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As interview coaches, we spend a lot of time telling our clients that networking is the secret weapon of the job search. It’s how they get their foot in the door, understand the shifting reality of their industry, and align themselves with what decision-makers are truly looking for.
I’m here to tell you: we must practice what we preach.
Formats, expectations, evaluation criteria—they’re all shifting constantly (thanks, AI.). If our coaching is going to be credible, relevant, and effective, we cannot afford to rely on expired information or secondhand generalities. We need current, specific, and firsthand intelligence from the people who actually do the hiring.
A strong network isn’t a nice-to-have. It is core to our ethical responsibility to deliver accurate insight to our clients. We simply cannot coach clients to compete successfully if we don’t know how the game is played and what it takes to win.
My own network has come to the rescue in high stakes coaching scenarios since the very beginning of my career. Each person has provided that insider knowledge I simply would not have gained without going directly to the source.
When I first started my business ten years ago, my earliest clients were high school seniors prepping for competitive college admissions interviews. Naturally, these were the easiest clients to find, since many of my friends’ kids (and kids’ friends) were applying to college at the time. But, I wasn’t about to go into those sessions blind. Luckily, I had two friends working in admissions at two different schools, and several friends who conducted interviews at a variety of institutions. I grilled them all about what impresses them most in an interview, and what candidates could do that would absolutely blow their chances.
Like many early-career coaches, I initially assumed the most important component was detailing achievements. I was dead wrong.
It was never about what the applicant had done—it was about fit. The only way to stand out in a sea of overachievers? Leave the interviewer thinking: “This student belongs here.” My clients needed to communicate how well they knew the school and how they would contribute to that specific community. That insight fundamentally changed how I coached my first clients, teaching them to focus on values alignment, not just credentials. My own research was key to their success and that year, every one of them was accepted at their first-choice school.
A few years ago, I landed a client interviewing at a fintech startup. I thought I was out of my depth: blockchain, Web3, tokens, validators. Huh?! My initial online research only compounded the confusion. So, I tapped into my network and set up a meeting with a friend who worked in the bitcoin world. His intel was gold: I didn’t need to understand cryptocurrency. I needed to understand the interviewers.
In this high-growth sector, the messages my client needed to land were not only technical specs. They were skills and values alignment: a passionate commitment to decentralization and financial freedom, coupled with extreme comfort with volatility. That insider perspective locked down my client’s critical messaging (and saved me weeks of chasing unnecessary crypto rabbit holes).
From coaching aspiring Ivy League professors and medical residency candidates to preparing jobseekers for coveted tech roles, the principle is the same: I went straight to the source. You cannot coach for a high-stakes, specialized role successfully without direct, current intelligence from the people who make the final call.
One of the best examples of why interview coaches must have access to insider perspectives came during the PARWCC Interview Institute session on November 19th, led by Chaz Flood: “Inside the FAANG Interview: Coaching Clients Beyond the STAR Method.” (FYI members can watch recordings of PARWCC sessions on the Knowledge Base).
Chaz walked our community through crucial details that coaches cannot guess or infer without direct exposure:
This is exactly the kind of information interview coaches need to acquire: specific, current, and rooted in real hiring practice. As coaches, our credibility is built on our ability to coach with accuracy. That means understanding:
This kind of intelligence doesn’t come from generic lists of “top interview questions.” It is earned through relationships. It is secured through conversations. And it comes from staying connected to the people who hire and to the professional community that keeps us informed.
Our clients trust us with career-making, high-stakes moments. We owe them more than intuition. We owe them certified insight. So networking isn’t just our clients’ secret weapon. It’s ours, too.
But with one difference.
Our clients must network within their targeted industry. Us? We must network across every industry. We can’t just rely on our own coaching peers or community. We need those cross-industry connections to scale.
Let your network provide that panoramic view of the job market. Then go transform those high-stakes moments into calculated wins.
The PARWCC Interview Institute is committed to raising the bar for professional mastery by bringing real-world hiring insight directly to coaches. And our new live Certified Interview Coach (CIC) program gives you the exact blueprint to coach with irrefutable authority. The first session starts on January 8th, and it’s not too late to secure your spot.
No matter how far you advance in your coaching or writing career, your longevity is a byproduct of your ability to adapt and reinvent yourself.
This reinvention process is not likely to happen by accident. Given that the shelf-life of an idea is about as long as a TikTok trend, now is a good time to ask yourself some hard questions about how you’ll move forward this year.
