Take a minute out of your (hopefully) busy day and think about how people found jobs fifty years ago. It might seem simple – if your father was a taxidermist, chances are you would be next in line to run the family business whether or not you had an interest in commemorating someone’s cat.
There was no Careerbuilder, no Craigslist, and networking consisted of knocking back a couple martinis after work (or during, see: Mad Men). These days we have a plethora of job resources, however lacking we are in actual jobs (see: recession). Speaking from experience, submitting your resume online in response to a posting on websites like CareerBuilder or Indeed is a drop in the bucket, along with 2,000 other drops also hoping to land a job. With major conglomerations and increasing globalization nailing family businesses into the ground, younger generations are faced with a daunting task: picking their own profession and then fighting tooth and nail until they get it. Luckily, companies like Careerli are being created to help people with the very important first step of any career: choosing one. Co-founder Meghan O’Shaughnessy was at this stage in her life not too long ago. She was working at Apple as a retail associate and it was wearing on her. “I was tired of working in retail and feeling isolated. I felt like I was wasting my major,” O’Shaughnessy said. She was a recent graduate and a prime example of someone with a multitude of talents that was having trouble trying to narrow it down to one. O’Shaughnessy attended both DePaul and Columbia College, transferring back and forth several times before graduating from Columbia College with a degree in Design. After quitting her job at Apple, she started working as a Community Manager for Dabble, a Chicago startup that offers affordable classes from crepe making to public speaking. After working for a successful startup, O’Shaughnessy caught the “entrepreneurial bug,” and decided to create a solution for her not-so-uncommon problem of career uncertainty. She came up with a business plan and entered S.P.A.R.K Chicago, a startup competition hosted by Technori during Chicago’s first TechWeek. O’Shaughnessy’s original idea, dubbed Careerli, was a tool mainly geared towards high school students who needed help deciding what career to pursue post-graduation. Careerli was chosen as one of the top three S.P.A.R.K contestants and the then five-person team was given three days of intense incubation with their development partner Obtiva. O’Shaughnessy said she learned a lot from the well-known Chicago software developer, “They turned our ideas into reality and helped us go from a baby idea to an actual company,” she said.
Careerli Aims to Help the Undecided
By Techli
19 agosto, 2011
