Why Bill Found a Job and Sally Did Not: Two Careers Searches in the New Labor Market
Note: This story is not about real people or real situations. The people are my creations, but their stories reflect a reality many face.
Sally and Bill were laid off in the same month, from different companies, in different roles, and with very different outcomes. Their stories unfold in parallel, shaped by the same labor market but filtered through two very different professional identities.
The Recruiter
Sally had spent ten years as a senior technical recruiter at Amazon. She had joined during a period of aggressive growth, when engineering teams expanded continuously, and hiring was treated as a strategic advantage. Over time, she became highly specialized. She knew how to source senior software engineers and machine learning researchers. She understood compensation, unwritten internal mobility rules, and the preferences of engineering managers. Her performance reviews had always been strong. She had hired hundreds of people. She believed that her skills were valuable and portable.
The layoff in September 2025 came as a shock, but not a surprise. Amazon had already reduced recruiting capacity several times. Automation tools were screening candidates. Hiring volumes were down. When Sally lost her role, she assumed the search would be uncomfortable but short. She updated her résumé and LinkedIn profile and applied for dozens of senior recruiter positions.
Six months later, she was still searching.
What frustrated Sally most was not rejection. It was silence. Applications disappeared into ATSs without response. Recruiters never replied. Roles were posted and then disappeared. Some positions required experience with AI sourcing platforms, recruiting automation systems, and workforce analytics tools that she had never used directly.
Sally realized that her problem was not competence, but positioning. She was highly skilled in a recruiting model that no longer dominated the market. Her experience was built around high-volume, engineering-heavy hiring in a large, brand-name organization with deep infrastructure and a strong employer reputation. The market she was now facing looked very different.
Most companies were hiring fewer people. Many had frozen external recruiting entirely and shifted toward internal mobility. Others had outsourced recruiting to RPO providers. In-house teams were smaller, more technical, and more focused on systems than on relationships. Employers wanted recruiters who could manage AI-driven screening, build talent intelligence dashboards, and integrate sourcing with workforce planning models. Sally had worked alongside these systems but not owned them.
She also faced a branding paradox. Her Amazon experience was impressive, but it also worked against her. Hiring managers assumed she would be expensive, rigid, and accustomed to large teams and strong support functions. Some worried she would not adapt to lean environments. Others assumed she would leave quickly once the market improved.
Sally felt trapped. She was overqualified for mid-level roles and underqualified for the new generation of strategic recruiting that emphasized data science, automation design, and workforce analytics. The skills she had spent a decade refining were still useful, but no longer scarce. The market had moved faster than her role had evolved.
The Account Executive
Bill’s story started in the same month but moved differently.
Bill had spent twenty years at Salesforce as a senior account executive. He had built relationships across multiple industries, managed complex enterprise deals, and developed deep expertise in SaaS pricing models, procurement cycles, and executive management. His job was about persuasion, trust, and long sales cycles. He understood how to navigate corporate buying behavior better than most.
When Salesforce laid him off, Bill felt the same initial shock as Sally. But he reacted differently. Instead of applying broadly, he focused narrowly. He identified companies with similar business models, similar customer bases, and sales cultures. He contacted former clients. He reached out to partners. He treated the job search as a sales job.
Within three months, Bill landed an offer from Intuit for a senior account executive role. The salary was lower than what he had earned at Salesforce. The commission structure was less aggressive. The brand was strong, but the territory was narrower. Still, it was a real job, aligned with his experience, and in the same domain he had mastered.
Bill accepted without much hesitation.
The Differences
What Bill understood, and Sally slowly learned, was that the market was no longer rewarding seniority equally across all functions. Sales remained critical. Companies still needed people who could close deals, manage enterprise relationships, and generate revenue. Even in a slower economy, selling did not disappear.
Recruiting, by contrast, had become optional. Companies could pause hiring. They could automate screening. They could outsource sourcing. They could ask managers to do more themselves. They could rely on internal talent marketplaces and AI matching systems. Recruiting capacity could shrink dramatically without immediate business failure.
This created very different power dynamics.
Bill’s skills were still directly tied to revenue. Sally’s skills were tied to growth. And growth was no longer the dominant strategy for most firms.
There was also a bigger difference in how their skills aged.
Bill’s expertise was relational and strategic. He understood how to navigate ambiguity, build trust, and influence decisions. These capabilities transferred across companies and products. The tools changed, but the core skill remained.
Sally knew how to operate within a specific organizational system. She understood Amazon’s hiring machinery. But much of that knowledge did not transfer well to smaller firms, AI-driven environments, or consulting-style recruiting models.
She began to feel like she was losing her professional identity. Recruiting had always been described as a people business, but now it felt increasingly like a systems business. The roles that paid well required skills in AI, analytics, automation architecture, and workforce strategy. The roles that matched her background were few, paid less, and offered little stability.
Bill, meanwhile, faced a different future. His new role at Intuit came with lower pay and higher expectations. He was expected to manage more accounts with fewer support resources. Sales cycles were longer. Buyers were more cautious. He felt older in a younger organization. He worried about being too expensive again in the next downturn.
But Bill still had a role in the system.
Sally was outside the system, trying to re-enter one that had partially automated itself away.
Their Futures
Over time, Sally started to rethink her career. She explored adjacent roles in talent analytics, workforce planning, and HR technology consulting. She considered retraining in data analysis. She thought about moving into product roles for recruiting platforms. She realized that the future of her field was less about filling jobs and more about designing labor systems.
Bill’s future was more linear but more fragile. He could continue selling, but each move would likely come with lower compensation and greater pressure. His value was still real, but the premium he once commanded had shrunk.
Both had survived the layoff. But only one had returned to stable employment quickly.
Their stories reflect a broader shift in the labor market. Roles tied to growth, expansion, and internal services are becoming volatile and automatable. Roles tied to revenue, strategy, and external relationships remain durable but less lucrative than before.
Sally represented a class of professionals whose expertise was real but not aligned with the new operating model of work. Bill represented a class whose skills were still necessary but no longer protected by scarcity.
Neither story was a failure. But only one still fits into the structure of how companies now create value. And that difference, more than talent or effort, explains why one search stalled while the other succeeded.



This is fantastic!!!! Omg. Sharing. And it is why you cannot let AI create your strategy, write your resume, etc. ❤️