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It’s kind of interesting. When my sister graduated from college in 2003, the speaker mentioned it was the worst time ever to try and find a job. A couple years later in 2005, I heard the same thing when I graduated. I heard it at various other times over the years. And now today it is still the worst time ever to find a job.

After hearing the same line, fairly consistently, for nearly 25 years, I’m having a hard time taking it seriously.

Companies only hiring people with experience is far from a new problem.

Back in the late 90s, I struggled to get my first job that actually used my studied skills. Yes, I had a job - delivering pizza - but I was desperately trying to get a job _coding_, and in-between virtue-signallers only hiring people of a specific race and the vast majority of companies expecting years of experience, it took quite a while and I really only found a position because the place I studied at gets actively involved in the process.

Yes, the trend of trying to replace entry-level jobs with AI doesn't help, but this isn't a new problem. Few businesses have the foresight to train up employees, and a lot are understandably disillusioned by entry-level churn, where you train people, and the moment they have skills, they skip off to another company, usually for more money - when losing that person costs the company more than if they'd just pay them a market-related salary.

AI isn't helping, but it's far from a new problem - it's just exacerbated by the corporate greed chasing ever more profit, where the easiest way to see a short-term financial gain is to cut salaries.

There are three career stages. First you're not qualified enough, then for a moment you're overqualified, and at last you're too old. The last stage occurs few decades before statutory retirement age.
From my own, local experience: the job is there, they just don't have the money to hire someone to do it. But the need is there.
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What we used to think of as an entry level job is gone. The pieces of the role are slowly being absorbed into tooling and automation.

Entry level candidates must get some midlevel skills & experience to become hireable.

The education system is inadequate right now, so this means building a portfolio.

Fortunately there’s an infinitely patient teacher you can lean on: AI! Plus an insanely good resource in the form of youtube.

It’s never been a better time to be a self-starter.

And it’s never been a worse time to be hat-in-hand, out there begging for a job.