Author:
Peter Suchy
Unemployment is a painful
experience. At times it can feel as though no one wants you. You can
feel that you will never get a job. You can feel like you're going to be
stuck in your present unemployed state forever.
I know the feeling of unemployment. I have been unemployed before, and I
wrote about one of my experiences in the book How to Build Wealth and at
more length in the book Gainful Employment. Unemployment can be painful,
but one of the most overlooked truths about unemployment is that
unemployment can be an incredibly profitable opportunity.
When I was unemployed, I did the only thing that I could do -- besides
keep looking for a job. I made myself more valuable. That is right; I
became more valuable while I was unemployed. How did I do that? I
increased my education.
If you have read the book Gainful Employment, then you will know that
there are four qualities that employers look for. Employers look for
experience, education, personality, and character. If you have the four
qualities that employers seek, then you have value and employers want
you. It does not matter if the unemployment rate is 38%. If you have the
experience, education, personality, and character that an employer
needs, then you will be hired and you will be retained. Why? You meet
the needs of your employer.
Knowing this, I chose to increase my education. I was actively seeking
employment, but it was not forthcoming. So, I set out to learn more
about my field. As my field was computers, and more specifically network
administration, I asked the question "what education would help me to be
more marketable to an employer?" The answer that I arrived at was
Microsoft's MCSE certification. That certification consisted of multiple
exams that, when passed, would confer the certification. The MCSE was
and still is a certification that employers actively seek when they want
to recruit a Network Administrator. I believed that if I could attain
the MCSE certification that I would have an easier time finding the job
that I desired. I already had a Bachelor's degree in Information
Technology, but I knew that the certification also carried a lot of
weight as it showed specifics that an employer would need.
So, I set out studying for the certification. How did I do it? I did it
cheaply. Remember, I was unemployed. I did not have the cash to spend to
send myself for formal training. I did have enough cash to buy the books
to study, however. And, that was what I did. I bought about a dozen or
so books related to the certification and read them. I devoted myself to
getting that certification and getting it cheaply because I knew that it
would help me in the future.
Yet, don't let me fool you. Of all things that I've ever done, this
might be the single most painful thing I've ever done. I have
experienced no shortage of mentally challenging obstacles, but this was
probably one of the worst, if not the worst. Why? I was unemployed. I
could not find a job and it felt like life was passing by. I was already
dissatisfied and depressed about not having a job. What could only make
it "better?" Reading dry, boring, technical manuals -- how satisfying!
Oh, and making maters worse, I failed 1 out of 3 tests and had to take
them over. Instead of 7 tests, I had to take 10 -- and I had to pay to
take 10 of them.
Still, I did attain the certification. What kept me going? Probably
desperation -- and this is important. I would NEVER have read those
books and attained that MCSE certification without being unemployed. If
I were employed I would have had far better things to do with my time
that sit in a room and read boring technical books so that I could pay
money to take challenging technical exams that I might not even pass for
a certification that I would have probably had to have quit my
then-current employer to get paid for.
That is why I can say that my unemployment was a golden opportunity.
Unemployment FORCED me to do something that I would never have done. It
forced me to further educate myself. It was mentally very painful and
dissatisfying, but it was absolutely a positive thing in the long run,
because I made the most of it. Within 3 months of finishing my
certification, I had been hired to a position that required me to use
the MCSE certification that I had acquired. If I had no MCSE
certification, my unemployment would have continued, because I would NOT
have been hired for the job.
If you do not both understand and feel that experience, education,
personality, and character are the qualities that an employer looks for,
then you will have a hard time wanting to better yourself while you are
unemployed. It is so easy to fall into the trap of wasting time and
feeling depressed. Yet, because I knew that bettering my education would
make me more valuable to near and more future employers, I was able to
set a goal. That did not mean that it was easy to motivate myself to
study and pass the exams, but I had a goal that I could focus on. Even
though I did not feel like studying, I was able to force myself to study
because I knew that I would get a return on my effort and there was very
little else that was productive for me to do.
If you find yourself unemployed, or underemployed, earnestly seek to
increase your value to your next employer. It does not have to be your
education, for you could do something that would improve your
experience. Maybe there is something that you could not have done while
you were employed that you can now do that you are unemployed. Maybe it
would be so valuable that it will be better in the long-run that you
were unemployed, rather than working. Maybe you'll look back in the
future and say, like I did, "I sure am happy that I was unemployed, for
I owe a portion of my career success to the things that I was forced to
do while I was unemployed."
If you do not give it any thought, you might err and believe that
unemployment has to be comprised of wasted time, depression, and endless
job searches. After reading this you should see that unemployment could
be one of the best things to happen to you, if you use it wisely.
About the Author:
Peter Suchy is the author of the books Gainful Employment and How to
Build Wealth. To read sample chapters of his books or to view his blog,
visit PracticalAdvice.info
Article Source:
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Unemployment - A Golden Opportunity