skills or even moving to a new area, there’s something to be said about considering new prospects when the old ones have fizzled out. You should consider looking to other areas if you’ve lost two or more jobs due to layoffs in the same town. You might consider checking out prospects in other cities to see if the job markets are more rapidly improving in those areas.

However, if moving is not on your agenda, you might consider enrolling in some training courses for your field while you’re in between jobs. Look for free courses on the Internet or in local career centers. Ideally, you want to do anything you can to make yourself more valuable to employers when you’re engaged in a job search. Your improved abilities will help a hiring manager ignore your layoffs.

Make Sure Your Resume is Spic and Span

When applying for jobs after having been laid off twice in a short period of time, you simply cannot afford to have any blemishes on your documentation, including your resume. You can, and you probably will, note that your layoffs had nothing to do with your performance, but employers don’t see it that way–they’ll wonder why a company decided to lay you off, of all of their employees, and they’ll look for deficiencies in your resume.

So as you write your resume, make sure to check for grammar, spelling and even font consistency. Have friends, family members, or even former co-workers read your resume to try to find mistakes. Employers are going to be looking at every minute detail. Don’t give employers ammunition by submitting a resume with glaring errors.

Consider Innovative Marketing Techniques

Being laid off more than once sometimes requires that you work ahead of the curve when applying for jobs. Think about starting a blog or general website focused on your industry, and send a link around to recruitment agencies. Consider starting a newsletter that you might be able to use to woo potential employers. The trick is to take the focus off of what skills you might not have and move it to your abilities.

Being laid off more than once can have a definite effect on your self-esteem. Keep a good attitude, and build on your skills, and you’ll eventually find a job that may be much better than the ones you’d had before.

About the Author

Need a job? Be sure your resume is the best it can be. Choose a resume writing service that is best for you and your situation. Do it today at http://www.ResumeLines.com

Related Layoffs Articles

VN:F [1.9.17_1161]
Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)