How Parents Can Help Kids Navigate Their Job Search

Episode 486 | Host: Emilie Aries | Guest: Beth Hendler-Grunt

How can you support the young adult in your life as they embark on the first steps of their career?

It’s no secret that Gen Z is coming of age in a very different world than the one their Gen X or Millennial parents experienced. How they connect with their friends, how they are taught in school, what’s involved in securing their first job —everything has changed a lot, and this makes it tricky to figure out how to help them. 

We’ve talked on this podcast in the past about helping a partner through a career change; today, we’re tackling a similar conundrum for the young people in our lives. Beth Hendler-Grunt has a decade of experience helping college students and their parents navigate the often arduous process of securing a job upon graduation. A parent of two college-age kids herself, she’s no stranger to how difficult it is to align the very different perspectives of a parent with four or more decades of life experience and a 20-year-old child. 

Beth founded Next Great Step, where she’s helped thousands of young adults gain clarity and confidence in their skills and land their first jobs out of school. Her programs use approaches grounded in psychology and her own background in sales—because what is job hunting but selling yourself to your next employer? She also recently published her book, The Next Great Step: The Parents' Guide to Launching Your New Grad into a Career.

The unique circumstances of today’s college-age generation

Teens and young adults today are the first generation to grow up with social media and smartphones, and many of them spent several formative years attending classes from home during the pandemic. These circumstances factor heavily into their unique college and post-college experiences.

While uncertainty around how to present oneself to a potential employer one to three decades older isn’t exclusive to this generation, this particular challenge is made more significant by the years spent in lockdown and small bubbles rather than in school and extracurricular groups, campus clubs, and other environments that encourage face-to-face communication. Add in the pressures and toxicity of social media, and it’s little wonder that Beth and a lot of research these days recognizes more self-doubt and mental health issues in young people now entering the workforce.

Add to this the ever-growing difficulty of getting hired in this age of layoffs and AI-assisted application processes, and college-age kids can use all the help they can get!

Help them sell themselves as a new grad

At Next Great Step, Beth works with college students to develop a vision of what they want for their future. Often, she will encourage them to put aside any and all constraints, like their degree and the expectations of their loved ones, and think big about what kind of work would bring them joy. They don’t need to know the job title, the company, or even the industry of this vocation, just the tasks they are doing in their imaginary scenario.

From there, the program teaches students how to isolate their core skills. Beth is quick to clarify that she doesn’t mean attributes like being honest and hardworking. Rather, examples include research, problem-solving, sales, coding, and writing. Core skills are the ones that the student is competent at, enjoys, and wants to utilize. 

Students also need to be able to provide stories that illustrate of these skills in action because, as Beth explains, “people do not read, and they do not listen.” Busy hiring teams are unlikely to be moved by a list of capabilities, but if an applicant can share a skill and immediately back it up with a specific example corroborating their competency, they stand a much better chance of selling themselves to that prospective employer.

Set them up for success along the way

As parents, of course it’s our tendency to want to help our children avoid disappointment and heartbreak. Unfortunately, kids often want to forge their own paths, and sometimes, it is the very challenges and failures they face that gives them the tools for future success.

In addition to letting them make some mistakes on their own—while always being there to listen and assist after the fact—Beth encourages parents and mentors of high school and college students to facilitate connections for them wherever possible. The opportunity to chat with professionals in a range of industries does more than provide students with many perspectives and real-world work scenarios. It also gives them plenty of practice conversing with people from different demographics and generations, which makes future interviews less daunting.

I want to hear your own experience with this topic! How are you helping the young adult(s) in your world? And if you’re a parent of kids anywhere from my three-year-old’s age to college-bound, I’m curious what practices you are utilizing to raise them with agency. Join the conversation on the Courage Community on Facebook or our group on LinkedIn to make your voice heard.

Related links from today’s episode:

Learn more about Beth’s work

Connect with Beth on LinkedIn

Connect with Beth on Instagram  

The Next Great Step: The Parents' Guide to Launching Your New Grad into a Career

The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness by Johnathan Haidt

The Conscious Parent: Transforming Ourselves, Empowering Our Children by Shefali Tsabary

Episode 106, Supporting Your Partner’s Career Conundrums

HIRED: my Job Search Accelerator

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

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