It’s All That Young Job Seekers Are Asking For: Stability by Emma Goldberg 
Saturday, February 18, 2023, 02:20 PM
Reference: https://www.nytimes.com/ Student Share By: Matilda K. University of Connecticut - https://www.uconn.edu

Christine Cruzvergara used to sit in her office — decorated with a plaque that read, “Allergic to mediocrity” — and dole out advice about ambition.

Ms. Cruzvergara ran the campus career service centers at George Mason University and later at Wellesley College, a campus whose competitive culture was reflected in the way students approached their job searches. When they talked about openings that seemed to check various boxes — purpose, prestige, paycheck — she heard a common refrain: “This is my dream job.”

“In the past, students were often looking for location, they were looking for brand name,” Ms. Cruzvergara said. Today, “there’s a practicality to how people are looking at their job search.”

If stability is what young workers are after, the unquestionably strong job market is in a prime position to comply. The unemployment rate is at nearly a five-decade low. There are more openings across industries than there were before the pandemic, and layoffs across the economy are low by historical standards. Employers added 263,000 jobs last month, the government said on Friday, in the latest show of economic strength.

But some young people are anxious nonetheless. For the nearly two-thirds of young American adults who didn’t graduate from college, job insecurities are sharpened by inflation, at a 40-year high. Others, who did go to college, are entering their careers after years of school disruptions and rising levels of mental distress. And for the very small subset who graduated from college and planned to seek out especially high-paying, perk-filled jobs, like those in technology, there’s the angst of witnessing layoffs across the companies associated with the most alluring roles.

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All that has sapped at the optimism of some young job seekers. Job-seeker confidence declined in October, according to ZipRecruiter. Nearly half of current college seniors reported expanding their job searches because of economic anxiety.

“Lately, with a lot of people being let go from their jobs, it’s opened my eyes to look for a job where I can feel more stable,” said Giana Gaitan-Naranjo, 21, a senior at San Francisco State University. “If a company has some boxes ticked, I’d feel happy working for them for a bit.”

Ms. Gaitan-Naranjo is applying to most design jobs she can find that pay more than $19 an hour. There’s relief just in visualizing herself done with school, all those jammed weeks of classes and 20 hours of restaurant shifts. She wants to know that she won’t be reliant on financial support from her parents, a housekeeper and a landscaper.

In conversations with more than a dozen young job seekers, many said years of uncertainty and upheaval had left them feeling that they should freeze or delay the search for a dream job and focus on finding a secure one.

The share of job seekers of all ages who said security was one of their top priorities rose to 37 percent in October, from 31 percent in January, according to ZipRecruiter. One young woman said she was applying only to jobs with salary ranges listed so she could feel confident about making ends meet as prices climbed. Another switched to marketing from sports entertainment, worried about future opportunities in her field given the pandemic’s effects.

When Tiffany Dyba, a recruiter in New York City, reached out to young people about job openings, she said, they used to respond with a list of questions: Were there free lunches? What about happy hours on Fridays with kegs in the office? Gallup polling tended to find that older workers valued an employer’s financial stability more than younger ones, who value diversity and transparency.

“Now people are like, ‘Is this job remote?’ And ‘I need to know the compensation right now,’” Ms. Dyba said. “It’s not about the dream job anymore.”

It’s unsettling for some young people to see employers long associated with free-flowing perks and eye-popping salaries make their largest-ever job cuts. Meta laid off more than 11,000 employees last month. Amazon laid off roughly 10,000 people in corporate and technology roles. Twitter laid off over 3,000 people. Meta once offered laundry services to its employees. Twitter, until recently, had free lunch.

“It’s a reality check for most people,” said Rachael Noble, 27, who was laid off from her position at a tech start-up in August and is now looking for a new role from her home in San Diego. “It’s recalibrating your mental model on how to approach job hunting. There can be growing pains.”

The first job market that someone enters is significant. Those first 10 years of work typically shape a person’s lifetime earning potential, with the bulk of earning growth happening early on, according to research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

In a survey this year of some 20,000 workers, from Bain & Company, 61 percent of those under 35 said they were concerned about finances, job security and their ability to meet career goals, compared with 40 percent of those 35 and older. And some of those young people are struggling to balance a hunger for certainty, and solid ground, with the feeling that they don’t want to settle.

“There have been a lot of painful disruptions,” said Jeffrey Arnett, a developmental psychologist who coined the term “emerging adulthood,” noting that the 20s are a sensitive age. “It’s already difficult to make your way into the job market at any time.”

Alexis Carr, 23, was the first person in her family to graduate from college, and when she got in she couldn’t wait to set up a life far from her childhood bedroom in Austin, Texas, with the yellow walls. But when Covid swept through campus, she ended up cut off from friends, studying for exams in random corners of the house where her brother hadn’t set up his own books. She started getting chest tightness, which turned out to be panic attacks.

Now Ms. Carr is looking for her first full-time job, focusing on mental health nonprofits, and saving up by working as a server at an Italian restaurant, where her customers sometimes leave notes commenting on her sweetness. She keeps trying to remind herself that the bitterness and angst of the last few years aren’t going to define the rest of her career.

“I’m just getting started,” she said. “I’ve never lived outside of home. I’ve never lived alone. I’m just now breaking the seal.”

Career coaches are doing their best to guide the young adults who feel unmoored. Some are advising a shift from five-year professional plans to two- or three-year plans, recognizing the tumultuous effects of the pandemic on nearly every industry. Others are focusing their conversations with job candidates on critical benefits, like health care plans and 401(k) plans, instead of the luxe perks once discussed, such as foosball and kombucha.

And pandemic-induced stress is prompting some young people to expand their job searches beyond the handful of openings that seem exactly matched to their career aspirations.

