New Grad Losing Hope of Getting Job

Looking and finding that first nursing job can be a long and stressful journey for new grads. The reality shock can be overwhelming and cause some to give up hope too early. Read on to discover some of Nurse Beth's helpful tips. Nurses Nurse Beth Article

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Dear Losing Hope,

CONGRATS on graduating!

It's way too early in the game for you to lose hope. You are 20 applications and 1 month in. Many new grads take months to land their first job. You're experiencing a bit of reality shock.

Yes, it definitely is recommended to start your Job Search while you're still in school, and more schools should tell their students.

For now, the best thing is to optimize your resume and hone your interview skills.

Right now it's all about strategy, and finding a way to stand out from all the other applicants.

Landing a job is your full-time job right now.

Resume

You must individualize your resume for each organization. I sat in on a phone interview with a nurse from Ireland who was applying to the hospital where I work in California. He knew exactly what part of town we are located in, and that we were recently Stroke certified. He knew our mission and values and said he was working on his conversational Spanish (large Spanish-speaking population). You can see that he was a savvy interviewer and he definitely stood out.Have you learned to optimize your resume for automated tracking system (ATS) software by using keywords from the job posting? Important.

Using the right words can get your resume in front of a recruiter

Interviews

Your resume landed you 2 interviews, but your interviews didn't get you to the next level.

They are looking for someone who is a safe practitioner, and who will fit in. Candidates don't always understand that. For instance, an applicant prepping for a Tele interview may misguidedly study up on heart block interpretations. But a hiring manager knows you do not have experience, and they are not looking to trip a new grad up on their knowledge.

Let's say they give you a scenario where you are alone with the patient in the room, and the patient collapses. They want you to answer that you'll stay with the patient, assess and support, and call for help. Initiate BLS if the patient arrested. This shows you understand your limits and are safe. Now if you think critically by saying you anticipate an EKG or labs, that's even better.

Likewise, you can count on being asked some standard behavioral questions, and you need to prepare your answers. You will likely be asked "What's your greatest weakness?" A standard answer is "I'm a perfectionist" Standard, disingenuous, and it doesn't help you to stand out.

An avoidance answer is "I'm not good at public speaking". It's not relevant because public speaking is not a skill required for the job. An unwise answer is "I can't handle stress" because stress management is required to succeed as a nurse.

A good answer is "I'm not a natural at delegating. I try to do everything myself. I'm beginning to understand that it takes all of us working as a team to get it all done. In my last clinicals I made a point to ask my PCT to please take a set of vital signs for me because I was passing meds. It worked out great, and I'm going to keep practicing"

In this way you turned a weakness into a positive. Notice the word weakness was never used in the response.

Always be prepared with a couple of questions when asked "What questions do you have for us?" A good answer is "Do you have shared governance, or what ways are there to get involved in projects once I get through orientation?"

I have a bookful of tips like these for you. There are bold risky moves, such as cold-calling, but there's a right way and a wrong way to do a cold-call.

Consider relocating if need be to land that all-important first job. You don't say where in Minnesota you live, but Mayo Clinic is known for being new grad friendly.

I’d say a good part of it is where you are. If you applied at our hospital right now they’d hire you for sure. We need staff. I was hired right off my NCLEX. There are places that need you, just gotta find them, may just have to move..

Specializes in Emergency.

I had to start in Skilled Nursing. Not where I wanted to be but it was a job and more importantly, it was good experience. It took 2 1/2 years after NCLEX to get where I wanted to be, but everything before that was good background experience.

There is a ton of need in Skilled Nursing and you will gain medication knowledge, leadership skills, delegation skills, and importantly you will learn how to talk to the doctors that can't or won't come in to assess the patients for themselves. You'll also learn to work with a lot of different situations; foleys, wounds, feeding tubes, etc.

I won't lie, it is HARD. You'll likely be understaffed and without the proper supplies half the time. What is rewarding though is most of the clients are terrific. Most.

I am starting to think finding a decent paying job as a nurse is not as close to what many nursing schools present! thats very discouraging! what happened to the shortage we have been hearing about for years! or is it only certain professions in the healthcare industry ( PAs, MDs, etc)

Specializes in Tele, ICU, Staff Development.
9 minutes ago, xindin said:

I am starting to think finding a decent paying job as a nurse is not as close to what many nursing schools present! thats very discouraging! what happened to the shortage we have been hearing about for years! or is it only certain professions in the healthcare industry ( PAs, MDs, etc)

There's regional shortages of experienced nurses, but surpluses of new grads. It's very competitive in some areas.

23 minutes ago, Nurse Beth said:

There's regional shortages of experienced nurses, but surpluses of new grads. It's very competitive in some areas.

So, this will drive the pay for nurses down then

Specializes in OB.

Keep trying! Reach out, try to find out the manager's names on the floors and see if you can directly email your resume to them. Sometimes the HR department is not fabulous at getting resumes where they need to get to. Don't rule out specialty departments, such as cardiac or ICU. Go to job fairs. Know that you will be working midnight shift - at least for awhile. Do not say that you can't! That's a huge red flag. Work it out, find a sitter, whatever it takes. On a medical floor, it probably won't be for too long. When you get an interview, dress appropriately, be early, ask something, anything - I hate when we do peer interviews and the person has no questions for us. How long is orientation? Is it just with 1 preceptor, or multiple?

