Be patient.
In 15+ years of recruitment, I’ve placed thousands. Rejected thousands more. The difference isn’t what you think.
Let me explain.
What You’re Actually Competing Against
You think you’re competing against other candidates. You’re not. You’re competing against indifference.
The hiring manager is busy. 200 applications to review. Back to back meetings. Their own work on top of hiring.
They’re looking for reasons to reject, not interview. Every typo. Every vague phrase. Every unexplained gap. That’s a reason.
Your job isn’t to be good enough. It’s to give them no reason to say no.
What Actually Works
After thousands of placements, I know what works. It’s not complicated. Just consistently ignored.
First, research like your job depends on it. Because it does. Know the company. Know the role. Know the interviewer. Know the industry. Know competitors. Know challenges.
Second, communicate clearly. Short sentences. Direct answers. Specific examples. No rambling. No corporate speak. No vague platitudes.
Third, follow up. Once is polite. Twice shows interest. Three times is too much. Learn the rhythm.
Fourth, be honest. About experience. About motivations. About what you want. Lies catch up.
The Hard Truth
Most people don’t get jobs because they don’t deserve them yet.
Sounds harsh. Is harsh. Also true.
Six months searching with no offers? The problem isn’t the market. The market is the same for everyone. The problem is you – approach, preparation, communication, attitude.
That’s actually good news. You can change yourself. Can’t change the market.
Stop blaming external. Start fixing internal.
The Long Game
Careers are decades long. Individual job searches are weeks or months. But people get this backwards. They panic about immediate rejections while ignoring long-term reputation.
The recruiter you impress today might place you in your dream role five years from now. The hiring manager who rejected you might hire you at their next company. The candidate you treated well as a peer might become your future boss.
Every interaction matters. Every impression compounds. Every relationship has potential future value.
Play the long game. Be professional always. Follow up on rejection emails with grace. Connect on LinkedIn with genuine notes. Remember names and details.
Short-term thinking gets short-term results. Long-term thinking builds careers.
Specific Actions For This Week
Don’t just read this. Do something.
Monday: Review your CV. Does every bullet point have a number? If not, add them.
Tuesday: Practice your ‘tell me about yourself’ answer out loud. Time it. Under two minutes.
Wednesday: Research three companies you want to work for. Know their challenges.
Thursday: Reach out to two people in your network. Not asking for jobs. Just staying connected.
Friday: Apply to five roles where you meet at least 70% of the requirements.
This isn’t complicated. It’s just consistent effort. Most people won’t do it. That’s your advantage.
Common Objections I Hear
‘But I’m an introvert.’ Introverts can prepare thoroughly, answer concisely, and ask thoughtful questions. Introversion isn’t an excuse.
‘But I’m not good at self-promotion.’ Nobody’s asking you to brag. They’re asking you to clearly explain what you’ve accomplished. Facts aren’t bragging.
‘But the market is terrible right now.’ The market is the same for everyone. Some people still get jobs. Be one of them.
‘But I don’t have enough experience.’ Then get creative about how you frame what you do have. Transferable skills exist.
Objections are comfortable. Results require discomfort. Pick your discomfort.
What Now?
Reading is easy. Acting is hard. That’s why most won’t change. Nod along, agree, keep doing what they’ve always done.
Don’t be most people.
Pick one thing from this article. Do it today. Another tomorrow. Small improvements compound. Big intentions without action go nowhere.
Market rewards action. Not plans. Not ideas. Not intentions. Action.
What’s your first action?
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