Hard Times Send
'Economoms' Back to the Job Market
By Bonnie
Rochman Thursday, Mar. 12, 2009 When you're eight months pregnant, it's hard to find a good interview suit.
But a burgeoning belly didn't stop Nicole Young, 33, from hitting the job
circuit this fall. Her husband, who works on the floor of the New York Stock
Exchange, has seen his income shrink along with the Dow. And the consulting
projects she has been doing from their home on Long Island in New York are not bringing in enough money to
make up the difference. So Young, who left her full-time marketing job in 2005
when she was pregnant with their first child, buffed up her résumé and started
conducting phone interviews to try to line up a job that would begin after her
second child was born in December. She contacted five recruiters, hoping to
find something in corporate communications or general management. Could she
start right away? Not exactly. No job offers ensued.
Now, with a 3-month-old and a 3-year-old, Young is reviving her job hunt:
full time, part time, any time will do. With the employment outlook turning
bleaker by the day, she and many other white collar moms who opted out of the
workforce to focus on their kids are scrambling to get back in. Meet the
economommies. (See the best and worst moms of all time.)
Of course, for much of the U.S.,
working is not optional. But with men making up 82% of the recession's job
losses, women are flocking to mom-centric job and career-consulting sites,
where they learn how to translate their maternal skills (negotiation, time
management) into corporate argot. Mom Corps, a staffing company that pairs
women with white collar jobs that have flexible hours, in February surveyed its
500 most recent registrants: 63% said the economy was driving their decision to
look for work. Five percent said they joined because their spouse was laid off.
At Mom Corps, businesses pay to list job openings and gain access to tens of
thousands of women who have registered for free; the agency, like rival service
10 til 2, also does actual matchmaking for companies. It's definitely a buyer's
market. In early March, Mom Corps had 34,000 job hunters and 54 jobs; 10 til 2
reported a similarly scary ratio. How quickly employees are synched with
employers — Mom Corps says most of its openings are filled within two weeks —
hinges on factors like location and skill set. Think Excel is just a verb? Next
in line, please.
Since Mom Corps opened shop in 2005, it has matched nearly 1,000 women with
manager-level positions at small firms as well as Fortune 500 ones. Though the
number of listings fell in recent months, founder Allison O'Kelly says, things
are picking up as hiring freezes make project-based, benefits-free workers the
only kind companies can afford.
"This is not a good time for many businesses, but this is a good time
for our business," says iRelaunch co-founder Carol Fishman Cohen. Her
firm, along with sites like YourOnRamp and 2Hats Network, offers crash courses
in networking as well as tips on how to finesse gaps in résumés (don't organize
chronologically) and what to wear to an interview (shoulder pads are for
linebackers).
One tidbit from Harvard
Business School,
which held a weeklong course this month geared to help women re-enter the
workforce: steer clear of the term part time. Use flexible hours
instead. "Part time has a connotation of not full commitment,"
says Timothy Butler, who chairs the Harvard program, which cost attendees
$5,000 apiece. Cheaper options include iRelaunch's $125 one-day return-to-work
sessions around the country and its new $19.99 webinars. The first topic: What
the heck is LinkedIn, and how can it be used as a job-search tool?
Until recently, business networking sites like LinkedIn were a mystery to
Lisa Estabrook, 50, who left her advertising job at a bank in Philadelphia when her first child was born 16
years ago. Now she finds herself haunting YourOnRamp, which her husband — who
was laid off from a reinsurance firm six weeks ago — heard about from a career
counselor at a local church. She rattles off all the networking sites she's
trying to get a handle on, including Facebook and Tweeter. Um, make that Twitter. "To my kids," she says, "it's funny
to see Mom trying to get with it." (See which businesses are doing well despite the recession.)
In March, Maria Retter, 48, started a part-time job she found through Mom
Corps as an office manager in northern Virginia.
With a self-employed husband and with their youngest child about to join two
others in college, Retter decided she needed steadier work than the
Web-designing she had been doing from home. And she is firmly convinced that
motherhood has made her a better employee: "If you can handle temper
tantrums, then when you have to deal with obnoxious people in an office
setting, you say to yourself, 'You remind me of my 2-year-old.' "
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