- What are the most common mistakes
unemployed job seekers make?
Long - term
unemployed job seekers make up 37 percent of unemployed individuals.
Not exact matches
This survey was conducted online within the U.S. by Harris Poll on behalf of CareerBuilder among 374 HR professionals (employed full - time, work in Human Resources and use, have primary or shared decision -
making about the Human Resource system at their company) and 319
job seekers (
unemployed, employed full - time or part - time and have applied for a
job in the past six months) ages 18 and over between June 2 and June 25, 2014 (percentages for some questions are based on a subset, based on their responses to certain questions).
Numerous
job ads compiled by Quinn's office from sites like Craigslist and careerbuilder.com explicitly state that
unemployed job -
seekers need not apply,
making it all the more difficult for those on the hunt to get back to work, Quinn said.
If a
job seeker has been laid - off from a
job where s / he
made $ 52,000 per year they are losing $ 1,000 in income each week they remain
unemployed or a total of $ 36,000 if out for the national average.
Through our dedication to accessibility we have expanded our services to reach a client demographic that may not have otherwise engaged our services, including new immigrations / IEPS, at - risk youth, under - educated, untrained and / or skill - lacking
job -
seekers,
unemployed or under - employed individuals and people
making career transitions.
Here is something else
job seekers fail to consider... If you have lost a
job where you were
making $ 50,000 a year — you are losing $ 961.52 every week you remain
unemployed.