Almost 2 years is a long time to be looking for work. Even though the economy has been bad, there should have been something opening up.
I’d take a close look at how you are looking for work.
Are you presenting yourself in a professional manner? Dressed for office work with a suit and tie? Or are you dressed for the street with torn jeans and sneakers?
Are you presenting yourself in a respectful manner? Do you remember the names of the people interviewing you and do you address them as Sir or hey you?
Is your resume professionally done, printed on good paper with perfect spelling and grammar?
Do you have personal business cards made up with your contact information? MS Word has the templates to print them and any office supply store has the blanks. It makes you look professional and stand out from the crowd.
How were your marks? If you just scrapped through with minimum passing and a few repeats then you might want to think about something else.
You could contact a HR firm and ask them to spend a couple of hours with you looking over your resume and conducting a mock interview. It might cost a couple hundred but after all you have invested in your education its small change.
Are you geographically mobile? If you only want to work in the oil patch in North Dakota then there is not much out there for you.
Try to send out 50 to 100 resumes a week. That’s a lot and it takes a lot of research to find that many firms but the information is out there. Don’t just e-mail them since a lot of places will trap email from strangers and delete attachments. Send them on nice professional stationary. See any office supply place for coordinated high quality paper and envelopes (You can coordinate them with your business cards as well.)
Are your expectations unrealistic? In engineering they teach us how to run big projects but the reality is that everyone has to start out doing the grunt work. Nothing in engineering should be considered beneath you. No one will hire a new graduate to run multi million dollar projects.
I could go on but I think you get the idea.
Rick Kitson MBA P.Eng
Construction Project Management
From conception to completion