Laid-off, fired or terminated? Say this... - YouTube

Channel: Don Georgevich

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Hey everybody.
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Don Georgevich here with you today.
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And in this video, I'm going to tell you how you can explain to a prospective employer
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that you were laid off from your last job.
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I mean, it happens at one time or another in your career.
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People get laid off.
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There's nothing you can do about it.
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And it's even happened to me.
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I've been laid off, if you can believe that someone would actually let me go.
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I know, I'm surprised too.
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But it hurts.
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I've been there.
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I've been laid off many times in my career.
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Sometimes, for six or nine months at a stretch with a wife and kids and bills.
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It gets expensive and it's really difficult and it's hard to get through.
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And what I want to do is help you get through this.
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I want to teach you how you can explain being laid off to a prospective employer, so that
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it doesn't sound like you were fired or that you were let go because of poor performance.
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I mean, most companies, if they have a layoff, it's because the company isn't doing well.
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So, if you were let go because of a widespread corporate layoff, let me give you a few ideas
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that you can use to tell employers that it really wasn't your fault.
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And one of the things that you really want to come through, to be crystal clear, in your
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answer as to why you were let go or why you're laid off is to let them know that it wasn't
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a result of your professional performance.
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You were on the job performance.
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You want to let them know it had nothing to do with you.
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In fact, you want to let them know that your performance was excellent.
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Let them know that your boss thought your performance is great.
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You have a long history of excellent performance reviews.
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You want to talk about how much you liked working there.
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You want to talk about how much you enjoyed what you did, you enjoyed the people.
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So, you want to make it clear that it had nothing to do with your personal performance.
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In fact, your personal performance was great; they loved you.
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You have a long track record of excellent performance reviews.
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You loved working there.
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You loved what you did.
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The people liked you.
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The customers liked you and even your boss went and asked his boss if they could still
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keep you.
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In fact, that's actually what happened to me.
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In my case, my boss went to his boss, which was the owner of the company, and said, �Hey,
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we really want to keep Don.
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The customers like him, he does a great job, we want to keep him here�.
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But you know what?
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None of that mattered.
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They just simply said, �This is a numbers game and we have to let go� in my case,
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it was 45 people.
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They had to let go 45 people in order for the company to survive.
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And they didn't want to do that, because that was really putting them down to a bare bone,
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skeleton crew, but they had to do it.
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If they didn't let these people go, the whole company would sink.
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So, unfortunately, I got caught up on that and it sounds like that's what happened to
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you too.
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You got caught up in an unfortunate corporate-wide layoff and it's not your fault.
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And that's the message that you want to come through when they ask you why you were let
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go from your last job or why you were laid off.
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That's what you want them to understand is that it had nothing to do with you and in
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fact, they loved you there and they didn't want to let you go.
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And what this really does; this is sending a message to that employer that, �Hey, you
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know what?
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There's another company that really liked this guy, but they had to let him go.
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So, this is our opportunity to pick this guy up; to pick up a good guy on sale.
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Maybe we can even pay him less than what he was making before�.
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I don't know if that factors into it or not, but this is a chance for a company to pick
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up a good person who's already been screened by another company as being a valuable asset.
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Now, here's a problem that often happens in cases like this.
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If you were very well-paid at your last job, that's probably nothing that you want to share
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with prospective employer.
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It doesn't look good to go into a prospective employer and say, �Yes, I was very well
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paid my last job and then they had a lay off�.
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The underlying message in that statement could be that maybe you were laid off because you
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made too much money.
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So, if you made a lot of money or if you were paid more than maybe you should have been
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paid, don't let those numbers come out in the interview.
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You might have to taper down your salary a little bit and shut a few dollars off, so
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that you don't look too expensive.
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Because let's just say for example, you were making $100 thousand a year at your last job
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and then you got laid off and you go and interview for another job, but that job is only paying,
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let's say 75 thousand.
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And you're thinking, �Okay, you know what?
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I'll go ahead and take the 75�.
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Problem is that employer's going to know that you're making 100 thousand and then if they
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offer you a 75, that you're more than likely not going to stay there for very long.
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You're going to take the job at 75, you're going to work there for a little bit, maybe
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six months or a year until you can get back to that $100 thousand mark and then you're
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going to leave that company high and dry.
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So, they're not going to be interested in you; more than likely they're not.
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So, keep that in the back of your mind.
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If you're paid above market value for your position, you may not want to share that exact
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figure with them and tone down your salary to more about a market value for what you're
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worth.
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And by doing that, that's going to help you transition from being unemployed and laid
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off into another position a little bit more rapidly than if you were to hold on to that
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past salary that you were making and holding out for that with somebody else.
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Makes sense?
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Okay.
