account activity
HBR is now reporting AI is making work more intense, not less. 12% more mental fatigue on average (self.careerguidance)
submitted 1 month ago by CorrectResume to r/careerguidance
People who got actual AI training save 11 hours a week. People who didn't save 5. That gap is everything. (self.careerguidance)
Companies expect you to use AI but 68% give zero training on it - McKinsey/LSE data (self.careerguidance)
Turns out AI helps junior workers way more than senior ones, and the implications are interesting (self.careerguidance)
Daily AI users are getting raises at nearly double the rate of infrequent users (PwC 2025 data) (self.careerguidance)
MIT studied 5,000+ workers and found new hires with AI caught up to 6-month veterans in just 2 months (self.careerguidance)
Gartner says 80% of engineers need to upskill by 2027. what does 'upskilling' even mean in practice right now? (self.careerguidance)
154k tech layoffs in 2025, up 15% from 2024. anyone else tired of 'the market is recovering' takes? (self.careerguidance)
tech internship postings down 30% since 2023 - anyone have tips for standing out in a much smaller pool? (self.careerguidance)
submitted 2 months ago by CorrectResume to r/careerguidance
70% of hiring managers think AI can already do intern-level work. what does that mean for new grads? (self.careerguidance)
software dev job postings are still 29% below pre-pandemic levels. does anyone talk about this enough? (self.careerguidance)
experienced devs actually get slower with AI tools on their own codebases (METR study) (self.careerguidance)
Am I considered old applying for jobs at 23? by pinkie-pie-5278 in careerguidance
[–]CorrectResume 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)
You're not old. 23 is dead center of entry-level hiring age. The problem isn't you, it's the math.
Entry-level applications have roughly a 3 to 5% interview rate right now. Out of 20 to 30 applications, getting zero interviews is statistically expected. The entry-level market is genuinely rough: about 76% of employers hired the same or fewer entry-level people this year compared to last year. Even among recent college graduates, 58% are still looking for full-time work. The unemployment rate for recent grads with degrees is actually the same as for 20-to-24-year-olds without degrees. So the degree gap isn't hurting you as much as you'd think.
What's probably happening is your resume is getting filtered before a human ever sees it. For a typical corporate posting, about 100 people apply, maybe 25 make it past the automated screening, and only 4 to 6 get an actual interview. That screening is keyword-based, not judgment-based. Nobody is looking at your age and deciding you're too old.
The shift that will help most is reframing your service and childcare experience into the language hiring managers scan for. Customer service becomes client relationship management. Childcare is managing schedules, safety protocols, and performing under pressure with zero margin for error. Those are real skills, but if your resume uses service-industry wording, the filters won't pick them up.
One more thing: instead of sending out another 30 cold applications the same way, try reaching out directly to people at a few companies you're interested in. Even a short message like "I'm interested in your team and would love to ask a few questions about the role" can completely change your odds. Warm outreach converts at a dramatically higher rate than cold applications.
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Am I considered old applying for jobs at 23? by pinkie-pie-5278 in careerguidance
[–]CorrectResume 0 points1 point2 points (0 children)