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"Growth Requires Discomfort"

📅 14 Feb 2026 ⏱ 3 min read

Embrace it.

This is the conversation most people avoid. It’s uncomfortable. It might hurt. But avoiding it hurts more in the long run.

Ready? Let’s go.

The Pattern Nobody Talks About

Here’s what I see every week. People come frustrated. Applied to 100 jobs. No responses. Five interviews. No offers. Doing everything ‘right’ but nothing works.

Then I dig deeper.

They applied to jobs they’re not qualified for. Sent generic CVs with typos. Walked into interviews without research. Answered questions in rambling paragraphs going nowhere.

They weren’t doing everything right. They were doing the minimum and hoping for maximum.

Hope is not a strategy.

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 Uncomfortable Reality

Truths nobody wants to hear:

Connections matter more than qualifications. Unfair? Yes. True? Also yes.

First impressions form in seconds. Qualifications take hours to evaluate. Guess which matters more?

Companies ghost constantly. Unprofessional. Also standard. Expect it.

The ‘best’ candidate often doesn’t get hired. The one who fits best does. Not the same thing.

Accept these realities. Work within them.

The Employer Perspective

I work both sides. Here’s what hiring managers tell me when I ask why they passed on candidates:

‘They didn’t seem interested.’ (Translation: they didn’t ask questions.)

‘They couldn’t explain their experience clearly.’ (Translation: rambling answers with no structure.)

‘Something felt off.’ (Translation: body language or energy was wrong.)

‘They didn’t research us.’ (Translation: asked questions that were answered on the website.)

Notice what’s NOT on this list? ‘They weren’t qualified enough.’ Qualifications get you in the door. Everything else determines whether you stay.

Interview skills are skills. They can be learned, practiced, and improved. Stop treating interviews like personality tests. Start treating them like performances you prepare for.

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.

Final Thought

I’ve been direct because sugarcoating doesn’t help. Market is competitive. Rejection common. Success requires more than showing up.

But here’s what I know: people who consistently apply these principles get results. Not immediately. Not always first try. But eventually, reliably, predictably.

Success in job searching isn’t magic. It’s method. Clear communication, thorough preparation, consistent follow-up, honest self-assessment.

Simple doesn’t mean easy. But achievable.

Good luck. Need less of it if you do the work.

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