I have 17 years experience of doing a thing. I have been trying for 17 years to get a job doing that thing. I have been told over and over I don't have the experience because it's not "professional".

17 years. How much more experience do I need? What else can I learn after almost 2 decades?

Someone who hires people, please help answer this, why won't anybody give me a chance and hire me so I CAN get this experience I need that somehow is better than doing it for 17 years on my own.

@dr_zooks

Have you been making money? If not, it’s not considered “professional” experience.

They want references. Proof you can work well with people. Can work within a corporate or military structure.

Although having worked on something for 17 years, why not start your own business doing that thing and pocketing -all- the profit?

What type of work have you been doing during those 17 years?

Hiring managers are probably asking themselves these and many other questions.

@amarand the sad thing is I can answer all those, but it doesn't matter. I've been in corporate environments for all these years, on teams, working right next to the field I want to be in. I've gotten certifications and a degree in this field. Still no. All my certs expired because nobody cared that I got them.

I'm being vague in case they're here and reading this and I don't want to seem like I'm complaining, I'm just furiously curious.

@dr_zooks

You want a promotion within a specific company? You do not want to leave that company to get a new job? Initially, your post read (to me) that you were unemployed and doing the work outside of a paid environment. If your communications are coming across that ambiguous, makes me wonder what your resume looks like.

My suggestions:

1) Full resume review. Find someone else to look at it for you. You may be too close.

2) Find a job elsewhere. Better position, better fit, better money.

@amarand yeah, I'm unemployed right now. I did #1 like 4 times and #2 is what I'm trying to do. I even got a new cover letter from scratch.

@dr_zooks

Cover letters should be written and tailored to each specific job opportunity. Do people still use generic cover letters?

Do you have access to LinkedIn learning? Here in Ohio, our library systems offer it for free. If you were in Ohio, I could help you get that for free and start digging in on modern/current resume and job stuff.

@amarand I tailor it as much as I can, it just includes more details about my skills and whatnot so I enter the company's name and stuff. It's not generic, per se, it's specific to me and my abilities. I just change who I'm addressing it to when I submit it.

@dr_zooks

My gut feeling is, you’re getting filtered out at the resume level. If I’m wrong, and you’re getting callbacks, focus on your post-interview process. Do you have an inkling of where you’re getting filtered out in the search process?

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@amarand do people still send out thank you followup emails? Is that outdated?

@dr_zooks

I always send a thank you email to someone I’ve met with. But I write a custom one for each person. Brief, on-time, shows you were listening during the interview and got their contact information. I usually just try to grab their card if I can, or their email usually has all that. Sometimes. Corporate directory. Assistant might have it.

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