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So, in the end, when you rap up your answer to an employer, you want to let them know
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that it was the company�s fault, not that it was an individual's fault, not that it
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was bad leadership, that overall, the company was struggling, the company was failing, they
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just weren't making their numbers anymore, and they had to let go a certain number of
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people in order to survive.
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And unfortunately, you were caught up in that.
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I mean, it's not your fault that there was a downturn in business or unless maybe you
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were in sales and it was your fault.
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But usually, in a case like that, there's not one individual who is responsible for
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a corporate-wide layoff.
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There's a lot of reasons that a company doesn't make its numbers.
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I mean, maybe the competition is too tight, maybe the economy has taken a dip, maybe the
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industry that you're in is just struggling overall, and that happens.
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There's so many reasons that companies layoff people.
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But most commonly, it's a downturn in business.
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And the business that they have today isn't the business that they had yesterday or last
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year.
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For some reason, they're just not making the numbers and they have to let people go.
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And unfortunately, good people like you, good people like me, we get caught up in that,
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and we have to go out, and we have to hit the streets, and we have to look for another
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job.
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But this makes us stronger, this makes us better.
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Every time I've been laid off from a job, and it's been several.
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I've probably been laid off 3, 4, maybe 5 times in my career.
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And I'll tell you it hurts; it hurts every time.
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I don't like it.
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It usually comes as a surprise, because for some reason I didn't see it coming; everything
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was great, and then they tap on the shoulder and they bring you into their office and they
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say, �You know what?
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Things aren�t looking good here.
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We need to let you go.
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Pack your stuff.
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Here's your box and get out� and that's just been said to me so many times and it
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hurts.
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And it's happened to you and I'm sorry for that.
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But it's going to make you better.
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It's going to make you stronger.
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You're going to grow from this.
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You really will.
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You're not going to realize that right now.
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You'll see the growth and the strength after you get over this hump and you look back on
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it, but it will happen.
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I promise you that.
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It will happen.
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You just have to go out there and you have to keep looking.
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You have to keep your chin up.
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You have to be confident in your abilities and you just have to know and believe that
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something is going to turn your way again.
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It will happen.
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When they let good people like you go, this really creates an opportunity for another
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employer to scoop up someone else who is already a seasoned worker, who is disciplined in what
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they do and can instantly bring value to another company.
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And that's the kind of message that you want to resonate from you when you go into an interview.
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You're giving yourself strength.
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You're putting yourself in a stronger mindset for the interview and it's going to help you.
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Like I said, it's going to hurt now; it's going to sting right now, until you can get
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situated again.
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But just know that you're the kind of person that always lands on your feet and that this
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is only temporary.
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It might seem like forever, but it's only temporary.
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And if you put your nose to the grindstone and you look and you work hard, you will find
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something.
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And all you have to do when you get into the interview is one don't complain.
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Don't have any ill feelings toward your last company.
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Don't throw them under the bus.
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Praise them, tell them how much you liked working there, what a great company they are.
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And that you would go back there again.
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But unfortunately, you got caught up in a messy layoff and you don't regret it.
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Now, more than anything, you have to remember that you're not in a job interview to explain
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why you were let go or why you were laid off.
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That's not the point of the interview.
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The point of the interview is to talk about the value that you can bring to them.
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That's what you want to shine through.
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Sure, you have to address this.
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You have to address why you were laid off, but you don't want to spend a lot of time
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on that.
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Maybe 30 to 60 seconds, just talk about what happened, �Hey, I worked there for a long
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time.
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I was really happy there.
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Unfortunately, the company wasn't making their numbers anymore and they had to let people
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go.
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My boss tried to save my job, went to his boss.
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It just didn't matter.
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They had to let people go.
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And I got caught up in that� and then move on.
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You have to move on from that, and don't throw them under the bus.
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Just move on and start talking about the value that you can bring to this new company and
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this position if they hire you.
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I mean, that makes sense; right?
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Now, of course, if they ask you more questions about the layoff, they start digging in picking
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your answer apart, what that's really telling you or should tell you is that they're not
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buying what you're saying.
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They don't believe something about your story.
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So, if they start asking questions after you've already told them what happened, that means
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they're not buying what you're saying.
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So, keep that in mind.
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It may or may not happen.
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But ideally, generally, what should happen is you tell them what happened, here's why
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I got laid off, and they should just accept that and move on with the interview.
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But that doesn't happen, watch out, because they're not buying it.
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And you might want to give them a little bit more information about the company, what happened
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in your position, and everything else like that.
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Alright, that's all I have for you today my friend.
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I wish you well.
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I understand your position; believe me on that.
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I've been there; I know.
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Keep your chin up, keep your nose to the grindstone.
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Get out there.
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And remember, smart people learn from their mistakes.
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Really smart people.