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Things I Learned During My Year Long Unemployment

December 31st, 2009 · 8 Comments · career, linkedin, networking, social networking, Twitter

I just signed an offer letter for a small company looking to do big things here in Rochester. (In fact it is about 3 minutes from my house! Bye Bye Jefferson Road!) I had been out of work for a little over one year. That is a long time.

I had/have some immediate thoughts on what I/my family did to survive this past year. Yes…survive. I am deliberately using that word.

  1. Get your finances under control. In a hurry. We went to Defcon 1 on day 2 of my unemployment. What does D1 look like? It looks like cutting all non-essential spending. Satellite bill cut down dramatically. (Come on…you need SOME tv.) Meal planning started. No dinners out. This let us keep Family Friday Pizza Night.
  2. Don’t let it affect your kids. Our goal was to not disrupt our daughter’s life. We had to cut violin lessons. (I think she was happy about this actually). But I went the extra mile in ensuring she was living a balanced life.
  3. Exercise. Every day. We joined the local YMCA and practically LIVED there. This was $90 a month WELL spent. Especially in the summer. We ROCKED that place. And continue to do so. We extracted more ROI out of that $90 than anyone. :)
  4. Work your network. I say this with the assumption that you already have a network built. If you didn’t have a network in place – an ACTIVE network by the end of 2008 – you are beyond screwed. I was volunteering at a place in the Summer. It didn’t work out. I got a new job earlier this week. BOTH came through my EXISTING network. I battle with the networking gurus all the time on constantly expanding your network. I like to grow organically and farm, farm, farm my relationships.
  5. Have an internet presence. This helps with number 4 but it also helps you CLOSE the deal. I could SEE the hits on my Linkedin page. I could see the traffic on this site jump after I talked to people. I can’t tell you the number of times people have referenced my site, my linkedin, or my twitter (which I don’t use all that much) during conversations. It works.
  6. Volunteer – work with kids. It will humble you. I worked a lot with my daughter’s second grade class. I worked with a non-profit that worked with kids teaching them entrepreneurial skills. I coached a group of 8 and 9 year olds in a flag football league. It gives you perspective. It will keep your head on straight.
  7. Open yourself up. Possibly the hardest part. Under stress, I tend to hunker down and get inside myself. Fight that urge. Let people love you. Let people help you. And most importantly ASK for their help. So easy yet near impossible. Trust me. I know.
  8. Learn. Every day. I had a teacher in highschool. Freshman year. All boys school. Priest. Taught Latin. (Now you have some insight about me. :) Only man I have ever really feared. But he said something profound. He told us to make sure we read something every day. Even if it is the comics. When you read – you learn. I made sure I was using my gray matter. I took on projects that FORCED me to learn.
  9. Stay positive. As the great prophet Bob Marley used to say – “Everythings gonna be all right.” You have to keep a positive mental attitude. Even when you are bruised and battered. You HAVE to get up. You have to put your helmet on. And you have to go attack that rock and keep pushing it up the hill. Because ONE DAY it will not roll back down on top of you.

I hope this helps someone. If you are in this place – talk to me. I get it. I can help. Give me some love on this post – add your own tips – crab at me about how wrong I am.

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8 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Steven Pofcher // Dec 31, 2009 at 7:46 pm

    #4 — I agree.
    Network quality, not quantity. Gotta hunt, but farming is more important.
    Example: I keep getting LinkedIn requests with the LinkedIn boilerplate verbage, then I never hear from the requester again. Where is the value?

    Steven Pofcher
    stevenpofcher@aol.com

  • 2 mikelally // Dec 31, 2009 at 10:28 pm

    Steven! Thanks for the comment. There can be some value. Emphasis on the “some”. In the past, I had connected to some LIONS (Linkedin Open Networkers) which allows me to expand my search capabilities. LIONS go for sheer quantity. We’re talking thousands of connections. I support adding one or two of these toplinked people. It opens things up for you. It will help you find more people and jobs. I am a fan of quality though. I try to keep my connections to people that I “know”. Ive met them, worked with them, interacted with them in some way. Thats just me though.

  • 3 Mollie // Jan 4, 2010 at 2:19 am

    Mike! Congrats on the new gig! Can’t wait to hear about it.

  • 4 Doug McSorley // Jan 4, 2010 at 8:23 pm

    Great advice Mike. You’ve learned alot over your one year journey. Keep going strong my friend.

    DM

  • 5 Wendy Boyce // Jan 8, 2010 at 2:15 am

    Hey Mike – Great great post for the start of the year (and my first visit to your blog via Doug Mc). Many of those things I have faced myself in recent months (minus the unemployment) – but I absolutely love your outlook, and completely agree with the idea of cultivating your existing relationships within your network. Through those your network will grow organically – so true (and the same applies to the manner in which we build strategies for marketing websites).

    I learned the networking lesson the hard way – started out with saddles blazing and grew it too large too fast and lost track. I have a select bunch of relationships now I work to grow and I know that will gradually expand for me over time.

    All good stuff – I look forward to following your blog this year.
    Peace,
    @SocialPMChick

  • 6 mikelally // Jan 8, 2010 at 11:04 pm

    @socialpmchick – welcome Wendy! I think we may have even met…although I am not 100% sure. I hope you enjoy reading! Thanks for the comment!

  • 7 Father Olaus // Jan 13, 2010 at 7:00 pm

    Tempus fugit et nihil revenium… you’ll be stronger tomorrow.

  • 8 Graeme Roberts // Sep 24, 2010 at 9:59 pm

    I love this post. Wise, honest, direct, and smart, like Mike Lally.

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