Jobless professionals vie for holiday sales work

Shogun

Free: Mudholes Stomped
Jan 8, 2007
30,530
2,267
1,045
Mara Proctor used to design limestone hearths and columns for luxury homes near Kansas City, drawing on her college education and six years of training.

These days, she's leading customers around a store that sells sculptured snowmen and Santa figurines.

It isn't by choice. Until a few weeks ago, Proctor was among the record 5.9 million Americans who have been jobless for at least six months. Now she belongs to a subset of that group: Out-of-work professionals and managers, engineers and teachers who have turned, in desperation, to holiday-season jobs as sales clerks.

Retailers report a surge in applications this year from professionals who had never applied for such jobs before.

"You'll find Wall Street stock brokers and small business owners trying to find temporary retail jobs during the holidays," said Ellen Davis, vice president of the National Retail Federation.

The pay is low, the jobs temporary. And the work is hardly equal to their experience or expertise. Yet the nation's unemployment crisis left these people jobless so much longer than they'd expected that many count themselves fortunate to have anything.

Laid off eight months ago, Proctor said she figured, "OK, I'll do the unemployment thing for a couple of weeks and get a new job."

"It was very naive," she said. "You start calling all your contacts, and you find out they're all laid off, too, so your contacts list doesn't mean anything."

In a bleak labor market, holiday-season hiring has meant at least a respite for many long-term unemployed. Not that it's easy to land even these jobs. Most retailers have cut back. And overall in the economy, six applicants, on average, are competing for each opening — compared with just 1.7 workers per opening when the recession began in December 2007.

For the stores, though, the availability of clerks with experience managing or working effectively with co-workers is a luxury. They've been able to cull the excellent from the merely qualified.

"It enables us to be somewhat more selective and hire a higher-caliber" clerk, said Glenn Album, vice president of human resources at Toys R Us. Album said the company this year has hired, among others, former teachers and an accountant.

"What's great with the higher-caliber team members is there is much, much better service in the store," he said.

On a cold morning before Thanksgiving, Proctor jangled a set of keys and opened the Sticks boutique for business at the Country Club Plaza shopping district in Kansas City. When she was laid off in March, the notion of a retail job didn't even cross her mind.

At 32, she had spent six years hopping easily from job to job in the home-design business, seeking out higher responsibilities and pay with each move. Last year, she worked for a contractor, using computer drafting programs to draw floor plans.

After her layoff, she thought she'd be marketable. But the market had collapsed. By late summer, Proctor had burned through much of her personal savings.

She leapt at the chance to work temporarily as manager of a Sticks location, selling handmade wooden sculptures. Still, the job lasts only until Jan. 6. After that, she'll be unemployed again.

Retailers pay their sales clerks an average of about $13 an hour, the government estimates. Proctor declined to say how much she's paid, beyond saying it's well below what she earned as a designer. But it's more than the $400 a week she'd been collecting in unemployment benefits.

At Hoffman's Chocolates in Greenacres, Fla., the lavish holiday display of Christmas lights, toy trains and a robotic Santa Claus draws onlookers each year. But finding skilled workers for the holiday rush used to be difficult, said CEO Fred Meltzer.

Until this year. When it posted 45 jobs in its chocolate factory and on the sales floor, Hoffman's received 550 applications. Some came from people laid off by the circulation department of the Palm Beach Post. Others had worked for law firms. Another was Lisa Pagan, a former department store manager.

Once she heard Hoffman's was hiring, Pagan said she put on her best job-interview outfit — just to drop off her resume. She landed a position that pays less than half what she made last year as a department-store manager. But after a year of unemployment, Pagan, a 38-year-old divorced mother of two, isn't complaining.

"It's very scary out there right now," she said. "You get 101 excuses why they can't hire you. You get into panic mode."

At the Showtime Detroit clothing boutique in the Motor City, manager Dan Tatarian has been fielding inquiries from mortgage brokers, among others, desperate for work.

"They just want a job," Tatarian said. "They don't care what they're doing."

The trend illustrates the despair of unemployed people with professional backgrounds who face a pitiless job market, said John Lonski, chief economist of Moody's Capital Markets Research Group. Even though the economy has begun growing again, employers aren't confident enough in the recovery or their own businesses to step up hiring.

"Companies are still capable of meeting customer demands with their now often downsized staffs," Lonski said.

Competition is especially fierce for retail jobs, in part because the industry has cut 1 million jobs since January 2008, said Davis of the National Retail Federation. Many retailers, fearing another weak holiday season, are trying to manage with leaner staffs.

"Not only are there fewer positions, but more people are applying," Davis said.



Jobless professionals vie for holiday sales work - Yahoo! News
 
Too late for that. They should have applied months ago.

There's really no time these days for thinking you're too good for anything. These professionals need to lower their standards and get to work until something better comes along.
 
I dedicate this thread to all of you capitalista motherfuckers who like pretending that outsourced jobs only hit the labor and manufacturing sector. Those of you who seem to think an increase of service jobs will make up for lost manufacturing and that the panacea is, apparently, to go back to college and become a fucking java programmer... as if those very professional positions can't be undermined by the same free market failure which sees the USA normalizing it's standard of living with India, China and Mexico.