At the current pace of innovation, one year of “business-as-usual” will put you 3-5 years behind. Here are 10 ways to avoid that.
You know this. Traditional job-search processes, résumé-writing norms, and coaching strategies are being replaced by more agile, data-informed, and emotionally resilient approaches. It is not just Artificial Intelligence, ChatGPT, and robots that are creating havoc for job seekers and employment pros coaching job seekers. It’s also adapting and integrating the emotionally resilient approaches.
Amid these mind-blowing changes, mindfulness has emerged as a core competency; one that enhances decision-making, communication, emotional adaptation, strategic career planning, and the massive action that’s required behind the planning.
Consider Michael Saletta, founder of Saletta Leadership. He says, “The superpower of all superpowers of modern leadership is mindset mastery. The highest-performing leaders aren’t just skilled in strategy, they know how to shape and shift mindset – starting with their own. This is not a soft skill, rather a strategic imperative. Strategy only works if the mindfulness behind it is strong enough to execute it.”
In the August 26, 2025, edition of, Get Hired, LinkedIn News Editor, Andrew Seaman, wrote an article: How to Get Into the Right Mindset for Your Job Search. He writes, “People often fail to give mindfulness the time and focus it deserves during their job searches. Yet, mindfulness mastery can be that make-or-break factor that leads to getting hired.”
In the context of a job search, mindfulness can be defined as… the practice of job seekers to maintain a heightened level of awareness of 1) their internal thought processes and, 2) external workforce realities. And then to proactively and strategically take appropriate action based on this heightened level of awareness – mindfulness.
For career coaches and résumé writers, teaching job seekers how to cultivate mindfulness is no longer optional. It has become essential.
Integrating mindfulness training into your current menu of services will 1) optimize rapid employment and 2) significant reduce stress and time required to work with your job seekers. This is because the role of mindfulness, in today’s stressful, chaotic, and confusing world, is unquestionably a stabilizing, empowering, and confidence-building asset in seeking new jobs.
While mindfulness often appears in wellness and so-called ‘New-Age’ literature, its application in the employment and hiring space has distinct characteristics. In career development, mindfulness is best understood as:
Historically, major shifts in the employment landscape occurred over decades. Today, they occur almost minute-to-minute. Organizations must continually update technologies, restructure job roles, and reassign responsibilities. AI advancements accelerate this pace by creating new tasks, eliminating others, and redefining what skills are considered essential (or not).
Mindfulness enables job seekers and professionals to remain aware of these changes without feeling overwhelmed – actually creating a courageous constitution. By observing trends objectively, job seekers and employment professionals can better anticipate market needs, identify emerging career paths, and avoid outdated job-search behaviors.
As AI takes over repetitive, data-driven, and transactional tasks, employers increasingly value qualities such as: adaptability, emotional intelligence, clear communication, learning agility, relationship-building, cultural awareness and self-awareness. These competencies, often referred to as, ‘durable skills,’ are inherently linked to mindfulness. Candidates who exhibit calmness, focus, and self-control/confidence stand out in interviews and workplace interactions.
Like it or not, Applicant tracking systems (ATS), algorithmic résumé screening, skills-based assessments, and automated video interviews now play central roles in hiring. Navigating these systems requires both technical understanding and emotional stability.
Imagine a soldier who did not go to boot camp (basic training) trying to fire a weapon in the heat of battle – totally petrified because they weren’t taught mindfulness to be calm, aware, and prepared under fire. That’s what boot camp is for. It’s mindfulness training, where soldiers are taught ‘specific techniques’ to ensure professional preparedness to achieve success in battle. Same is required for job seekers battling for jobs they deserve.
Clarity is power! Clarity transforms ambition into direction, turning every step a job seeker takes into a successful rapid employment process.
Job seekers are overwhelmed with career advice, market predictions, AI tools, and often conflicting job-search strategies. Without a mindful approach, this cacophony of overwhelming information and colliding advice causes fear, paralysis, stress, and at best, significant discomfort in seeking a job. With mindfulness training, individuals can filter out the noise, evaluate relevance, and make disciplined choices aligned with their goals. And yes, this can be taught!
Mindful job seekers evaluate opportunities based, not just on skills, education, and qualifications, but on mindful values (what’s going on in their hearts) and long-term fit – personal and professional. Then they create a job search plan, mindful that the plan and strategies will probably change, in some way, throughout the process. They are prepared for this. And they are prepared to make the best decisions as a result.
