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It’s Hard Out Here for a Recent Law School Graduate

A recent exchange from the Job Chat column of the Washington Post:

rejected rejection letter Above the Law blog.jpgI’m a recent law school graduate who has yet to secure my first job. I’m growing desperate. I’ve sent out 330 résumés to the Hill, feds, nonprofits, trade associations, campaigns and law firms. I’ve even applied for bartending and waiting tables, only to be told I’m overqualified. What do I do?

Are you just mailing (or e-mailing) résumés blind? Or are you networking through professional associations, your law school’s alumni group, etc? You need to think quality, not quantity.

Completing a single federal job application can take a full week, so I have a hard time believing you’re putting the right level of effort behind pursuing jobs at carefully selected employers.

And no one is overqualified to wait tables and tend bar in Washington …

Hmm…. On the one hand, we aren’t terribly impressed by this advice. The correspondent basically wrote: “Help! I’m trying really hard, and I can’t land a job.” And columnist Mary Ellen Slayter responded: “Try harder! Or get a job flipping burgers at Five Guys.”

On the other hand, we don’t have any better advice. The job market is grim — and given this individual’s batting average thus far, we suspect that their credentials may be less than stellar.

Readers, any advice? Or, if no advice, sympathy or commiseration?

Job Chat: Networking, Targeting May Help in Search [Washington Post]

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