2 posts tagged “recession”
Sometimes, dear Reader, it takes more to maintain a blog than just occasionally thinking about writing a post, then eating some malted milk biscuits. I am starting to realise this - and it's been a humbling epiphany, let me tell you! Possibly tomorrow.
In my defence, there hasn't been much time for writing about hts' valiant battles with the dragon of recession, what with all the valiant battles we've been having with the dragon of recession. Dragons are notoriously intolerant of people blogging during battles, even if the people blogging aren't at the vanguard of the battle, but are quite far away from the fighting, behind some trees, maintaining the database and proofreading CVs. Nor do they relish being asked for a time-out while you read other people's blogs. So basically I haven't so much of sniffed Vox or any of its denizens since January.
Anyway, here's our news, since you asked:
1. We're finding that the dragon of recession (see above) isn't as sprightly as it was in January. It has slightly blunt nails and an intermittent cough. Will provide further economic insights as developments develop.
2. Varun has only gone and become a Dad, hasn't he! To a baby girl! Named Manya!
3. Danny did an abseil down the gigantic and weirdly carpeted side of the Fort Dunlop building! For charity! (The Stroke Association, to be specific.) With no previous abseiling experience and his children watching in terror admiration! Video to follow, as soon as we've edited out the bit where I put my head in front of the camera, thus turning the scene into a big curly nightmare.
4. Jayne passed her CERT-RP recruitment exam with flying colours! (She used crayons.) She can now commandeer light aircraft with her business card!
That's the news for now. Right, I'm off to read some blogs.
Let's say you've been made redundant. It's a dashed grim time to be made redundant. And let's say you've been made redundant from a company situated only two miles from where you live. It was ideal, until they started culling staff.
But there's hope! Let's say that an agency rings you up to tell you about a great opportunity with a friendly, financially solid company that's twenty miles from where you live - a twenty-five minute direct motorway commute, but a whole eighteen miles further than you're going at the moment.
Which of the following do you think? -
1. Twenty miles versus two miles? Now that doesn't compare favourably. I'll say no, wait a month, and review my situation.
2. Twenty miles versus... being unemployed during an economic recession? Give me some of that.
The guy on the phone this morning was adamant that he wouldn't consider anything beyond a short commute for the next month. We're not a hard-sell kind of agency, so we stopped short of hectoring him, threatening to abduct his family, etc. His plan, he said, was to look for wish-list jobs now, and broaden his search later if that didn't work. Sounds like a reasonable strategy, no?
Trouble is, this opportunity won't be around in a month, and we don't get vacancies like this too often. In a month's time, comparable opportunities, if they exist, might be forty miles away - and this guy will be asking for jobs within a twenty mile radius. At which point he might consider reflecting that, had he been a little more prudent, he might already have an offer for a job a mere twenty miles away.
True, he (or we) might find something within walking distance from his house over the next month. In which case, all he would have had to do was withdraw the application to the twenty-miler. Submitting his CV to our client today wouldn't have bound him to anything; it would merely have broadened his range of possibilities, at a time when plenty of people would happily commute much further than twenty miles in order to have a secure job.
My advice to people being made redundant? Put yourself in your own future shoes, as it were. Be as flexible now as you think you will be in a month's time. If you think you'd look at a twenty mile commute in a month, don't rule it out now. If you'd look at jobs forty miles from where you live in a month's time, don't close doors on opportunities now. If you will be facing a life on the street, sleeping in skips and trapping cats for food, and would happily accept any job, then don't rule anything out now. Remember, an application doesn't bind you to accept a job - you'd have to be shortlisted, interviewed and given an offer first, and even then start-dates are negotiatiable.
Of course, if you definitely wouldn't consider a twenty mile commute in a month's time - for whatever reason - you've no reason to consider it now. But bear in mind that opportunities aren't raining down from the heavens at the moment; in tough times, flexibility is strength.
cee eff: