Advice to College Grads Without Jobs

A recent editorial in the Washington Post by Meredith Raimondi provides a pretty good reminder of what success thinking is all about. Meredith, a recent graduate of George Washington University, was lamenting her lack of a job.  She wondered why, after paying all that money for an education, she found that she was only qualified to do the job of a $25,000 administrative assistant.

It’s instructive to look at the language she used. Sorry, but its the language that 80% of the population uses. We call them “average” or worse.

  • After four years of college I expected my life would magically come together– Comment: like in The Secret, where just by thinking of something it happens? Nope, that’s not the way it works. You provide something that someone else determines is of value to them. They trade you dollars for what you are providing. There is no magic out there there that says oh, a graduate…lets pay her.
  • As a philosophy major, I thought that the critical thinking and analytical skills I acquired would be more desirable to prospective employers–Comment: they are if you can show an employer how they will profit by your skills. But smart thinking people are a dime a dozen and you are competing with folks just like you from around the world. It’s got to be something more–what makes you different?
  • I have heard that there are stimulus jobs and I have applied for probably a dozen jobs with the federal government alone. Comment: You and millions others…The government’s job is to protect your right to use your gifts and talents to provide value for others, not provide you a job. One of the major flaws in the whole stimulus economy is that it encourages people to sit back and wait…thus becoming even more dependent on the other (this time the government) for survival.
  • I fell as if I am being enterprising in my search, using Craigslist, Indeed, CareerBuilder and The Post: Comment: Enterprising would be tracking down the the CEO of a company you want to work with and sending her a shock and awe package that markets yourself, causes her to pay attention to you and makes her say I’d be an idiot to not at least interview Meredith.
  • I went to college with the dreams of working on government policy, writing for a newspaper or serving a on a bioethics committee. Who knew that the economy would go into crisis when I was in college. Comment: sure, its tougher out there than it was a few years ago but there are lots of kids graduating from college who did get good jobs. Probably better to figure out what they are doing and model that.
  • After sending what seems to be my millionth resume and cover letter, I am realizing that I might need to go back to school sooner than expected: Comment: first, every employer is getting resumes and cover letters. How are you making yours stand out? Why would you expect that an employer would choose you over the others or over the choice of doing nothing at all? Second, why in the world do you think that more school and more debt is going to fix your problem? That sounds like running away. Frankly, spending some time hanging out with winners/entrepreneurs in order that you can see first hand what successful people were doing would be far more valuable. I know lots of people who have no college degree, let alone any advanced degree, who are enormously successful.
  • GWU’s online jobs site used to be a great place to look for paid positions but with the economic situation, jobs have been scarce: Comment–don’t blame the economy.. that just gives you an excuse. Take full responsibility for your success or failure. Winners don’t blame others or the economy or the government or anything…they figure out how to get things done.
  • I’ve been checking my email, hoping for a job offer….I thought once college ended, all my dreams would come through. Comment: the four years you just spent are just the beginning. But no one promised that all your dreams would come true just by hanging out GWU’s writing center for four years. Life is not about hoping– its about planning out what, exactly, its going to take to be successful…setting goals….never leaving it up to the other.

Let me make a few book recommendations for you:

Think and Grow Rich–Napoleon Hill– a little hard to read the first time. Many, many successful people read this book once a year for its timeless principles of success

The Millionaire Next Door– what to the financially successful people in America really do…not just theory, but survey results…how do they think and act?? Who do they hang out with.

No B.S. Wealth Attraction: Dan Kennedy…more timeless advice about how really successful people really act and think.

You don’t need to reinvent the wheel…you only need to look around at what made others successful and model that.

Get started.

3 Comments

  1. Excellent advice Ben for anyone including college students looking for work.

  2. Nicole says:

    Could you please elaborate on the following statement:

    “It’s instructive to look at the language she used. Sorry, but its the language that 80% of the population uses. We call them ‘average’ or worse.”

    1) Why are you sorry?
    2) Have you done a study revealing that 80% of the population uses the type of language Meredith chose in her editorial?
    3) Why do you refer to people as “average or worse” simply based on the type of language they use? How do you derive enough information from their choice in words to pass this type of judgment on 80% of the population?

    I find that when people use extraneous and unnecessary language, try to masquerade baseless statistics as facts in order to prove a point, and pass judgment on a massive amount of people they have never even met, they are no better off than idealistic college graduates who were just hoping to find a job. :)

  3. benglasslaw says:

    It’s “‘average’ or worse” because the 80% I’m referring to are the 80% that are not going out and actively pursuing success in its various forms. It includes the middle 60%, from 20%-80%, which I refer to as “average,” and the lowest 20% which I refer to as “worse.” The 80-20 split comes from the principal that 20% of Americans control 80% of the nation’s wealth. That top 20% is the people who are being proactive and holding themselves accountable for their own success. The other 80% are those who share the ideas with Meredith that they are owed something simply for showing up.

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