All employment pros understand the importance of job seekers having self-confidence throughout their job search. Self-confidence is a state of mind where job seekers know the value they bring to potential employers, believe in that value, and are confident in communicating that belief on résumés and in employment interviews – to win job offers.
But what if job seekers did more than believe in the product they’re selling (themselves)? What if career coaches and résumé pros taught them so well and so precisely that they actually ‘loved’ the product they are selling? Self-confidence now becomes heightened to a whole new level – where they are so self-assured (not cocky) that they don’t just win job offers… they ‘influence’ them.
Let me ask two questions: At a time when it was impossible to get to the moon and back, did scientists and engineers spend most of their time and resources focused on how to achieve this, or did they spend most of their time focused on being stuck on earth?
Second, in the successful pursuit of creating Apple’s Siri, do you think Cheyer, Gruber, Kittlaus focused most of their time and resources on how to help users send messages, make calls, listen to music, watch videos, get directions etc., or did they focus on all their setbacks, negative people, and failure after failure they encountered along the way?
Mindfulness is about focus. When coaches inspire job seekers to focus mindfully on their goals rather than their situations, success quickly, and often quite unexpectedly, follows.
In PARWCC’s Certified Empowerment & Motivational Profession (CEMP), we teach a myriad of strategies to integrate into your résumé writing and career coaching processes. The following are a few general techniques to help professionals integrate mindfulness into their daily career-related activities:
By adopting these (and other) mindful habits consistently, job seekers become more grounded and effective in their high-stakes employment campaigns.
As AI reshapes hiring processes and workplace expectations, the need for human clarity, presence, adaptability, and emotional engagement increases. Mindfulness equips job seekers with resilience and direction, empowers career coaches to guide with greater precision, and helps résumé writers produce materials that truly reflect both the individual and the modern employment landscape. In today’s fast-moving job market, mindfulness is not only a psychological / emotional advantage – it’s a strategic rapid employment necessity.
https://parwcc.com/certified-motivational-and-empowerment-professional-cemp/
The term Pink Slip originated in the early 20th century, when employers in America used pink-colored paper to print termination notices for their employees (in other countries, different colors are used).
This expression has become widely recognized as a symbol of job loss and workplace insecurity. It can be used literally and figuratively, with people using it to describe any situation in which they have been “let go” from their position and employer.
The pink color was used to differentiate memos or letters written on white paper. The Pink Slip was noticeable.
U.S. employers have cut more than 1.1 million jobs through November of 2025, consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported in December. That number is the highest level since 2020, during the pandemic. Tariffs, corporate restructuring, and artificial intelligence facilitate the layoffs.
Given today’s employment atmosphere, where Pink Slips often reach employees with no warning, employees need to be prepared.
If someone gets a Pink Slip today, it often arrives at the same time or after access to a company computer, email, Teams, Slack, or other platform has been terminated. It is as if the employee never existed with the company.
At that time, there is no access to payroll, year-end and 401K files; or personal files, which may include awards (individual or group), any files with kudos for work well done, performance evaluations, succession plans, training and credentialing history, necessary emails, contact information (e.g., email or cell number of a colleague, supervisor, or customer for a possible reference), or a picture you may have placed on the computer to share with colleagues of a work party, award ceremony, or new baby.
As such, I coach my clients to move personal files from a company computer weekly, if not daily. I also coach my clients and anyone I know, friends, family, and colleagues, to keep an accomplishment journal. This journal will be invaluable if a Pink Slip arrives. The employee will be able to build a new résumé with impact statements from this accomplishment journal.
I encourage and coach my clients to keep their résumés and LinkedIn profiles updated at least every six months. If a Pink Slip does arrive, it is much easier to update a résumé with six months of impact statements than to make many years of updates.
A Pink Slip is typically received via email today. The letter may be the body of the email or an attachment or both.
Some Pink Slips are this simple:
Dear Name,
Please find attached a formal letter regarding the conclusion of your employment with XYZ company as of date/year.
On behalf of XYZ company, I want to extend our sincere gratitude for your service and contributions. Your work has been truly valued, and we appreciate your support in making our client’s/company’s experience smoother.
We will be in touch with you regarding any next steps and information required to finalize this transition.
We wish you the very best in your future endeavors.
Sincerely,
XYZ President/or HR Director
If the employee works in an office, they may be allowed to gather personal items, such as a lunch box, cell phone charger, hairbrush, and a jacket hung on the back of the door, and then be escorted from their desk space by security. Others may be greeted by a representative from security or Human Resources upon arrival for work. The employee is handed a box of personal items and a Pink Slip notice and is not allowed to enter the premises.
