I am an RN, BSN, looking for a position in the Chicago IL suburbs area

Nurses Job Hunt

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Hello everyone,

I am new to this site so I am not sure how this all works. I am looking to make some connections, get some advice/insight, and ultimately receive some assistance in finding an RN position in the Chicago IL suburb area.

Here is a little background about myself:

I recently relocated from FL to IL at the beginning of this month (June 2014). I attended nursing school in Miami and graduated with my ASN in May 2012 and passed my boards right away. I graduated from an RN-BSN program this past May (2014). I worked at a pediatric office for almost 8 years (2006-2014). I started there as a medical assistant and was quickly promoted to a lab technician. After passing my boards my title in the office changed to RN and I continued to work there while attending/completing my BSN program. I completed my BSN practicum hours in a NICU and would really love to acquire a position in this field!

In about a months time (May-June 2014), I have applied to 10 different hospitals and over 30 different positions. Again I am most interested in working in the NICU but I would also be interested in any L&D, PICU, or peds positions.

Here is a list of Hospitals I have applied to:

1-Loyola University Medical Center (Maywood)

2-Silver Cross (New Lenox)

3-Adventist Midwest Health (Multiple Locations)

4-MetroSouth Medical Center (Blue Island)

5-Little Company of Mary (Evergreen Park)

6-MacNeal Hospital (Berwyn)

7-Ingalls Memorial Hospital (Harvey)

8-Advocate Christ Medical Center (Multiple Locations)

9-Edward Hospital (Naperville)

10-Palos Community Hospital (Palos Heights)

Right now these hospitals are in order with the one I hope to MOST hear back from at the top of the list. This is based on location and the position(s) I have applied for and/or I am still being considered for (I have already received my share of automated rejection emails :(

So....I know these hospitals are hiring (or at least their websites show positions available) and I want to make something happen! Does anyone work at any of these locations and know if specific units are in fact hiring???? Who do I need to contact to get my resume in the right hands and land an interview????

Thanks for taking the time to read this post and if anyone can help me out I would appreciate it!

-Natalie

Specializes in LTC.

At the hospital where I work (not as an RN, was never able to get an interview in the saturated northeast where I live) they have postings that sit around for YEARS that are never filled. They are quicker to hire IT people than nurses. I asked my supervisor why they do this and she said that she thought the job postings were like a wish list. In other words, you would like to buy a new dress but you know you can't afford it but put it on your list anyhow. (She has been working there for 30 years, so I guess she understands their mentality). I would assume that if they found a nurse who appeared to be a perfect fit, then they would jump to hire her but otherwise they can wait forever. It is no skin off their nose that nurses, both new grads and experienced, need jobs, it is not their problem. Their general attitude to employees is "Be thankful u on have a job in this economy.- " have actually heard supervisors say this to very good, committed employees.

Specializes in CVICU.

Since you graduated in May with your BSN then you might still qualify as a new grad, which is way better than being seen as an RN who graduated in 2012 and hasn't worked in a hospital.

What makes a huge difference in this industry is who you know. Since you are a fairly new nurse and have just moved to the area, you probably don't have any connections. You need to put yourself in a position to make connections. Are there any professional organizations in your area? The local chapter of AACN is a place to start if you want to work in ICU. If you want NICU or PICU then find a similar organization that is focused on PEDS.

In my area AACN meets once a month, and for 60 bucks/year at the meetings you get a presentation and a meal. You also get to mingle with nurses who are actually working in the field. If you are a friendly outgoing person you should be able to establish some meaningful connections that might get you an "in" with a nurse manager at one of the hospitals on your list.

Specializes in NICU, ICU, PICU, Academia.
Since you graduated in May with your BSN then you might still qualify as a new grad, which is way better than being seen as an RN who graduated in 2012 and hasn't worked in a hospital.

What makes a huge difference in this industry is who you know. Since you are a fairly new nurse and have just moved to the area, you probably don't have any connections. You need to put yourself in a position to make connections. Are there any professional organizations in your area? The local chapter of AACN is a place to start if you want to work in ICU. If you want NICU or PICU then find a similar organization that is focused on PEDS.

In my area AACN meets once a month, and for 60 bucks/year at the meetings you get a presentation and a meal. You also get to mingle with nurses who are actually working in the field. If you are a friendly outgoing person you should be able to establish some meaningful connections that might get you an "in" with a nurse manager at one of the hospitals on your list.

I respectfully disagree about the OP being a 'new grad'. While I wish her well, she is an experienced RN without acute care experience. 'New Grad' status is someone who has just passed their boards and has not held a position as an RN yet.

Keep plugging OP- the timeline for getting hired gets longer all the time. It is also the end of the fiscal year- and that can muddy the waters as far as hiring as well.

Specializes in CVICU.
I respectfully disagree about the OP being a 'new grad'. While I wish her well, she is an experienced RN without acute care experience. 'New Grad' status is someone who has just passed their boards and has not held a position as an RN yet.

.

I realize that technically she is not a new grad as defined by someone who just took their NCLEX, but she is a new grad as defined by just getting a shiny new BSN. A hospital is less likely to look at her as a nurse who has been out of school for 2 years without acute care experience which is a worse position to be in.

Wow what a great idea! Thank you, I can't believe I didn't think of this :up: I have wanted to join a professional organization for a while... I already emailed my local AACN chapter AND local NANN chapter...Thanks again!

Specializes in CVICU.

If you do indeed join one of those organizations and you like it, don't be afraid to run for office. That looks great on a resume and also puts you in a position to network with even more people. In my local chapter you don't need to be a "practicing" ICU nurse to run for office. In fact a couple of years ago a nurse who was fairly fresh out of school became President of our local chapter.

To do Secretary, Treasurer, VP or President does not require bedside clinical experience, what it requires is that you have organizational skills like being able to herd cats.

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