Are Workers Over 50 Unemployable?

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Workers in their 50s are about 20% less likely than workers ages 25 to 34 to become re-employed, says a 2012 Urban Institute study. Nearly two-thirds of unemployed workers age 55 and up say they’ve been actively looking for work for over a year, according to a recent survey by the Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers University.

 

"When there's a large supply of unemployed workers, employers can afford to be choosier, and they're opting for workers they think are less expensive or more recently trained," said Sara Rix, senior strategic policy advisor for AARP's Public Policy Institute.

 

Is age discrimination alive and well? To some degree, yes. But according to Patricia Smith, senior VP at the career-coaching firm, New Directions, it's now just an obstacle, not a barrier. "You don't want to work for a company that doesn't want to embrace you because of your age anyway," says Smith.

 

So what can 55 and 60 year olds do to find a decent IT job? Smith advises senior job seekers to consider more flexible work arrangements—things like consulting, interim work, long-term project work, or joining a "flex work" company that offers project or contract work on a freelance basis. These arrangements allow you to learn new skills, and try new career areas without a big commitment. The same holds true for employers, who may be reluctant in these times to take on a new, older employee. A flex work or consulting arrangement is a win-win for both sides: employees get a paycheck and employers get decades of experience and expertise without the burdened costs associated with a full-time employee.

 

IT workers heading toward 50 should begin thinking about job options, alternative job paths and career goals, especially in these tough economic times. “Shame on you if you’re not thinking every single year, ‘What’s my next step?’” says Pamela Mitchell a career coach and author. “It’s magical thinking not to do this.” That cushy paper-pushing job packed with perks won’t last forever. Which is why it’s so important to have a plan B or even a plan C ready to roll.

 

Some additional tactics for finding work if you’re over 50 include:

 

  • Forget Online Applications. These impersonal app trees take an hour to fill out and are set up to reject you if one “square-peg” answer doesn’t fit their screening program. Your application never gets read by humans.
     
  • Forget Headhunters. More square-pegs screening, especially on the tech side. They want to bring their corporate clients young hotshots at half your asking salary and no medical issues.
     
  • Forget Unemployed Stigma. In your cover letter and interview, let the prospective employer know that you’re a successful IT consultant or have your own small business. Show them your business cards (have some printed up for $5). Tell them the economy has impacted your business and you’re considering a plan B with their firm. Never let them think you’re desperate for a job.

 

Land a decent job when you’re over 50? It can be done. But you’ll have to start thinking of a Plan B early.

 

Image courtesy of imagerymajestic / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

