The unemployment rate continues to be just plain ugly across the country. The U6 level of unemployment is now at 17 percent.
U6 is a broad-gauge measurement that takes into account those who are involuntarily working part-time because they can't find full-time work and those who have given up looking for work out of sheer frustration.
The New York Times recently ran an article titled
$13 an Hour? 500 Sign Up, 1 Wins a Job.
The upshot of the story is that a trucking company in Burns Harbor, Ind., posted an opening for an administrative assistant to do data entry and make photocopies.
Between 300 and 500 applications poured in overnight. The applicants included a a former I.B.M. business analyst with 18 years experience; a former director of human resources; and a master's degree holder with a dozen years on the job at accounting firm Deloitte & Touche.
We've all heard similar horror stories. It's been a brutal time out there in the job market. If you are unemployed, it feels like it will never get better. But don't start having doubts about yourself as a potential hire. There are opportunities right now.
CNNMoney.com reports the
Best Jobs in America are the following:
1. Systems engineer
2. Physician assistant
3. College professor
4. Nurse practitioner
5. Information technology project manager
Jobs like these may all require more education on your part. As the economy flexes, you must flex too and obtain new skills, new training, a new trade, different certifications or a new profession.
It is very rare that the job training and skills you enter the workforce with will carry you through an entire lifetime. The typical person now has
four distinct careers over a working lifetime. We're not talking about jobs, of which most people have 15; we're talking about four different careers per person!
Clark himself is on his third career. He began as a social worker, then started a travel agency chain and now works in the broadcast industry. So he has one more in front of him. What might that be?