But on the whole, the strategy of applying, reaching out to the recruiter/hiring manager, and showing up with your interest has resulted in better outcomes, at least in my experience.
Got one rejection, two "thanks but we're actually not hiring for this position anymore" and silence from the rest. In the past it's usually been no problem getting interviews and offers within a few weeks. Nothing this time. I last looked for a job just last March (2022) and it was very easy. Now it's the complete opposite.
I've also started to apply for non web jobs (in random fields) and not getting even a rejection for those either.
I'm thinking it might be time to start Doordashing.
I'm 7+ YoE senior engineer working in the embedded space.
I even have generic third party recruiters ghosting me these days, _after_ having me put a time into their goofy Calendly link.
You know the kind. You check their LinkedIn out and they have a B.A. in Library Sciences or something. Yeah. Those guys have the upper hand now.
- Decided there was no future at my then current job in June
- Applied to a handful of places with no response
- Followed up with a recruiter who had been pinging me for a year. Turned out I was a great fit (aligned experience in math, data engineering, fintech), 3 rounds of interviews, accepted job offer in early July
Would probably still be looking if the stars hadn't aligned (new job is great so far)
I got laid off 2.5 months ago. Decided to take a 2 months to center myself. Ive dropped about 12 applications now, had 1 interview at second round. Another contact me, then ghost me, and 2 "sorry you arent a fit", the rest have been silence.
Im a Senior devops/automation engineer, 20 year career in some IT field.
I'm an engineering manager with more than 13 years of experience, web dev for much longer.
I've been applying since March, as my company started showing a lot of signs of toxicity and financial troubles. Last month, less than a year from their previous layoffs, they did another round and was part of it.
The majority of the jobs I've applied for didn't answer. A mere 1-2% replied. I had the luck to go through the full interview process with a handful (4 since March) only to be discarded at the very end.
The market is definitely over-saturated. To the point that companies have become extremely picky and failing a small thing might mean getting cut off.
I'm currently on hold since August was really flat, and will resume in September. Let's see...
I’ve had many recruiters talk with me for 30 minutes to an hour and then go dark as they have maybe 3, 4 roles to fill and everything needs to be perfect.
Couldn’t have come at a worse time for me, as I had to take 2 (well prepared) years off for health reasons, thinking my experience which is still quite relevant would help me get back in. I’ve done a few consulting gigs but those have mostly dried up. It’s a state of constantly lowering expectations in terms of salary and role, and doing side projects as I can find the motivation.
I've 16 years of experience in IT and applied to 27 jobs since March. 17 rejections, 8 didn't respond. With the 2 remaining jobs I'm in the final stage but there are other candidates and the companies can choose the best one, I don't have high hopes.
I feel horrible, it's really taxing on me, the waiting time between interviews, checking emails hoping to get an update just to get notified that people are on vacation, everything is delayed. The companies have multiple candidates to choose from, they are not in a hurry.
Tbh I think one major reason I got this job was that I can communicate fluently in english, both written and spoken, and they want that people can communicate with the possible stakeholders because the company language is English. Many of the interviewers said my communication was very good, as I just spoke my thoughts aloud and explained everything.
They said that large portion of the candidates can barely understand what the Leetcode question asks and spend long time just reading, also most people take 30+ minutes to fill two functions that is just basically react setState (and they have react in their CV). I was quite surprised really.
Although, if I had USA salary, the decision would be more difficult for sure, but now it is obvious. My visa is being processed now, and my plan is to stay at least until I get PR in the said country.
The job market seems particularly bad in the USA from what I have read, in Sweden it is much worse than before but I would not say as bad as USA, but obviously the salary isn't as great either. We can hope the market gets better..
If nothing is holding you down and it is looking really bad, it might be worth looking abroad if you can accept the lower salary but also relatively lower costs. I also had some interviews in Japan and quite a few companies there seem to be willing to sponsor the visa and take care of that, also the interviews not as hard as American companies. The more global companies like LINE etc seem to have relatively ok salaries compared to the local companies, and the culture is not as bad.
I've been involved in hiring for a few companies since 2018 ish, and I've noticed a really sharp decline in the quality of candidates this year. Recently I have interviewed no end of candidates who have 5+ years experience, made redundant and seem to think they can walk into a job with zero effort.
Some recent examples that I am slightly changing for anonymity:-
- a candidate could not remember how to do a for loop in python
- a candidate told me they forgot what the job they applied for was and who we are
- the only question a candidate asked me at the end of the interview was 'can I work on my personal laptop?' We are a multi billion pound company, not a startup.
If these were graduates I can forgive some of the poor interviewing skills, but these were for mid/senior positions, sometimes leads!
I would like to stress, there are some fantastic candidates coming through too, and I am deeply sorry for anyone who has lost their job. The challenge though as a hiring manager right now is wading through the vast numbers of candidates who really put in zero effort, and there are a lot of them.
I would say recruiting has dropped off 80%. In the boom times I’d get like 5-10 emails from recruiters a week, and even a couple phone calls. Now it’s down to 1-2 a week. Still not like before, but has noticeably picked up from earlier this year.
I've seen better times
truly remote jobs are rare now