The Extreme Tragedy of the Rescinded Job Offer

 "In preparation for the new gig, he [tech expert in Palo Alto] quit his job in the Bay Area, gave up his Palo Alto lease and arranged six months of temporary housing in Mexico City. That afternoon he got a call from Twitter HR." - Bloomberg, May 26, 2022.

The offer was snatched-back. Twitter indicated that reason was its "current situation." And, as we all know, that ranges from the uncertainty embedded in the Elon Musk offer to the ending of the tech boom.

That tech expert is stranded in a tech marketplace that was shrinking. It was unlikely that he would be able to land a comparable job, at least not quickly. 

Not long ago on LinkedIn a woman provided the chronicle of the same kind of professional tragedy. Just before she was to begin her job as a recruiter at Meta, the offer had gone poof. She has just signed a lease. Meta's prospects have been souring. Her own prospects in a job search probably aren't so hot.

All this brings back the grim play-outs of newly graduated JDs during The Great Recession. They had landed a job. Or so they jad thought. Then Big Law firms snatched them back.

At that time, the demand for junior lawyers had fallen off a cliff. Meanwhile, most had student loan debt that required about $700 a month then (now it would be much higher). Most had to do other kinds of work to make ends meet. And most of them never made it back to practicing law. When the recovery kicked in law firms were hiring the fresh crop of law firm graduates.

Editor-in-Chief of this blog Jane Genova (janegenova374@gmail.com) will provide pro-bono coaching on preparation of job search materials to those caught up in this tragedy. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Timing Is Just Right for US Government to Create The Ministry of Magic

Law Students - Subreddit for Big Law As Ultimate Mentor

The Queen's 70th - Count Us Out of the Celebration