Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Long odds

I received a rejection e-mail a couple days ago for a communications position at a local non-profit organization in Pittsburgh. Since it's unusual we actually get a live one, I thought this would be the best opportunity to see what my chances are in the jobs market.

The woman responded the following day with a friendly and detailed response. But it also confirmed what I suspected all along: Our resumes are getting buried beneath hundreds of others. She told me the company had received 130 applications, and two workers narrowed the list down to 25. From there, they whittled it to 10 possible applicants, four of whom they interviewed.

The woman said she has been with the company for 20 years, and never had this type of response for this position. That also means I had a 3 percent chance of scoring an interview. Seems like I'd have better odds playing the PowerBALL.

This illustrates the problems many of us newspaper reporters face while trying to find a job that relates to our former profession. It also might be an indication that a new and totally different career is the best -- and maybe the only -- option.

3 comments:

  1. a clear window to a place i hope i won't ever visit. i hope you and your friends find a way out, mikey.

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  2. Hey, Phil! How are things going at the ole Daily Mail? Maybe I can make a return trip to the newspaper after my townhouse is foreclosed!

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  3. I feel your pain. One place told me that they got 80 applications in two days.

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