Even though a layoff is a “no-fault” separation from a job, receiving the Pink Slip letter feels like a punch to the gut. You know — that feeling you get when you are shocked and dejected. Then the flood of emotions and questions pours out: How could this happen to me? My performance rating was superior last month. What did I do wrong? How will I pay my bills? What do I do now? How do I access my personal files? Do I have value in the employment market anymore?
Emotions set in. There are feelings of anxiousness, rejection, failure, gloom, shame, embarrassment, and maybe even depression. The grief cycle begins. Grief is not just about death. Employees grieve the loss of a job, opportunities and promotions, income and salary, benefits, and even the feeling of loss from missing colleagues, project meetings, events, and the challenges of not being able to engage in collective brainstorming.
Their schedule may have included regular meetings for years, which are now gone.
Most employees wear an “imaginary hat” that says the title of their discipline or role: Engineer, Nurse Practitioner, IT Specialist, Director, Chef, Marketing Specialist. Or they wear that hat with a list of accolades and awards. They no longer know how to respond when someone asks them what they do or for whom they work.
Some Pink Slips do come with a warning and a date, a month, or a couple of weeks in the future. This allows an employee to move personal information from a company computer and speak with a company Human Resources or benefits representative to discuss items such as COBRA for medical insurance, unemployment insurance and benefits, and other severance benefits offered by the company. If an employer provides an advanced notice, the employee has time to learn and prepare for unemployment.
Coaching Pink Slip clients requires the coach to demonstrate empathy to build client trust. Explain the job loss grief cycle (as explained in the CPCC program) to Pink Slip clients. Ensure they understand how to navigate the immediate needs, including creating a budget, applying for unemployment insurance, and obtaining medical insurance or CORBA.
Next, begin the career management action plan and identify the client’s needs. The client may need to draft a new résumé, update an old one, update a LinkedIn profile, and make decisions about the career transition. The client may want to change career fields or disciplines, or obtain a position that delivers greater challenges or a less demanding position.
A Pink Slip is an opportunity for some employees to make decisions going forward about how a job or company aligns with their goals and values. You can discuss burnout and create a “wish list” for new positions. It may provide an opportunity to earn a new degree or credential or to learn new skill sets. It is undoubtedly an opportunity to meet new people, build relationships, and connect with colleagues, alumni, and friends from the past.
Pink Slip clients need much encouragement and confidence-building. Their mindsets need to shift from doom to opportunity, as we coach them to navigate the unpredictable and ambiguous. We provide realistic timelines, explain the workplace circumstances that include fake job postings, ghosting from résumés and interviews, and the critical requirement to speak to humans.
I ask them many questions: What skills do you possess that are still useful as you seek new employment? What can you contribute that is valuable? What do you want to do – assume nothing hinders that decision? How can you stay confident in your skill set and job search? What did you learn from your previous job search that you will not do this time, or that you will do and enhance this time?
As a career coach, I become their confidant. They can vent openly and even shed a tear if needed. And we keep moving forward to build their new career management plan and launch a job search strategy to help them reach their goal position. I am coaching my clients to be prepared in 2026.
The thank you email is the most neglected tool we have to help move our clients’ careers forward. Almost always the thank you email is little more than a proforma document with a “standard issue” expression of gratitude bolted on. It includes attempts by the author to “sell themselves”…again. One “expert” even suggested including small talk! It would surprise me if such a note was glanced at for more than two seconds.
It doesn’t have to be that way for your clients.
Let me introduce the interview-generating email. It has never failed to provide just such opportunities for my clients in the 25 years I’ve used it. But first, a critical foundation.
The main purpose of the interview is for our clients to learn what the target organization’s biggest problems are. Regardless of the career field, regardless of the organization, regardless of the level of job responsibility, our clients will be hired as problem solvers. Jobs that don’t involve solving problems have two characteristics: they require the employee to ask if the customer wants fries with that and they don’t require résumé to apply.
Asking the interviewer what the company’s greatest problems are is an excellent way to evaluate the organization. Our clients expect an appropriate answer. If they don’t get one, Orlando’s First Law of Employment applies: “Everything you hear, everything you see, as you deal with a prospective employer is condoned or encouraged by the leadership—without exception.”
It’s very common for interviewers to confuse problems with symptoms. For example, falling sales is not a problem. It is a symptom. Your client should ask the interviewer what caused the symptom. For example, falling sales could reflect a new competitor entering the market, a fall in demand, an understaffed sales force…you get the idea.
