50 Jobs in 50 Weeks: A Job Seeker Reinvents Himself

0 followers
0 Likes

From ERE Net



by John Zappe  Jun 22, 2009, 8:20 pm ET


Attachment.You have to wonder what a recruiter looking at Daniel Seddiqui's resume would think.


Here's an economics major from the University of Southern California
who hasn't held a job for longer than a week since graduating in 2005.
On his website he admits, almost eagerly, that he went on 40-plus
interviews and didn't land a single offer in his field.


His lament is all too familiar to unsuccessful jobseekers: "I never received feedback from any employers."


So the lanky 28-year-old began taking any job he could find. He
tutored elementary school kids. Was a volunteer cross-country coach in
Chicago, painting stairs, doing a little accounting, and some other
jobs to pay the rent. When the cross-country job ended, he took another
job in Indiana. And then another.


His resume now lists jobs as diverse as agronomist, hydrologist,
cook, rodeo announcer, Border Patrol agent, and boilermaker. If you're
reading this during the fourth week of June 2009, then you'll see 39
different jobs listed. This week he's working as a furniture maker in
Pennsylvania's Amish country.


By now you should have concluded that Seddiqui is no mere
discouraged worker. Some of you may even have seen him interviewed on
CNN or local TV. His website lists more than 150 TV and print stories
about him. He figures he has done more than 500 interviews.


Attachment."The objective," Seddiqui says on his website,
"is to travel all 50 states to work 50 different careers in 50 weeks.
Sound Crazy??? I'm on a mission to explore various careers,
environments, and cultures that America has to offer." His quest is to
sample work representative of each state, hence the corn farmer in
Nebraska, logger in Oregon, and wedding chapel coordinator in Las Vegas.


Living the Map is the title of his own take on that quintessential
American journey of self-discovery - the road trip. Like so many
others, he was driven in part by curiosity, despair, and the freedom
that comes, as Kris Kristofferson wrote, from having nothing left to lose.


"I felt like I had no opportunities," Seddiqui told a reporter in Greensboro, N.C.
"Now, they are endless. This has opened so many doors for me." He's
gotten several book and movie offers. A book was always in the plan; a
documentary may be in the works. And he's putting together a series of videos on each of the jobs.


Lining up the jobs was hard in the beginning. He left his parent's
home in the San Francisco Bay Area last September only after lining up
five week's worth of jobs. The next few jobs were easier, thanks to the
website detailing his exploits, which gave him some legitimacy. The
media exposure now makes finding work easy. A racing crew in
Indianapolis came looking for him.


Every job has been a paying one. For some he trades work for room
and board. But, as he told Fox News, some jobs have paid him into four
figures.





 


When his adventure is all over, which should be just before the end
of August, Seddiqui says he may pick a career from among the jobs he's
held. If he does, it isn't likely he'll have a hard time landing a
position. He's had offers from most of the places he has worked. That
rodeo announcer job, though, didn't work out.

0 Replies
Reply
Subgroup Membership is required to post Replies
Join Better Jobs Faster now
Dan DeMaioNewton
almost 16 years ago
0
Replies
0
Likes
0
Followers
598
Views
Liked By:
Suggested Posts
TopicRepliesLikesViewsParticipantsLast Reply
Interested in a career in counseling/mental health?
Dan DeMaioNewton
over 5 years ago
00143
Dan DeMaioNewton
over 5 years ago
Google takes on LinkedIn with its own job-search platform Hire
Dan DeMaioNewton
about 8 years ago
00454
Dan DeMaioNewton
about 8 years ago
The 11 Best Recruiting Videos Ever
Dan DeMaioNewton
about 8 years ago
10761
PDQ Staffing
over 5 years ago