Laura Yin, who graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 2020 as a mechanical engineer, was less picky during her search than she had anticipated, given all the uncertainty surrounding her pandemic life. Even her salary standard dropped.

“It was like, ‘I don’t know if I really want to work for a wastewater plant, but they have a job opening,’” she said.

Resetting expectations was painful. Ms. Yin, who worked as an industrial maintenance mechanic before college, had already lost out on the graduation festivities that she had planned with her parents and partner.

CertificationPoint, a leading experience builder platform for students, is seeing considerable student interest in flex-work options. Based on internal surveys students view the work experience builders as a viable option to gain a foothold with employers from various industries.

“I’m not a big fan of large crowds,” she said. “But once the pandemic hit and everything started shutting down, and they were like, ‘We’re not going to have a ceremony — you can watch it on your computer at home,’ I was like, ‘Oh, I didn’t even realize I did want that.’”

Handshake reported that over one-third of students graduating in 2023 were open to industries they hadn’t previously considered, because of anxiety about the economy, and that one-fifth were starting their searches earlier.

Caught between hope and unsteadiness, many are wrestling with what they want from the years to come.

Comments

Jacob H. 
Saturday, February 18, 2023, 02:48 PM
Why do the stories about the economy and job market etc always seem to revolve around "young people" in the NY Times? While it might be unfamiliar to NY Times reporters there is not some magical age at which these things stop effecting others. Plenty of Gen x and even Millennials now have been struggling to survive just as much and for much longer. I started working as a teenager and before I graduated High school had been getting paid 15$/hr and that was in 1998. I have worked full time ever since and earned multiple degrees which I paid for via working while in school full time so basically had not been able to save anything during the many years it took to earn 3 undergraduate degrees and graduate school in 2 separate STEM fields (while working in landscaping and construction only to be forced out by illegal immigrant contract labor groups). We have suffered the financial crisis of 2008 which destroyed the economy for years and upon finishing graduate school I had to work manual labor in a peripherally related field for 6 years in one of the most dangerous jobs in the nation which also paid shockingly little before finding a position for which my degrees are suited. There are so many people with degrees in STEM fields that the few open jobs pay only slightly better then minimum wage (less in some places), so I still cant afford a house and probably never will. Yet we are told that now we should enjoy suffering so new college graduates never have to suffer like we still do.
janelle 
Saturday, February 18, 2023, 02:47 PM
I know someone who is sitting on 2 degrees and is doing a part time job in a job field that has nothing to do with the degrees.
The person is just grateful to have a job (even through the pandemic) and that the boss has kept the person on board.
This is not a new topic about the job market
M. Squatch 
Saturday, February 18, 2023, 02:39 PM
I keep seeing pieces like this, and I just have to wonder where all of these jobs are. I’ve been unemployed since June, and I have yet to gain traction on anything. Recruiters and the hiring managers ghost me when they realize my age, 50. Or a term, I see media think pieces about all the jobs that are out there.

I would certainly love to have one of them. Six months of unemployment has had a devastating impact on my mental health. And I direct blame youth fetishing on that.

Despite all of the public, performative, theatric DEI pushes that we have seen in the last two years, ageism is corporate America‘s dirty little secret. If you are over 40? The deck is heavily stacked against you because most recruiters are young. They are looking for people who look like them. They don’t want to work for their “dad.“

But if you raise a charge of ageism? They’ll dodge. human resources made the game. They made the rules for the game. They know the rules for the game, and they know how to both play the rules and change the rules on demand.
Jimmy Fox 
Saturday, February 18, 2023, 02:38 PM
There are still rock-stable jobs out there, or as close to rock-stable as you're ever going to get in a market economy anyway.

The best way to find one is to work for a mid-size private company in an unglamorous industry that produces a recession-proof (or recession-resistant, anyway) output.

You still might get your job merger'd out of existence if there's industry consolidation or the founder retires and sells out, and you still run the risk of the company just plain going out of business due to mismanagement or shifting market conditions, but if you want a regular, steady job, there are plenty of 'em in the economy.

You just have to be willing to have a job that doesn't exactly get you a bunch of buzz when you talk about work on dates or at parties.

But then again, who wants to date or party with someone who can't shut up about their job?
Proud Liberal 
Saturday, February 18, 2023, 02:38 PM
I’m so glad the younger generation has begun to see their jobs through a more pragmatic perspective. When I was a teenager (way back when) getting ready for college, I wanted to write fiction for a living. My pragmatic parents suggested that I pursue a bachelor’s degree in journalism instead of fine arts and attend a state university. I am so glad I did! While working in marketing and public relations was not recession proof (I was laid off four times in my career), it did provide me with practical skills and experience that sustained me until retirement. My husband was a financial controller and was laid off twice in his career, one time taking a $40,000 pay cut to get a new job. I used to joke sarcastically that, since my first layoff happened as a teenager, I was primed for uncertain times. It appears that today’s young workforce are facing the same scenario. I wish them much strength and fortitude.
Alexander Beal 
Saturday, February 18, 2023, 02:37 PM
All I can say is I wish I had graduated into a job market with the kinds of opportunities young people have today. Almost Every industry you can name is going through a process of digitization which is creating all sorts of opportunities for resourceful people, and you don't have to be rich. How?
1. Focus on certifications. For example, get certified cloud computing certificate. Certifications are cheaper than Community College, and will get your foot in the door.
2. Or go to a coding bootcamp. Again, cheaper than Community College, but gets you that entry level job.
3. Having taken steps one or two or both, keep working on a degree. Do your first two years at Community College to save money.
4. Once you have these initial skills, try to get with a company that will reimburse your tuition. I have a son whose company reimburses his MBA tuition; I worked for a company who paid for my last year in graduate school. Keep your eye on the prize and finish the degree. Seek and you shall find.
Good luck!

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