TalentEgg Trends

Today’s Talent, Tomorrow’s Leaders

Knowledge Hub For Employers, Career Educators And Coaches

Category: Uncategorized (page 32 of 47)

Happy New Year from TalentEgg!

The TalentEgg team wishes you all a very Happy New Year and all the best in 2009!

It’s very exciting that TalentEgg is now in its second year of operation. 2008 was great, but 2009 is going to be even better! We’re looking forward to continuing to connect students and new grads with meaningful entry-level jobs, internships and summer jobs.

Before we leave last year in the dust, however, I want to congratulate TalentEgg’s founder and president, Lauren Friese, on being named a 2008 “Woman of the Year” over at She Takes on the World, which is a lifestyle and business blog for female entrepreneurs.

Lauren is recognized for her hard work getting TalentEgg up and running, and for her continuous efforts to make TalentEgg so successful. Way to go, Lauren! You definitely took on the world in 2008 and I’m sure I can speak for everyone when I say we can’t wait to see what you accomplish with TalentEgg in 2009.

Recent grads are the silver lining

If your network of family and friends is anything like mine, it has undoubtedly been affected by the current economic situation.

While catching up with family over the holidays, I’ve heard a handful of stories from some who have already been laid off and others who are crossing their fingers while co-workers with less seniority are let go.

It was strange to be comparing job searching strategies and resumé writing tips with my relatively wealthy uncle who is in his 50s and has been jobless since October. He’s taking a resumé workshop, filled mostly with other middle-aged workers who have recently lost their jobs as well, while he decides if he wants to go back to work or retire early.

My cousin’s husband recently lost his sales job as well. He was successful enough that my cousin quit her job earlier this year to stay at home with their two young children. Within a few months, they went from being a stable single-income family to a no-income family that has to put plans of moving into a bigger home on the back burner.

I know they’re lucky and things are a lot worse for some others who have been laid off.

Hopefully things will turn around soon, but “experts say” things are only going to get worse in the new year:

As bad as the past few months were, even the rosiest of economic forecasts shows on average Canadians will get poorer in 2009, and many – perhaps as many as 200,000 additional workers – will lose their jobs as the economic recession deepens.

However, we should look at the types of jobs that are being lost. Some are demanding government cash to stay afloat: manufacturing, particularly the auto sector, along with the financial sector, is hemorrhaging jobs. Forestry, retail, travel and tourism, and real estate aren’t great industries to be in either, if you believe all the hype.

But things aren’t all bad.

Currently, Canada’s unemployment rate is sitting at 6.3 per cent and it’s predicted to rise to eight per cent in 2009. Looking back to previous recessions, however, we saw the unemployment rate reach as high as 10 per cent in the early 1990s and 13 per cent in 1980-81.

In fact, some industries, such as IT, the skilled trades and health care, can’t find enough people to fill their jobs. As an educated, motivated work force with comparatively low salary expectations, recent grads are probably in the best position of any group of job candidates in the current economy.

TalentEgg itself is a great indicator that employers are still hiring for a lot of entry-level roles, as Lauren said almost a month ago. TalentEgg wouldn’t exist if they weren’t. New entry-level roles are added to the site almost daily. In particular, agriculture, energy, engineering, health care, management, marketing, sales and technology jobs seem to be the most in demand.

Brazen Careerist founder Penelope Trunk recently posted some encouraging evidence that young workers are holding their own in the current economy:

  • jobs for candidates with little to no experience are increasing
  • there have been and still are plenty of entry-level jobs to be had
  • the unemployment rate for workers with a post-secondary education is much lower than that of the general population

She says “that young people shouldn’t be thrown by the bad news that old people are pushing. Things are not that bad if you’re beginning your career.”

A good indicator of these points might be that while everyone else is cutting back, Gen Y is still spending.

What do you think about the current job market for new grads? Should new grads be worried about finding jobs in 2009, or is Penelope Trunk right?

A day in the life of TalentEgg

Today has been a funny day within an incredible week. i.e. the best week we’ve ever had at TalentEgg in a number of ways.

Today, the highlight is ‘decorating the Egg Carton’, and as I write this, I’m realizing a major oversight- in our decorations planning, we did not include a physical egg carton. We will have to rectify that situation (note to self).

Anyway, Tina is currently very busy decorating our new whiteboard with special TalentEgg-coloured dry-erase markers and with content such as “Eggcelent Progress”, which will track our growth week-to-week, and “Goals to Hatch”, where we’ll measure key metrics we work towards achieving each week (one of them is “Client Touching”).

I’m pretty busy supervising that effort.

We have also acquired construction paper and markers, which will be used to create The TalentEgg Cloud 9 project (as well as for general colouring and creative activities).

Daniel has been posting aproximately 100 million new jobs over the past few hours and sending out a couple of e-mail blasts to boot.

We’re kind of annoyed that he’s not helping with our very important work instead (colouring in the office).

Allow me to introduce myself

I’m CassandraTalentEgg’s online community manager and the newest addition to the TalentEgg blog.

From now on, I will be contributing to the blog and to the Learn section of the main website at least a few times a week, as well as chatting with people all over the Internet about student and new grad jobs, among other things. And TalentEgg, of course!

Currently, I’m a fourth-year print journalism student at Ryerson University in Toronto, Ont.

I had the great pleasure of working at TalentEgg over the summer as a sales and marketing intern. Although I had to give up that position to start my last year of school in September, I’ve stayed in-the-know about all things TalentEgg and I’ve been dying to be part of this team again.

Thanks for having me back, and I’m looking forward to writing for the website and blog

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