It’s also possible for the interviewer to confuse tasks with problems. Problems require thought. Tasks, while important, usually don’t. If you were in my office, you’d notice two holders containing a fair number of files. If those files fell to the floor, there would be paper everywhere. Not having the files in order would slow me down. But it is not a problem.
Every piece of paper has a client’s name on it. Every folder has a client’s name on it. A smart five year old could put them back in order. No thought is required.
Problems always arise from a lack of resources. The ones that spring to mind are money, people, technology, and facilities. But problems can also be a lack of knowledge, access to the appropriate people and files, and decision making authority.
Make sure your clients understand the information you’ve just read. Without that, they could easily misconstrue the answers interviewers give to their question.
I am not a big fan of “scripts,” but here are two ways your clients might ask the critical question:
“If there was only one thing I could do to help you the most now, what would that be?”
“Assume I’ve been on your team for a while and I have exceeded your expectations. What would I have to do for that to happen?”
As soon as the interview is over, suggest your client find a quiet place immediately. They should write down the company’s problem as best they can. Then they should assume they have been hired. What will they do to help the company fix their key problems right from the start?
Remind your clients no detailed solutions are possible. They haven’t met the people with whom they will work. They don’t know the culture. But they can certainly draw on their knowledge of their career field to outline some applicable concepts. They should write those down as well. Then they should email you the following: what problems does the company face that touch on your client’s career field and how they would help solve those problems. Clients should also include the interviewer’s name and title. If it was a panel interview, target the primary interviewer and copy the rest in their email.
You now have enough information to draft the interview generating email. Start by thanking the interviewer, outline what your client thinks the company’s problems are, suggest some concepts, and tell the interview your client will call to see if those ideas meet the company’s needs.
Here’s a genuine, fictionalized, example:
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]
Will these ideas work for the Center?
Dear Dr. Crenshaw,
I wanted to do more than just thank you, Dr. Wang, and Dr. Chatterjee for being so generous with your time last week. The more I learn about this opportunity, the more it appeals to me.
In fact, as soon as we finished our conversation, I began thinking about ways I might be most productive, right from the first day. And so, I’ve outlined an action plan in the next paragraph. I know I’ll revise my ideas once I learn more about the Center and the people I want to support. Nevertheless, I’d be interested in your reactions to what you are about to read.
I’ve already indicated my first priority: I want to meet and really listen to all our internal and external customers. Their concerns will guide my priorities. Perhaps my perspective as a newcomer could point toward new solutions.
For example, I’ve been thinking about the relationship between our ultramicrotome and the options available to acquire cryo-microtome capability. I’m already updating my knowledge of Reichert CFS equipment and how it compares to the Leica Ultracut UCT. My goal would be to refine return on investment numbers such a major expense would have to provide. That might be useful in any supplemental budget request for the upcoming FY.
Thinking about Dr. Chatterjee’s question, I’ve arranged training on the Veeco 3100 Atomic Force Microscope at the University of Memphis under the direction of Dr. Lewis Coons. I’ll start training tomorrow.
Because I want to be sure I serve you well, may I call in a few days to explore how my ideas might work for the Office of Scientific Exploration?
Sincerely,
Arthur T. Collins, Ph.D.
There is no rush to get the email to the interviewer. In fact, it would be best to wait a few days. After all, your client said he took time to think the problem through.
Once your client emails what you wrote to the interviewer, he should call and ask to speak with the interviewer’s secretary. Your client doesn’t want to surprise the interviewer with his call. With a time and date planned for the conversation, the interviewer will be much better prepared.
When the two talk, your client asks the key question: “Will my ideas work for you and your company?”
The next words from the interviewer’s mouth are—by definition—a second interview!
Charge for this product and service. How large an investment is a function of a typical salary for the job. Because I work exclusively with rising, senior, and very senior executives, I usually collect $250 for such an email. Results? About $6,000 in annual revenue.
Remind your clients of the exceptional value you’re providing: a second interview. You should mention how unlikely it is for any other job seeker to respond with the same persuasive power and precision and directly to the hiring decision maker.
Of course, your brand will become stronger. You’re offering something extra most résumé writers don’t even think of, let alone provide.
The email you write does more than lock in a second interview. It often generates a job for your client and more revenue for you.
by Stephanie Renk and Mark Misiano – 12/02/2025
The U.S. enters 2026 with a labor market that has finally begun to look recognizable again. The labor economy is shifting into a steadier rhythm after a period defined by pandemic-era turbulence, historic quits, aggressive hiring, wage spikes, and wild sectoral swings. What’s emerging is not a simple reversion to pre-pandemic conditions, but a new equilibrium – one shaped by structural technological change, demographic realities, and an economy adjusting to years of overstimulation.
