Historically, less job cuts happen in the summer

Posted July 15, 2021

With summer in full swing, some job seekers may feel the best time to look for new positions has passed. That is not the case, according to one authority.

“Traditionally, we see the fewest job cuts in the summer months,” said John A. Challenger, CEO of Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

“In fact, many companies’ fiscal year-ends occur in the summer, and as budgets are reassessed, new positions are funded. Many companies are actually ramping up hiring, right now.”

In addition to the potential for new openings, summer offers myriad opportunities to re-engage your network, whether through a summer concert, a fishing trip, or grabbing coffee or lunch outside. The better weather also may help job seekers stay positive, which will help them in interviews and networking meetings.

“Hiring authorities want to hire happy people, and they also may feel more relaxed in the summer months. This is a good environment for an interview in which the job seeker and the hiring manager really connect,” noted Challenger.

Challenger offered these tips to utilize the summer months in a job search.

Re-ignite and re-connect with your network

There may be a large portion of your network with whom you have not spoken to in several months. Now is the time to re-connect with and expand your network.

If you have not joined online networking communities like LinkedIn, do so now and start connecting with former colleagues, classmates and other acquaintances. If you are on LinkedIn, revisit your list of contacts, because chances are good that their professional or personal situations have changed in recent months. So, not only do you have a reason to check in with them (to congratulate or otherwise acknowledge their changed circumstances), but that change could put them in a better position to help your job search. From each existing contact in your network that you reconnect with, make a goal to get the names of two to five new contacts they know who might be able to help with your employment search.

Follow Challenger’s LinkedIn for more job tips and connection ideas.

Move away from resume-centric job-search strategy

Most Americans take the traditional approach to job search: scour the help wanted ads and send out resumes by the hundreds. The only difference is that the help wanted ads have moved from the print newspaper to the Internet. The biggest problem with this approach is that the resume is really just a way to weed out candidates. A long employment gap on the resume is going to stand out and not in a good way. Even without the red flag of prolonged joblessness, relying on a resume to get your foot in the door is a numbers game that favors the employer. You might as well be playing the lottery.

In today’s market, employers posting a job opening will receive hundreds if not thousands of resumes. They will maybe find 10 to bring in for face-to-face interviews. Do you think they will go through every resume to find those 10? No. The initial keyword screening might narrow the field to 100 that a hiring manager will go through. He or she will only go through enough to get the 10 for interviews. Maybe that’s 50. If you are number 51 in that stack, you are out of luck.

Uncover the hidden job market

The other problem with relying too heavily on help wanted ads — whether online or in print — is that these represent a small fraction of the available jobs. We estimate that as few as 20 percent of the available jobs are ever advertised. The other 80 percent will be filled through employee referrals, personal connections and other backdoor channels. This is why expanding and staying connected to one’s professional and personal network is critical. It increases the chances of being in the right place, at the right time, when one of these hidden opportunities arise. The other way to uncover these opportunities is to simply start contacting companies where your skills would be a good fit. Your goal is to make contact with key managers in the department(s) where you would work. Avoid going through the human resources department (unless that is your profession), as their goal is to screen you out.

Reset expectations

You may need to consider working for less money than you imagined, working in a different industry or accepting a job title that differs from your aspirations. However, your primary objective at this point needs to be getting back on the payroll so you can start filling in the experience gap.

Remain positive

Don’t be defensive or take on the role of the victim when it comes to your prolonged unemployment. Avoid phrases like, “no one is hiring” and “nobody wanted me.” Focus only on the positive attributes you possess, what you have done to keep your skills fresh. If the topic of your prolonged unemployment comes up, don’t dwell on it. Move past it quickly with a statement like, “There have been many opportunities, but a mutual fit has been difficult to achieve. During this time, however, I have had the opportunity to round out my experience through (education, professional development, volunteer work, etc.).”

Step outside of your comfort zone

An aggressive job-search strategy often requires you to do something that makes you uncomfortable. You will have to tell people you have not seen in ten years that you lost your job. You will have to cold-call employers about job opportunities. An aggressive strategy also includes asking a friend or former business associate for the names of five people who might be able to help with your job search, and then calling those people to request a meeting. You will have to engage in conversation with complete strangers at a networking event. These are difficult activities for the most confident among us, but you must abandon any misgivings you might have in order to find a position.