So what can you do if you have completed a 4 year path residency with a year of fellowship and still are struggling to find a job? Any other options other than switching to another residency?
Pathoguru
Pathoguru
This kind of posting scares me to death and ruins my days....
So what can you do if you have completed a 4 year path residency with a year of fellowship and still are struggling to find a job? Any other options other than switching to another residency?
Pathoguru
community practice troll
Being a physician is sort of a dead end job anyways. Your earnings are controlled by the government.
As someone beginning a job search right now I find this thread quite disheartening and discouraging. It seems like there is no way to predict whether or not one will be able to find a job and you only know after it is too late. After reading many of these threads I have to say that I have no idea what makes a trainee a strong or weak candidate for getting a job. People who find jobs seem to imply that those who can't must have "red flags" while those unable to find a job do not perceive themselves this way. This instills a certain amount of self doubt for someone entering the job search. Do I have "red flags"? I don't know. Apparently if you do you can't see them. I have missed cases in residency. Does that make me incompetent? I think I work well with people. Maybe they don't think so? Obviously everyone without a job perceives themselves as being competent and easy to work with, maybe that is me??? I don't know. Maybe I won't know until I ask for job references from faculty and they tell me to get lost.
I do know that my program has kicked my ass and I have worked hard. I feel like I shouldn't be this worried, but oh well. I am half a decade in now and if it doesn't work out I guess it is too late to go back now.
I have heard the usual bs about networking a thousand times, without it being explained or described. It's kind of loose buzzward that means you get a job by blind luck. It's how I got my first job, but I've had a lot of opportunity to sit and think about what I could have done differently. Residents are already in a underdog/social leper position, and you may find it difficult to go around begging for a job.
There is something you can learn, which has a lot on unambigious material out there--it's called SELLING. And the product you will be selling will be yourself. And no one can do that for you. And if you can SELL yourself to the group, you can SELL your competence to the surgeons, gi docs, ob/gyns, urologists, derms, and so on.
I would start will the Zig Ziglar material, but there is so much material on SELLING that anywhere would be a better start than doing nothing.
I have heard the usual bs about networking a thousand times, without it being explained or described.
<snip> <snip>
The key to networking is doing these things BEFORE you need a job or fellowship, so that you can build relationships over time. <snip>
I think people confuse "networking" with "showing up at conferences, introducing yourself to people, and hoping that things happen." It doesn't work that way.
Networking also includes making it known that you are competent pathologist and someone who people want to work with. I received a couple of unsolicited recruitment-type contacts towards the end of my residency because attendings in my program were contacted by their friends who were looking for someone to hire, and the attending thought of me.
What often happens with residents is that they all end up sitting together at their own table. Then they wonder why nothing good came out of their "networking."
One needs to have confidence but not arrogance that you are a good fit for the next position.
People want to help their friends, not random strangers with business cards.
Networking will not get you a job. Personal contacts will get a job. The stronger these contacts are and the more of them you have, the more likely you are to get a job.
People want to help their friends, not random strangers with business cards. Pathologists included.
Acquiring personal contacts (and cultivating them) IS networking.
I would like to make the point that this is about intent, not semantics. If you want to call making friends with a lot of people "networking", that is fine with me.