I Have No References or Work Experience, Now What?

Volunteer Fire FightersCara asked: “I have no work experience, and therefore, no professional references. What should I do (other than not say that to a potential employer)?”

A lot of millennials are in the same situation she is, I’d like to share my response publicly.

You might not have any work references, but you most certainly have academic references or people who can speak to your character.

You might have a favorite professor (college) or teacher (high school) whose class you excelled in, consistently performed well, and so on.  To this day, my best references come from my favorite marketing professor.  I graduated in 2007.  Think about teammates on sports teams you might have been a part of or classmates who worked with you on projects, anyone who can speak well of you and isn’t directly related to you.

If you are still coming up short – find a mentor, volunteer position, open source project, or something else you can work on for a length of time. Pick something interesting – like habitat for humanity or volunteering at a local Better Business Bureau. Over time you will gain someone who can speak as a reference, whether it’s a volunteer co-worker or the coordinator or even the recipient of the volunteer work.

No Work Experience wasn’t always this scary, but the economy that we’re facing at the moment is rife with peril for new entrants. My advice? Do as much networking as you can – get involved on MeetUp with a professional organization, do an Ignite speech – hell, start up an Ignite group if your town doesn’t have one.

Do anything and everything you can – claw for every inch.  Collaborate, connect, and dream – but most importantly, DO SOMETHING.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Blogplay

Post to Twitter Post to Facebook Post to StumbleUpon

This entry was posted in General Ideas, Job Search Ideas and tagged , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.
blog comments powered by Disqus
  • Back To Blog!
  • Psychotic Resumes 101

    Psychotic Resumes is a Gen-Y (Millennial) job survival guide created by Nick Armstrong to help new professionals build stronger resumes and cover letters so they can find a better job. It's our goal to help Gen-Y do better at interviews and on the job, promoting strong leadership, entrepreneurship, and common sense.

    Want to contribute to Psychotic Resumes? Introduce yourself.

  • Connect With Psychotic Resumes

    Psychotic Resumes on Facebook Nick of Psychotic Resumes on Twitter Nick of Psychotic Resumes on LinkedIn
  • Psychotic Resumes Contributors

  • Subscribe to Psychotic Resumes

    Subscribe
  • Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner

  • Psychotic Resumes TV

  • Flash MP3 Player JW

    Here is the Music Player. You need to installl flash player to show this cool thing!