Comment on Young men are struggling in a slowing job market, even if they have college degrees

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partial_accumen@lemmy.world ⁨1⁩ ⁨day⁩ ago

If you’re interested/comfortable in sharing some specifics I’m interested in hearing more about his real world experience:

The hiring signs for don’t necessarily mean much. I have a friend looking for such “basic” sort of a job, or anything really, that I’ve been trying to help out. Two years later and we’re both still trying to find more places around for him to apply to. I know the guy well enough to know that he’s not like being a jerk to the occasional interviewer he gets or anything like that, and while he doesn’t have much he doesn’t have zero work history either.

It sounds from your explanation that he is actually getting interviews, but hes getting ghosted afterward. Has he talked about what how the interviews go? Does your friend feel good about how they went or was he getting questions he didn’t like or had trouble providing an answer to? Have you done a “mock interview” with him to see how he presents to see if there are things he could use help on there too? Are you in an area that has seasonal work (such as tourism support) and has he gone for any of that? Those kind of workforces tend to be more permissive with their hires.

you’d think statistically at least one of them would have worked out by now, but most won’t even give the courtesy of a “no”

Sadly, I know this is VERY common for employers to simply ghost applicants even after interviews. Its a practice I don’t like either.

I suspect those signs are more there to have a constant pool of applicants in case they should need to quickly replace an existing employee (or reassure overworked ones that they’re “looking” for someone) than any actual intent to hire more staff.

I’ve personally talked to a few of the managers/owners of the places I frequent, and nearly all the ones I’ve talked to are actually actively interviewing to hire, not just build a pool. Even the one that I talked to that IS building a pool communicated he has a high turnover workforce (usually working students whose school schedules frequently change and they have to quit). Again, all of my second hand experience is within 15 miles of where I live and I absolutely understand conditions could be different literally everywhere else in the USA.

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