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ADVICEGUEST COMMENT: To Lehman refugees, a headhunter perspective18 September 2008By Dominic Connor COMMENTSWhat an excellent article. Well done Dominic. Read all comments »Firstly, I know it wasn’t your fault personally, LB was a vast organisation, and we’ve seen that size is not the same as strength. Your CV is not poisoned by these events, and after you’ve allowed a short pause to get your head back together, move forward, because if you don’t then you really will be lost. I’m old enough to have been through bad times before, and the recurrent pattern is that the real losers are the people who fail to work their way back. Everyone has career breaks, this is yours. Wipeouts leave spaces for determined people to move forward faster. Even if this sounds like crap to you, it is necessary for you to think this way. I’m habitually contemptuous of psychobabble but it really is the case that going passive is the worst thing you can do. Look hard at what you’ve got to sell. As a headhunter I have learned that a significant percentage of your market value is the brands that have endorsed you. Lehman employees that I’ve met are distinctly above average, and I know that is a common opinion. To get hired by Lehman in the first place, you must have shown yourself to be smart and able to deliver. As it happens, LB turned me down for a job some years ago, so I know first-hand that the bar is set high…. I’ve written When it hits the fan, job hunting in a difficult market, which is freely available to those who need it. The short version is that you need to work on your network and really put the effort into a total rebuild of your CV. Write down everything you can do because the odds are that you will have to move diagonally, and yes, that may have to be diagonally backwards. I do mean everything you can do – to do this properly needs at least three passes, and there is no reason why you can’t meet up with people in the same situation to share ideas on this. I don’t know how long or deep this downturn will be, I do know it will end. The most common failing of people coming back after a break is that they don’t seem to have done anything with the time, which implies they’re not much of a self starter. To an extent, it doesn’t really matter what you did, as long as it was purposeful and can be spun as not just watching daytime TV waiting for the phone to ring. It’s hard to call which of your skills will get you a new job, but you need to embrace this downtime for maintenance and upgrade. Hit the books, maybe take a course, and talk to other refugees about the business, keep that part of your brain going. It never hurts to help others where you can, I’ve got past some of my more stupid career decisions by people remembering that I once helped them; others forget, but the mean return is still good. Objectively, you still have value. Hold that thought in the days to come. Dominic Connor is a director of P&D Recruitment.
COMMENTSnotafan, HR & Recruitment, Thu 18 Sep 08Who is this numpty?
Rupert, FX & Money Markets, Thu 18 Sep 08What an excellent article. Well done Dominic. Add your comment »Tarquin, Hedge Funds, Thu 18 Sep 08notafan has a point Dominic.
bc, Derivatives, Thu 18 Sep 08No headhunter in the world can reactivate hiring to the other banks again. I think if you are out of work now with whole desks on the market, there is going to be a bit of a wait
Wizard of EC1, Research, Thu 18 Sep 08I think Dominic is talking sense and he’s not saying there are loads of jobs out there. Now is the time for LB employees ( and all the others) to rebuild and rebuilding means action, not sitting around sipping from a bottle of cheap whiskey ( by all means do that for a week or two). Do sit down and work out the fundamentals and plan to do the crazy things you never had the time to do - if you want to write the great English novel, then crack on, let's face it, you don't have much competition. The market will recover and there will be a skills shortage because a large chunk of talent will have left the industry. The IB industry has a history of appalling HR planning, anything longer than 3 months out is just too hard to plan. Better to come back refreshed and with a sense that you achieved something. But don’t think that by splurging your CV across the City that you are taking action, in the present climate it is a waste of time - why beat yourself up and deplete your energy and motivation? Add your comment »jessica, HR & Recruitment, Thu 18 Sep 08As a headhunter, I am inclined to mistrust anyone who starts a sentence with "as a headhunter".... Add your comment »Tarquin, Hedge Funds, Thu 18 Sep 08As a professional, I am inclined to mistrust anyone who starts a sentence with "as a headhunter".... Add your comment »anon, Quantitative Analytics, Thu 18 Sep 08I’ve written When it hits the fan, job hunting in a difficult market, which is freely available to those who need it.
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