- She had never actually worked in a marketing assistant/coordinator role and was competing against possibly hundreds of other candidates who were currently working in these roles.
- Her undergraduate marketing degree was virtually obsolete as she had no digital marketing or social media skills which were an expected requirement for many of the jobs.
- Her resume wasn’t doing her any favors. It looked outdated and didn’t highlight her transferable skills. As a 'relauncher', out of work for eight years, her resume was really only highlighting this gap.
- The jobs she was applying for — fashion, sport — were highly appealing to a wide range of applicants which would therefore likely make the applicant pool even greater.
- By applying for entry-level marketing roles, Sarah was not valuing the plethora of skills that she had developed earlier in her career: leadership, client relationship management, stakeholder management, financial management. They were still there! It was also highly likely that recruiting managers would think she was too experienced for coordinator roles.
- An interview with the human resources manager of a major fashion label.
- An interview with the human resources manager of a major retailer.
- A job offer to work as a part-time account manager for a homewares company.
- A further interview lined up that she canceled after receiving the job offer.