Senior economists, labor market researchers, and global institutions broadly agree on one point: the volatility is behind us, but the complexity is not. As Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has noted, labor indicators are “increasingly resembling [their] pre-pandemic state,” even as underlying pressures such as AI exposure, demographic shifts, regional divides, and sectoral rebalancing reshape how work is performed and how workers compete.
For career coaches, résumé writers, and workforce professionals, the 2026 environment demands a deeper understanding of how these macro forces translate into individual career outcomes. The goal of this article is to articulate the evidence, synthesize insights from leading economists, and translate the findings into practical guidance for service providers working with job seekers at all levels.
The first overarching trend shaping 2026 is normalization. Labor economists describe the current cycle not as contractionary, but as disinflationary. Employment, wages, and productivity are recalibrating after several overheated years. Job creation continues (though at a more measured pace) while unemployment levels trend slightly higher yet remain low by historical standards.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) projects the addition of 5.2 million jobs between 2024 and 2034, with disproportionate growth concentrated in specific industries – chiefly healthcare, social assistance, green energy, and data-driven roles. Healthcare alone is set to grow 8.4% over the next decade, driven by population aging, expanded chronic disease management, and increased mental health demand.
The Indeed Hiring Lab’s forecasts show job postings stabilizing after a significant cooling through 2024 and 2025. Employers are neither panicked nor exuberant; they are selective.
This selectivity reflects:
The resulting environment is competitive but steady. We’re looking at a labor market that rewards focus, preparation, and the ability to articulate one’s impact.
Job seekers need rigorous clarity about where they add value. Résumé writers must sharpen measurement, tighten narrative framing, and articulate the relevance of clients’ experience for changing sector demands. Coaches must teach precision: what sector, what role, what impact, and why now.
It should be clear by now…AI is not a temporary trend. It is a structural force reshaping the global labor economy. But contrary to apocalyptic narratives, economists emphasize nuance.
The World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs analysis forecasts that 23% of jobs globally will undergo significant change by 2030, with tens of millions of roles created and tens of millions displaced. The International Monetary Fund estimates that 60% of jobs in advanced economies are AI-exposed, meaning they contain tasks that AI can either augment or replace.
David Autor (MIT):
AI can “restore” middle-skill work if deployed as decision support. His argument is that AI can expand access to high-level knowledge by distributing expert-like capabilities across a broader workforce.
Daron Acemoglu (MIT):
Automation is neutral; how we deploy it determines its impact. Acemoglu warns against “excessive automation” that eliminates tasks without creating complementary new ones. He advocates for technologies that enhance, not erode, worker agency.
Erik Brynjolfsson (Stanford):
We should “race with the machines, not against them.” He argues that innovation accelerates prosperity only when coupled with investments in human capital.
Pearson’s Skills Outlook, analyzing more than 21 million job postings, finds that communication, teamwork, critical thinking, leadership, and customer service remain among the most consistently demanded skills through 2026.
These findings reinforce that while technical literacy is rising in importance, human-centered strengths remain the differentiators. It’s especially true for leadership, cross-functional work, and client-facing roles.
Coaches must help clients develop a two-track skill strategy:
Résumé writers should highlight AI-enabled outcomes (productivity gains, decision-making improvements, and workflow enhancements) paired with narratives of emotional intelligence and cross-functional leadership.
The 2026 economy is defined not by uniform expansion but by sharp contrasts between thriving and shrinking sectors. For job seekers and career professionals, understanding these splits is essential.
Healthcare & Social Assistance
Demand for healthcare workers is structural, not cyclical. BLS identifies nurse practitioners, physician assistants, mental health professionals, and medical managers among the fastest-growing occupations.
Technology & Data-Driven Work
Despite high-profile layoffs in Big Tech, data scientists, cybersecurity analysts, and software developers remain in strong demand across industries. Healthcare, finance, logistics, retail, and government all rely heavily on data talent.
Green Energy & Climate Transition
Clean energy continues to outpace national workforce growth. Wind turbine technicians and solar PV installers remain among the fastest-growing jobs in the country. Clean energy jobs expanded more than three times faster than the broader U.S. workforce in 2024, according to E2 and the Department of Energy.
