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.

On 3/3/2020 at 8:22 AM, Nurse SMS said:

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.

You sound bitter and need an attitude adjustment!

Specializes in Dialysis.
1 hour ago, xindin said:

You sound bitter and need an attitude adjustment!

That's not bitter, that's the reality of any job market

26 minutes ago, Hoosier_RN said:

That's not bitter, that's the reality of any job market

So families have to be broken and uproot, single parents lose or not have a family life because hospitals are not welling to take new grads?!! to me this is nurses bowing to corporate greed! almost all hospitals have open positions but all are almost understaffed and not hiring to reduce costs or other stupid reasons while many new grads are enthusiastic and ready to learn and contribute!

Specializes in Dialysis.
4 hours ago, xindin said:

So families have to be broken and uproot, single parents lose or not have a family life because hospitals are not welling to take new grads?!! to me this is nurses bowing to corporate greed! almost all hospitals have open positions but all are almost understaffed and not hiring to reduce costs or other stupid reasons while many new grads are enthusiastic and ready to learn and contribute!

Unfortunately, it's the nature of business. ANY business. Employers are constrained by budgets, no matter what their needs are. In some areas there is a saturation of new grads. In other areas, not so much. This isn't the fault of greedy corporate facilities. This is why, with any career, anyone should check need vs location. There is a shortage of experienced nurses willing to work at the bedside in crappy conditions, like shirt staffing, etc

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

You sound bitter and need an attitude adjustment!

You sound naive, entitled and ignorant in the way that business works. Well, and, frankly, bitter that the situation isn't what you would like it to be. We have a for-profit healthcare system in the US. Training new grads is expensive to the company. Don't like it? Did you vote on Tuesday?

This is reality. Job markets are what they are. You adjust by working in what is most likely to be something other than your first choice of jobs or shifts...or both....or you do something else.... or you move. How is that bitter? Why would it be the hospital's job to compensate for someone being a single parent? Nursing is a 24/7 job. EVERYONE misses out on family time, not just single parents or new grads or people who have to move to support their family. Why would that even be a question? Can't support yourself where you are? Guess you have to go where you can. Can't get a job in the ICU or the ER? Guess you will work med-surg or SNF or whatever you have to do to pay your bills and keep food on your table. Your resistance to this is, frankly, baffling.

That it is what it is, don't blame me. I don't make the rules, but in my job role I certainly see them play out. If you don't like the truth of it, I am sorry for that. My bluntness about the situation in no way reflects bitterness. That you don't like the answer doesn't make me the bad guy. Just the unfortunate soul who has taken the time to give you the truth of things and then get smacked for it. It isn't what you want to hear and I am sorry for that. I'm not bitter and I don't have a bad attitude. I'm employed, happy in my career and I take some of my personal time to come here and help green ones like you. You can take or leave the information as you see fit. ? Maybe the world will prove me wrong.

8 hours ago, Nurse SMS said:

You sound naive, entitled and ignorant in the way that business works. Well, and, frankly, bitter that the situation isn't what you would like it to be. We have a for-profit healthcare system in the US. Training new grads is expensive to the company. Don't like it? Did you vote on Tuesday?

This is reality. Job markets are what they are. You adjust by working in what is most likely to be something other than your first choice of jobs or shifts...or both....or you do something else.... or you move. How is that bitter? Why would it be the hospital's job to compensate for someone being a single parent? Nursing is a 24/7 job. EVERYONE misses out on family time, not just single parents or new grads or people who have to move to support their family. Why would that even be a question? Can't support yourself where you are? Guess you have to go where you can. Can't get a job in the ICU or the ER? Guess you will work med-surg or SNF or whatever you have to do to pay your bills and keep food on your table. Your resistance to this is, frankly, baffling.

That it is what it is, don't blame me. I don't make the rules, but in my job role I certainly see them play out. If you don't like the truth of it, I am sorry for that. My bluntness about the situation in no way reflects bitterness. That you don't like the answer doesn't make me the bad guy. Just the unfortunate soul who has taken the time to give you the truth of things and then get smacked for it. It isn't what you want to hear and I am sorry for that. I'm not bitter and I don't have a bad attitude. I'm employed, happy in my career and I take some of my personal time to come here and help green ones like you. You can take or leave the information as you see fit. ? Maybe the world will prove me wrong.

so maybe my comment was harsh a bit but it wast meant to be personal and I appreciate you taking the time to elaborate on this. My displeasure with the scenario is that we are becoming accustomed to take corporate greed and excuses about saving money, cost to train, etc as a fact of life that should not change! If that should be the case then the would around us would go become less and less progressive. I honestly dont see how voting plays a role in this since our political system is rigged with fallacies and empty promises from either party!