Have a happy holiday, fuckers!
 
I bet you WOULD want a thread like this closed, Frank, you scum fucking capitalista drone.
 
I bet you WOULD want a thread like this closed, Frank, you scum fucking capitalista drone.

I don't argue with the ignorant; you won't learn and it wears down my keyboard

Your rebuttals here are as fucking retarded as they were the last time I stomped a mudhole in your ass. Maybe you can find a min. wage job digging ditches this holiday season to make up for the failures of your favorite economic theory from the last decade.
 
hey! shogun,, the obamalama don't give a shit about out of work people, he's too busy stealing our money,, national health care, crap and trade, next illegal immigrants, he don't give a flying fuck about people being out of work,, hell he's off to copenhagen to sell his crap and trade, then off to accept his nobel peace prize after escalating the war, and after that, he'll probably come home for a toddy with billy ayers, and bullfrog wright, then after that? he'll find somebody to apologize to because Americans have to much,, didn't you listen when he said "Americans can no longer set their thermostats at 72, eats as much as they want, and drive their suv's and expect the rest of the world to like it" he's the king of the fucking world ain't he? and you voted for him.
 
I dedicate this thread to all of you capitalista motherfuckers who like pretending that outsourced jobs only hit the labor and manufacturing sector. Those of you who seem to think an increase of service jobs will make up for lost manufacturing and that the panacea is, apparently, to go back to college and become a fucking java programmer... as if those very professional positions can't be undermined by the same free market failure which sees the USA normalizing it's standard of living with India, China and Mexico.

Have a happy holiday, fuckers!

Merry Christmas to you too, maybe you would be in favor of lowering that corporate tax rate which is the second highest in the world so manufactoring could afford to stay in this country and employ Americans.
 
Too late for that. They should have applied months ago.

There's really no time these days for thinking you're too good for anything. These professionals need to lower their standards and get to work until something better comes along.

The problem is, there is no work. 6 applicants for every retail job, which are only temporary jobs for the Christmas season. I think it's high time that congress, the senate cut their pay and take unpaid vacations. I think it's also time that Obama quits having his big lavish parties, that way no one will be able to crash them because there are none.
 
Last edited:
Too late for that. They should have applied months ago.

There's really no time these days for thinking you're too good for anything. These professionals need to lower their standards and get to work until something better comes along.

The problem is, there is no work. 6 applicants for every retail job, which is only a temporary job for the Christmas season. I think it's high time that congress, the senate cut their pay and take unpaid vacations. I think it's also time that Obama quits having his big lavish parties, that way no one will be able to crash them because there are none.

What I said was they should have been applying in Sept./Oct. if they wanted holiday work. Now is not the time to look for retail jobs anyway.
 
I bet you WOULD want a thread like this closed, Frank, you scum fucking capitalista drone.

I don't argue with the ignorant; you won't learn and it wears down my keyboard

Your rebuttals here are as fucking retarded as they were the last time I stomped a mudhole in your ass. Maybe you can find a min. wage job digging ditches this holiday season to make up for the failures of your favorite economic theory from the last decade.

First, Chris Matthews apologized for calling West Point the Enemy Camp so I still have your shrunken head in my belt.

Also, it's apparent from your posts that you less than nothing about economics, so again, there's no point in wasting electrons "debating" with you or trying to get you back from "Wrong out in the trillions column"

Your behavior and overall ignorance in the Matthews West Point thread tell me all I ever need to know about addressing you.
 
I dedicate this thread to all of you capitalista motherfuckers who like pretending that outsourced jobs only hit the labor and manufacturing sector. Those of you who seem to think an increase of service jobs will make up for lost manufacturing and that the panacea is, apparently, to go back to college and become a fucking java programmer... as if those very professional positions can't be undermined by the same free market failure which sees the USA normalizing it's standard of living with India, China and Mexico.

Have a happy holiday, fuckers!

Merry Christmas to you too, maybe you would be in favor of lowering that corporate tax rate which is the second highest in the world so manufactoring could afford to stay in this country and employ Americans.

Labor costs are far higher to coprorations than corporate tax rate.

Lets just drop the labor rates and all will be fine?

Ohh wait we are already doing that.
 
I dedicate this thread to all of you capitalista motherfuckers who like pretending that outsourced jobs only hit the labor and manufacturing sector. Those of you who seem to think an increase of service jobs will make up for lost manufacturing and that the panacea is, apparently, to go back to college and become a fucking java programmer... as if those very professional positions can't be undermined by the same free market failure which sees the USA normalizing it's standard of living with India, China and Mexico.

Have a happy holiday, fuckers!

Merry Christmas to you too, maybe you would be in favor of lowering that corporate tax rate which is the second highest in the world so manufactoring could afford to stay in this country and employ Americans.

Labor costs are far higher to coprorations than corporate tax rate.

Lets just drop the labor rates and all will be fine?

Ohh wait we are already doing that.

Which would explain why GM and Chrysler are doing so well...no wait!
 

Forum List

Back
Top