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  • Diane C
    Diane C
    This article scares me very much!  I'm 55 and have been looking for a job for 9 months.  I have a great resume.  I desperately need a job now.
  • Stephen F
    Stephen F
    So, should I find a bridge to live under now before all of the good spots are gone?  I am 55, in I.T. and have been out of work for 4 years.  Do I give up and lose everything I have worked for just because some idiot thinks I am too old to be productive?
  • Charles C
    Charles C
    Offering tips on how to adapt to age discrimination perpetuates it.
  • Marcia M
    Marcia M
    A worker who doesn't need $11,000+ in health insurance costs a company a lot less than a younger worker.  Also, who says we expect to be paid twice as much or that we don't have current skills? These sound like excuses not reasons.
  • Constantin D
    Constantin D
    Easier said than done
  • Jim R
    Jim R
    Could not agree more with the points within the article.  I have faced this situation for over 4 years I am 61 years old with over 18 years of I.T. experience and have seen time after time when i was completely qualified for a position and sometimes over qualified get passed over for a younger applicant. Thank you for the article it reaffirms what I have been feeling for sometime.
  • John M.
    John M.
    Maybe it's time to stop the H1-B invasion while we are at it.
  • HAROLD S
    HAROLD S
    I found very useful and good advice in this article. I find myself in denial and spinning my wheels with online applications and head hunters. Consulting is the way for me to establish some working relationships.
  • michael c
    michael c
    Some one needs to look at some of the questions being asked on resumes you submit Online.  ExampleWhat year did you graduate high school or college, you do not have to be a rocket scientist to figure out an age of applicant, also asking your driver license number which gives you your date of birth in the last 5 digits of your license.  Both examples indicate a persons age with out flat out asking.  To me this is clearly age discrimination in the purest sense.  I know the AARP is being flooded with complaints of Age Discrimination, maybe they will be able to put some pressure on this situation.  50 and 60 year olds still need to work
  • Megan M
    Megan M
    How about some REAL information?! Where to go for assistance, who to speak to, what changes should we make, and how to get someone to look at our resumes and CVs?? Many of us over 50 have degrees that are considered too old, cannot qualify for any financial assistance to get retraining, AARP does NOTHING to help it's members that still need a REAL job, and we have no one to speak to about retraining that is of a similar age that can truly address the need to bridge the gap between the job seeker and corporate America! We need businesses to get incentives to develop apprenticeship programs for displaced workers so they can be marketable again. We need the Chambers of Commerce in cities across the country to encourage their members to offer retraining so the workers over 50 can be of service to them again. We need corporate America to realize that these people WERE our middle-class and without them our economy will continue to flounder. We also need the Federal Government to realize focusing only on the children without helping the parents and grandparents to have incomes to provide the housing and food for the next generation, the next generation is doomed!
  • Laurel S
    Laurel S
    I'm relocating to my birthplace of Southern California from Hawaii, and WILL get some type of IT job again. It's that or continue to make peanuts in retail. It won't be easy, but the most important thing is to believe in yourself and sell your skills. I had no retail experience when hired, and my new employers love me. I now have at least a fallback job and sales experience. (Hawaii is a great place to retire, by the way, but not a good place to find a job).
  • DanielF.M
    DanielF.M
    Good Article, Plans A,B,&C are good to have in place. I,m 61 and have gained much experience in a lot of technical areas and employers are missing the point, but that can't change but by the individual.
  • Robert T
    Robert T
    I have over 30 years of IT operational and support experience on large IBM mainframes to Windows 7.Over 400 applications out... no one will touch me... built website, on LinkedIn, registered with all of the job hunt sites... 4 years out of work... good luck to all of you over 50...Most of the jobs Americans will not do have been sent off shore.
  •  Ron R
    Ron R
    Cool CommentsI will be 55 in Nov and thanks for the online applications tip, I will stop wasting time energy.Really Like Charles B's comment Plan D
  •  Kate M
    Kate M
    I have multiple skills on multiple levels. All I get is the runaround.I have been out of work for almost two years. I am looking at plan 'D' disability. I have tried all methods of being gainfully employed from the 'try before you buy' to showing business cards.I have a website where I show off my skill set. I have tried underplaying my skills to skill specific interviews. Nothing seems to work. I feel like I am a throw away highly skilled IT Consultant that no one wants. I am even trying low skilled jobs at the local office supply stores to security guard and nothing!
  • Vanessa G
    Vanessa G
    I strongly agree. I have applied for many jobs that I knew I was qualified for and felt that I was overlloked because of my age. Until someone nails these employers on this it will continue to happen. This is discriminating. I am older and can outwork some these younger people who have not been out in the workforce like myself and many others have. I am 54 and I can outwork my younger co-workers.
  • larry b
    larry b
    I am 57 year old male and can not find a regular job, But I work better the young people.
  • carlos l
    carlos l
    employers only can see what they have in front of their eyes. All they want is quantity not quality.Older  experienced workers make good quality.
  • Alicia D
    Alicia D
    i think you are right most employers think that being over 50 is old..i am 56 and I have decades of experience that would help me on my job path and I am more committed than someone half my age I left the childish things behind. I will be on time and not absent because of I can't get up in the morning.  Employers should really take a look at what an over 50 can offer to the company on a whole than what a younger employee can't
  • Alex A. Kecskes
    Alex A. Kecskes
    Pamela: Good luck with your new business. Hang in there.Great saying, Sherrie.
  • Charles B
    Charles B
    My plans A, B, C are getting zero results. Plan D (disability)?
  • MICHAEL M
    MICHAEL M
    I don't understand employer thinking, older worker bring more experience and make more money for the business, you have to spend some money to make some money!
  • Johnie B M
    Johnie B M
    I'm not a Baby Boomer.  I'm in my 70s and still have to work.  I am not an IT, but I have skills with computers.  I was humiliated when I was applying for a Part Time job with a head hunter, who was to send me skills tests to at home.  I received nothing.  That told me she thought I am too old to work.  I thought age discrimination is illegal, obviously in my experience it isn't.  I can work for WalMart and get the treatment they do to their employees or go out and beg.  With  Masters degree and years of experience in many fields I am unhireable.  What do you suggest that someone in my predicament do?  Leave the country?  A lot of important resources are being overlooked because the attitude in the country that longevety is a curse in this country.
  • Pamela R
    Pamela R
    Thanks for the article. I am currently working on developing a new business.  However,in fear of being viewed as having a conflict of interest, I never thought to share my ownership of an up an coming online business.Although within this economy I am happy to have a job_ my hours are going to be cut again and I have my Masters but my current position requires a HighSchool diploma.  I am over 50 years old and very frustrated.
  • Sherrie N
    Sherrie N
    An Old Spanish saying..."The devil know more because he is old not because he's the devil."

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