Specializes in Corrections, Surgical.

I just got a job offer for a mental health unit for corrections. Sometimes you have to think outside the box and apply everywhere. I'm willing to relocate and that played a big part. I applied to so many residencies outside of my hometown and I'm glad I did. Both of the interviews I got was for places that are hours away. The great thing about this job in corrections is that there is no on call policy, I do not have to sign a two year contact and the pay is more than all of the residencies offer that I've been seeing. Since I have my ASN I am at a disadvantage, many places are BSN preferred. I knew I would have to apply to places that most people were not willing to go. Just keep pushing. I've applied to maybe 20+ places and only got call back interview for 2. One was the correctional position and one is at a hospital. Good luck and think outside the box. I know everyone wants a hospital position but its just not realistic with the amount of new grad there are these days.

The worst thing you can do is quit before you have really started. Believe it or not nursing is a tough field to break into. You are an RN don’t accept anything less than an RN position it could send the wrong message. Most RN’s I know started in long term care and built their skills, reputation, and reference list. I don’t know what part of Minnesota you are in or if working at a Veterans Affairs Hospital appeals to you, if so, go to USAjobs.gov and apply for some of the nursing openings. I will tell you the VA uses an interview technique called Performance Based Interviewing aka PBI so be prepared to talk about your experiences both paid and volunteer. Anyhow, don’t give up and don’t sell yourself short by accepting anything other than an RN position. Good luck! Ruth MSN, RN, MHA

Specializes in Critical Care; Cardiac; Professional Development.
On 2/23/2020 at 4:51 PM, xindin said:

I am starting to think finding a decent paying job as a nurse is not as close to what many nursing schools present! thats very discouraging! what happened to the shortage we have been hearing about for years! or is it only certain professions in the healthcare industry ( PAs, MDs, etc)

There is a shortage of experienced nurses, as Nurse Beth stated. There are also pockets of the country and specific regions as well as certain specialties that desperately need nurses. Rural settings? Very short. Indian reservations? Very short. Texas/Mexico border towns? Very short. Psych? Very short. SNF and LTACH? Generally very short.

The mistake people make when they hear "nursing shortage" is that they assume that it is equal all the way across. It isn't. There are areas to live (California, New York, DFW, Austin, most of Colorado to name just a few) that are absolutely saturated and new nurses struggle. The problem is how many people absolutely insist they can't move. Or work nights or weekends or holidays. Or only want ICU/ER/NICU/L&D etc.

It also seldom gets pointed out that the future of nursing isn't in the hospital. It is in Population Health.

8 hours ago, Nurse SMS said:

There is a shortage of experienced nurses, as Nurse Beth stated. There are also pockets of the country and specific regions as well as certain specialties that desperately need nurses. Rural settings? Very short. Indian reservations? Very short. Texas/Mexico border towns? Very short. Psych? Very short. SNF and LTACH? Generally very short.

The mistake people make when they hear "nursing shortage" is that they assume that it is equal all the way across. It isn't. There are areas to live (California, New York, DFW, Austin, most of Colorado to name just a few) that are absolutely saturated and new nurses struggle. The problem is how many people absolutely insist they can't move. Or work nights or weekends or holidays. Or only want ICU/ER/NICU/L&D etc.

It also seldom gets pointed out that the future of nursing isn't in the hospital. It is in Population Health.

So new grad should go and live in some deserted town to get hired! that gives zero incentive to anyone to get into this field!

Specializes in Critical Care; Cardiac; Professional Development.
9 hours ago, xindin said:

So new grad should go and live in some deserted town to get hired! that gives zero incentive to anyone to get into this field!

I think that is a bit of a dramatic response. It isn't the responsibility of the economy OR the field of nursing OR employers OR specific regions to give a new grad "incentive". People in any walk of life that want to succeed and thrive must incentivize themselves. If there isn't work where you live, there isn't work. Railing against that honestly makes no sense whatsoever. Nobody is entitled to a specific location, shift or specialty.

You work where you can get a job. That's just common sense. For many, that means either a move they would prefer not to do, a specialty that isn't their first choice and/or a shift that they would rather not work. Once you have experience your options change, and it isn't like it requires years and years of it. One year of experience is a whole different ball game when it comes to finding work as a nurse. You do your time and then the doors open.

If for you that means not being a nurse, there are lots of others scrambling to become one. It's fine if you want to do something else. But don't expect the industry to pander to you. It doesn't happen that way.

Specializes in Emergency.
11 hours ago, xindin said:

So new grad should go and live in some deserted town to get hired! that gives zero incentive to anyone to get into this field!

I would posit that there are many new grads who would love to live in these towns. I get ads all the time for tiny hospitals in the middle of New Mexico and such. If I were a serious mountain biker, hiker, kayaker, etc, these would be the perfect positions.