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Imagine a game of musical chairs. Except there are 12 chairs and 100 people.
Thatās what the job market is like right now, says Mandi Woodruff-Santos, a career coach and host of the āBrown Ambition” podcast.
āThereās not a lot of meat on the bone,ā she says.
Thatās why right now, many people who do have jobs are holding on to them for dear life, a concept that management consulting firm Korn Ferry called ājob huggingā last month.
So many people are talking and writing about the term that ājob huggingā is trending on Google.
It resonates. Are you hugging your current job right now? Maybe you feel stuck. Maybe youāre not able to gain the skills you want. Maybe youād like a new position with new challenges or more money, but ā¦
In July, the number of job openings (7.2 million), the number of new hires (5.3 million) and the number of people quitting jobs (3.2 million) were all pretty much unchanged, according to the latest numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Insert melting emoji.
Uncertainty about the economy, largely driven by changing policy, is causing employers to hold back on hiring, she says.
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Jesse Wideman, a certified financial planner based in Charlotte, NC, says a few years ago he had a lot of clients, particularly in the tech industry, who job-hopped to get more money. Now though?
āThereās a lot more fear around job security,ā says Wideman, who works for Zenith Wealth Partners.
He gets it. He says heās gone through job loss, and heās had both friends and clients go through job losses, too.
āThey were out of work much longer than they thought,ā he says. āThen, once they get in a new job, they donāt say, āI plan to be here a year or two.āā
They stay parked right where they are. Why? Because people are afraid to go through another job loss and think, ālet me make sure I don’t have another five or six months where I don’t have enough money for it to be feasible to feed me and/or my family,ā he says.
Job hugging does have benefits. Literally.
If your job provides your health care and you have people relying on you, thatās a strong case for staying put, says Woodruff-Santos, who has the nickname, āthe Queen of Quittingā because sheās quit jobs to get more money and coached women of color to do the same.
Believe it or not, some companies still have pensions, he says. If you leave, thatās money you may be leaving on the table.
Either theyāve been laid off before, or they want a cushion in case life starts life-ing and that job theyāre hugging cuts them loose.
There are tradeoffs, of course. If youāre putting more money in your emergency fund, that means less money for other things ā a down payment on a house, a wedding, your retirement or your brokerage fund.
It just depends on your priorities. Also, how strong your fear is.
And when opportunity knocks, bet on yourself
If clients arenāt happy in their role and something better does come along, Wideman says he works with them to help them evaluate where they are and what their financial plan looks like if they stay or if they go.
Those discussions definitely come up less these days, Wideman says. But they still do come up.
Woodruff-Santos says if youāre hanging onto a job that seems secure and you get a rare opportunity to jump ship, but youāre scared of moving because of a possible last-in, first-out layoff, what does that mean for future you?
āItās very comfortable to think āstay put.ā Itās the safe route,” Woodruff-Santos says. āBut at the same time, what are y’all hugging? It aināt hugging you back.ā
How much more could you have saved, gotten ahead, paid off debt, or socked into your 401(k) if you quit and took that leap?
āThereās that risk, but also that reward,ā she says. āWhat if things do work out? Because a lot of times, they do.ā
Woodruff-Santos, who works with women of color, says theyāve long known that a job is just one source of income. She encourages her clients to keep their resumes and networks up to date and not count on that one job to be around forever.
āIf you are job hugging naively, that is the worst mistake of all,ā she says.
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