Skilled Trades & Advanced Manufacturing
Automation does not eliminate the trades—it transforms them. New infrastructure spending and clean energy investments are driving demand for electricians, HVAC technicians, manufacturing technicians, and precision mechanics who understand complex systems.
Declines concentrate primarily in:
These shifts underscore the need for career professionals to help clients evaluate not only job fit but long-term viability.
One of the most consequential shifts in the labor economy is not what work people do, but where they do it.
Gallup reports that hybrid remains the dominant model among remote-capable employees with 52% hybrid, 26% fully on-site, and firm worker preference for continued flexibility. Robert Half finds similar trends in employer postings and worker preferences.
Certain sectors – particularly media, entertainment, and some segments of tech – are tightening on-site expectations. Instagram’s 2026 five-day RTO mandate is emblematic of this sentiment.
Claudia Goldin’s research shows that flexible work has historically reduced barriers for women in high-skill, high-pay roles. A swing back to rigid in-office requirements may widen gender participation gaps. Washington Post reporting has already shown early signs of departure among mothers facing these pressures.
Work model preference is no longer a minor preference but a core strategic factor. Coaches should help clients identify organizations aligned with their needs, and résumé writers should highlight hybrid-ready competencies: virtual leadership, cross-site collaboration, and digital productivity.
The Class of 2026 faces an unusually tight entry-level market. NACE projects a 1.6% increase in college hiring, among the weakest expansions in recent cycles. Earlier projections of 7% growth were revised downward as employers reassessed needs amid economic cooling.
Employers now expect clearer direction, stronger portfolios, and demonstrable skills – even for junior roles. Internships, capstone projects, and micro-experiences increasingly serve as critical proof points.
Career professionals must prepare students to articulate clarity of purpose, tangible achievements, and early professional identity.
The UN Development Programme warns that AI could create a “new divergence” in global equality. The U.S. is not exempt.
The divide may widen between:
The IMF’s 2025 findings reinforce the scale: 60% of jobs in advanced economies face some degree of AI exposure.
Career service providers play a crucial role in mitigating these risks through accessible upskilling, narrative reframing for workers with limited opportunities, and guidance into pathways that offer real mobility.
The 2026 labor market should not be read through the lens of fear. It is not shrinking. It is reorganizing around technology, demographics, sectoral specialization, and evolving expectations about where and how people work.
The central challenge for workers is alignment. The central opportunity for career professionals is interpretation.
Those who understand these shifts, who can read the macro signals, and who can convert them into strategy will help their clients navigate a labor economy that demands adaptability and clarity of purpose.
2026 is not a year of retreat. It is a year of recalibration, realignment, and intentional movement toward sustainable, meaningful work.
Janet Yellen – Public remarks and Reuters coverage on soft-landing dynamics and labor market normalization.
In business, so often it’s about knowing which levels to pull, when. You’re probably familiar with the allegory of a shipping magnate whose freighter is loaded with cargo ready for transport, but something is stuck and the shaft on the propeller won’t turn.
The shipping magnate’s crew looks the ship over and everything looks normal. Vexed, the magnate calls in an expert. This expert looks at the whole system — goes over the boiler, listens to the engine, generally pokes at everything for an hour and a half. They then pull out a giant mallet, walk to the drive shaft, hit it real hard one time, and tells the magnate to try and start the propeller now.
Miraculously, the problem is fixed. The expert tells the magnate, “Great, that’ll be $20,000.” The magnate is baffled and asks why it costs so much to swing a mallet one time. To which the expert clarifies that the magnate isn’t paying for the swing of the mallet, but for the expertise of knowing where to swing.
The moral of the story is that there’s a lot of value in knowing when and where to apply your efforts. Which leads me to today’s topic: knowing which levers to pull.
When running a business, whether a small local operation or a global enterprise, there are things you’d like to be different. There are probably several things, actually: you want to update your sales process, sell more of a certain product, etc. I ran into this issue when going on site visits with a management team. I’d look everything over and come away with 27 changes that would improve operations.
But in our allegory, the expert didn’t swing the mallet 27 times. They swung it once. If you have a lot of things that you want to change, then you have a responsibility to pull the right levers and make those changes. At the same time, the worst thing you could do is start pulling all 27 levers at once.
Because when you make a change, you need to see what happens after. Even if you’re 100% certain that a lever needs to be moved, maybe it only needs to be pulled halfway, or maybe you’ve overlooked a confounding variable that changes which lever needs pulling entirely. And if you only realize your mistake after you’ve pulled a bunch of levers, you’ll have no clues on how to course correct.
