Solving the Job Crisis One Job at a Time

Blogs are supposed to be personal, right? So allow me to personalize. Let’s consider the plight of one Megan Berry, 22 years old today, graduating from Stanford in two months with close to straight As.

Megan wants a job. More specifically, she wants a job related to social media and Internet marketing in the Silicon Valley.

In any normal year, this would have been no problem. Google would have snapped her up. Yahoo would have. So would a couple of dozen other companies. She’s an opportunity. A “fuzzy” political science major who won Web awards for programming Cold Fusion databases before she reached puberty, and did serious Web programming work for darfurgenocide.org while still in high school; she’s kind of a bridge, a writer and marketing type who understands the depths of programming. She has her own blog, and blogs at Brazen Careerist and Huffington Post. She’s been on Facebook for four years. She’s on Twitter. She’s on LinkedIn.

But then came the downturn. And the worst year for graduating seniors since sometime in the 1930s. And Megan’s got some possibilities, some things might still work out — one of which came directly from Twitter, by the way — but we’re passing mid April now, and she’s still available.

Think of this strategically. She’s as young as most college graduates, but in her chosen world of social media and Internet marketing, that whole world started about the same time she got into it. So maybe she has something special in the strengths and weaknesses category, something that might help even in this toughest of all years to get a job.

All her information, links to her various blog posts, and all the rest are (right where they should be for a young social media marketing person) at meganberry.com.

Comments

  • Don Sabatini says:

    Lets hope this job crisis problem gets solved soon.

  • VickyH says:

    Tim,

    I have left this same comment on Megan Berry’s post also.

    There is another non-profit on twitter that is helping people find jobs, they’re @JobAngels.

    “Job Angels mission is to help bring people together in a community setting where each person commits to a single goal: to help just one person find gainful employment.” — Job Angels mission statement

    I am a Guardian Angel volunteer, mainly supporting the Linked-In group, but have written a full post on how to effectively use their services or volunteer. http://sn.im/fkt7j – Job Angels – Twitter For a Social Cause (Part 3).

    Please leave a comment and let me know what you think.

    Thanks,
    VickyH

    • Tim Berry says:

      Thanks for the note about @jobangels Vicky … I guess I’m a guardian angel volunteer too, although I didn’t know it. Your comment led me to the remarkable parents blog, to see your post, and I have to add I like what’s happening there! It’s a nice combination of very attractive look and excellent content. And I share your priorities too, glad to see it written clearly. Tim

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