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Article Title: There is No Bigger Job Market Than These The United States of 
America
Author: Jack Kim
Category: Career
Word Count: 753
Keywords: job market, huge job market, relocating to find better job
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.distributeyourarticles.com
------------------ ARTICLE START ------------------

Various studies show being unemployed, or being fired, as being one of the most 
stressful and traumatic events in our lives.  No wonder, a job is more than a 
paycheck and we all know this.  The job becomes us, it defines us and gives us 
value, or at least to some of us, it does.  When we lose all that in one brief 
meeting in the office (and it always comes as shock, even the long awaited 
layoffs), it is any wonder we enter into various stages of denial, anger, 
shame, and so forth.

But here is the thing, and I love Bill Belichick for immortalizing it, "it is 
what it is."  And if current trends continue, it will be a long road to being 
employed again.  I have read articles that state the average job search now 
last in excess of 33 weeks.  That is a very long time, to state the obvious.

So the roller coaster ride in your head is going to be moving full force, but 
you do have the option to get off.  I remember as kid, because I was geek, 
having my pants pulled down in school (it would explain my introverted, self 
conscious belief that I have three heads).  As I stood there, I learned a very 
important lesson.  When you are standing there with your fruit of the looms 
showing for all to see; all you can do is, pull your pants back up.

And you must pull your pants back up.  To launch a successful campaign to find 
a job, a better job, you must have focus and act with discipline.  That 
requires pulling your pants up.  Profound people from Dr. Frankel to Stephen 
Covey have taught that we are creatures of choice.  The stimuli of life may act 
on us, but we can dictate how we respond.  We are creatures of choice, not 
creatures of instinct.

Thank goodness, because being creatures of choice; our horizon is limitless.  
Your horizon is limitless, but I will not deny that the choices before you are 
hard.  

One such difficult choice is whether to relocate or not.  Regardless of your 
home condition or situation, you must explore this option well.  There is an 
old saying, "you must fish where the fishes are."  

This is true even if you feel that where you are has a strong job market.  If 
you have been looking for some time and are not getting any bites, it is not a 
strong job market for you.  Where I work currently, I initially drove from 
Orlando to Austin to attend a niche job fair that I felt had potential.  I 
drove straight through for about 20 plus hours, I think, to attend this one day 
job fair.  And I hate job fairs, though as I wrote in a different article, 
niche job fairs are a wholly different creature.

Because I was open to "where the fishes are," I ended up taking a position in 
Maryland, instead of the one in Chicago.  Did we want to move from Orlando?  We 
had no real attachments there but the salient point is that looking at all 50 
States opened a huge job market for me to look at.

There is a sequential sense of things when it comes to looking for a job.  The 
wrong sequence would be to make a resume, or update one, and begin applying to 
every help wanted ad or online posting that matches your last job.  And when 
that does not work, you rewrite your resume or look for services that can 
formulate a better cover letter or resume for you.  Of course, there are the 
job fairs that feature 135 companies but attract 5,000 hopefuls.

Yeah, that is not good.

A better sequence is to examine who you are and what you do well.   Determine 
your skills and analyze how you want to utilize those skills.  You start by 
working from the inside out.  And that inside is you.  The next step is 
determining where and what you want to do that matches your skills and 
interests.

And here is my favorite mantra, "go where your research takes you."  If your 
research tells you to drive 20 plus hours to a job fair half way across the 
country, then do it.  Staying where you and continuing to do what you have been 
doing expecting (or hoping for ) different results defines something, but 
probably not success.

So, look at all your options, but most important, look at the whole of these 
the United States of America and find your next job.

Although not a job getting guru, Jack's been around the block a couple of time. 
 So, come over and take a look at some of the strategies, tips and advice, a 
few laughs and a couple of words of wisdom that he's dispensing, plus his great 
list of resources at http://www.LandingOnYourFeet.com.
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