So think it through. Talk things over with your team, and when you’re ready, pull one lever, then sit back and watch to see how (and if) it moves the needle. I can tell you from experience that after thinking everything over, it’s going to feel like you’ve already been waiting for weeks or months by the time you actually pull the lever. But you need to give the change time to breathe and have its full effect on your operations.
That doesn’t mean you need to sit on your hands while you’re waiting to see what changes, though. Instead, go back to your list of 27 items and look it over. Of all those items, I’d bet that some affect different areas; maybe some are pertinent to sales, whereas others pertain to operational efficiency or product development. If you can isolate the impacts of pulling different levers and establish separate controls, you can enact multiple changes and record them separately without worrying about them overlapping and messing with your results.
The only danger to this method is if there is unforeseen overlap between the two levers you pull. For example, if you change sales compensation, that will affect product movement, sales behavior, efficiency, etc. So if you changed something about a product at the same time you changed sales compensation and suddenly you’re selling more or less, it could very well have nothing to do with your product change, and you’re going to end up with some misleading results when analyzing your changes.
For this reason, having a well thought out plan is essential. Once you’ve accounted for all the variables you can and are confident that you’ll get good, isolated data, pull the lever. Then sit back, record what you see, and have the discipline to follow through and not change anything else until your first change has run its course.
Pro tip: If you can A/B test, do it. This will greatly speed up how quickly you can acquire real, actionable data about potential changes. If you work in retail, right now is a great time to try three similar-but-different concepts on three similar-but-different markets and see how the changes stack up side by side.
As a leader, it’s your job to know which levers to pull and when. While you should be cautious and methodical in your approach, you eventually need to make a decision and enact these changes. Because the only thing worse than pulling too many levers is pulling none at all.
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[St. Petersburg, FL], December 9, 2025 – The Professional Association of Résumé Writers and Career Coaches (PARWCC) today released its 2026 U.S. Job Market Outlook, a national analysis forecasting a labor market defined by stabilization, deeper complexity, and widening skills divides. The report highlights key structural forces shaping work in 2026, including rising AI exposure, uneven sector growth, and increasing pressure on early career talent.
The full report is available at https://parwcc.com/parwcc-2026-u-s-job-market-outlook-stability-skills-and-sector-splits-ahead/
“Volatility is behind us, but the difficulty is not,” said Margaret Phares, Executive Director of PARWCC. “The workers who thrive in 2026 will be those who align quickly with sector trends, build AI fluency, and strengthen the human skills that technology cannot replace. Everyone else risks falling behind as the labor market reorganizes.”
The white paper, authored by PARWCC researchers Stephanie Renk and Mark Misiano, synthesizes data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the World Economic Forum, Gallup, Pearson, the International Monetary Fund, and leading economists, including Daron Acemoglu, David Autor, and Erik Brynjolfsson.
Sixty percent of jobs in advanced economies contain tasks that AI can now augment or replace. Nearly one quarter of global roles will undergo significant change by 2030.
Job creation continues slowly and selectively. Employers are focused on productivity, impact, and clear value alignment.
Strong growth: healthcare, green energy, data roles, skilled trades.
Under pressure: clerical work, administrative support, retail, government contracting.
Research from Gallup and Claudia Goldin shows potential setbacks for gender equity if inflexible on-site policies expand.
NACE projects minimal hiring growth for new graduates. Employers expect clearer direction and stronger portfolios from entry-level applicants.
Across twenty-one million job postings, communication, leadership, collaboration, and problem-solving remain among the top requested skills.
The report identifies alignment as the defining challenge of 2026. Career professionals are uniquely positioned to help clients interpret market signals, refine their narratives, and develop skill strategies that increase mobility in an AI influenced labor economy.
“Career service providers are no longer simply résumé editors,” Phares said. “They are economic interpreters. They help job seekers understand where opportunity is moving and how to position themselves for it.”
The complete 2026 U.S. Job Market Outlook, including charts, forecasts, and sector analyses, is available at: https://parwcc.com/parwcc-2026-u-s-job-market-outlook-stability-skills-and-sector-splits-ahead/
PARWCC experts are available for interviews on AI exposure, labor trends, and workforce readiness.
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About PARWCC
Representing nearly 3,000 professionals in more than 40 countries, the Professional Association of Résumé Writers and Career Coaches is the global leader in credentialing, continuing education, and ethical practice for the career services industry.
Media Contact
Professional Association of Résumé Writers & Career Coaches
Margaret Phares
Executive Director, PARWCC
[email protected]
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