Specializes in Dialysis.
2 hours ago, xindin said:

I honestly dont see how voting plays a role in this since our political system is rigged with fallacies and empty promises from either party!

Did you take a government or civics class? Elections determine who fills government seats. Those folks determine budgets and budgetary concerns. CMS is one of the entities who receives funding. Depending on how well funded Medicare and Medicaid are, determines how reimbursements play out. The less reimbursement funds, the less staff and supplies will be appropriated. Unfortunately, shareholders will get theirs before they worry about the nickels and dimes (staff/supplies) of an organization.

Elected officials also set legislation to determine healthcare laws (as well as other employment settings), rules and regulations.

Yes, voting is important. It may be riddled with fallacies, but it's the system we have. It's better than not having a voice in your political process-all the way from POTUS down to your local school board, etc. Remember, not everyone gets a voice

Specializes in Emergency.
On 3/5/2020 at 1:00 PM, xindin said:

So families have to be broken and uproot, single parents lose or not have a family life because hospitals are not welling to take new grads?!! to me this is nurses bowing to corporate greed! almost all hospitals have open positions but all are almost understaffed and not hiring to reduce costs or other stupid reasons while many new grads are enthusiastic and ready to learn and contribute! 

I commuted 2+ hours for my first job, stayed at airBnb's for my shifts until I found something closer 8 months later. I went into this hopeful for something different but with eyes wide open. A year later I was in a job closer to home. Sometimes one must put on the big panties and wade in. Not fun, not ideal. Realistic.

1 hour ago, Hoosier_RN said:

Did you take a government or civics class? Elections determine who fills government seats. Those folks determine budgets and budgetary concerns. CMS is one of the entities who receives funding. Depending on how well funded Medicare and Medicaid are, determines how reimbursements play out. The less reimbursement funds, the less staff and supplies will be appropriated. Unfortunately, shareholders will get theirs before they worry about the nickels and dimes (staff/supplies) of an organization.

Elected officials also set legislation to determine healthcare laws (as well as other employment settings), rules and regulations.

Yes, voting is important. It may be riddled with fallacies, but it's the system we have. It's better than not having a voice in your political process-all the way from POTUS down to your local school board, etc. Remember, not everyone gets a voice

I know the process and its intricacies, I just have zero faith in it

40 minutes ago, CKPM2RN said:

Thanks for the input

17 hours ago, Nurse SMS said:

You sound naive, entitled and ignorant in the way that business works. Well, and, frankly, bitter that the situation isn't what you would like it to be. We have a for-profit healthcare system in the US. Training new grads is expensive to the company. Don't like it? Did you vote on Tuesday?

This is reality. Job markets are what they are. You adjust by working in what is most likely to be something other than your first choice of jobs or shifts...or both....or you do something else.... or you move. How is that bitter? Why would it be the hospital's job to compensate for someone being a single parent? Nursing is a 24/7 job. EVERYONE misses out on family time, not just single parents or new grads or people who have to move to support their family. Why would that even be a question? Can't support yourself where you are? Guess you have to go where you can. Can't get a job in the ICU or the ER? Guess you will work med-surg or SNF or whatever you have to do to pay your bills and keep food on your table. Your resistance to this is, frankly, baffling.

That it is what it is, don't blame me. I don't make the rules, but in my job role I certainly see them play out. If you don't like the truth of it, I am sorry for that. My bluntness about the situation in no way reflects bitterness. That you don't like the answer doesn't make me the bad guy. Just the unfortunate soul who has taken the time to give you the truth of things and then get smacked for it. It isn't what you want to hear and I am sorry for that. I'm not bitter and I don't have a bad attitude. I'm employed, happy in my career and I take some of my personal time to come here and help green ones like you. You can take or leave the information as you see fit. ? Maybe the world will prove me wrong.

Even people who are independently wealthy from birth are required to meet life as it is. Nothing guarantees them happiness. You make the choice to engage life and be satisfied, or go to your grave as miserable as the worst. Employers owe nurses no more than any other employer owes their employees. That is reality.

Specializes in Non judgmental advisor.

Oh honey don’t worry you will get a job ! Are you willing to work in a SNF, or LTAC, it doesn’t have to be a long term solution, although personally when I was practicing I preffered the geriatric alzheimers unit, because they are very appreciative and sweet, but I know new nurses crave acute care For some odd reason, if you are willing to work here, or relocate just till you get hired you are gold, but I swear on everything you will be working and happy this year and very soon ?

Specializes in Non judgmental advisor.
On 3/2/2020 at 11:39 PM, 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!

Most nurses are going in for alternate reasons , anyhow, I think new young nurses who are child and husband free should use this relocation tool in their pocket to return to their desirable location. But since technology is evolving and baby boomers are soon to retire in a very short time things will shift to the nee grad nurses favor lets hope