Episode Description
In this special, more personal episode, Steve looks past the headlines and into his own home to explore why early career paths feel so discouraging for today’s students. Using Lindsay Ellis’s Wall Street Journal article, “Companies Predict 2026 Will Be the Worst College Grad Job Market in Five Years,” as a springboard, Steve shares the real conversations he’s hearing from his college-senior son and from campuses around the country: ghosting, silence, fewer internships, and shrinking campus recruiting. Yet there’s real hope. This cohort was forged in Covid, and many aren’t waiting for permission. They’re building side hustles, micro-startups, creator businesses, and portfolios that prove capability. Steve challenges leaders to fix the early experience and invites families to support zigzags over straight lines. It’s a clear, human reset for anyone navigating or hiring into the messy first step of work.
The early-career “handshake deal” is dissolving: students do the work, the system returns silence.
Push factors (ghosting, black-hole processes) are beating corporate pull factors.
Covid-shaped grads are unusually adaptive and entrepreneurial.
Leaders must redesign the first mile of work: responsive communication, real projects, faster feedback.
Families can champion experimentation, portfolios, and non-linear paths.
Wall Street Journal article by Lindsay Ellis, “Companies Predict 2026 Will Be the Worst College Grad Job Market in Five Years.”https://www.wsj.com/lifestyle/careers/2026-graduates-job-market-7928bcd7?st=Lbd1QE&reflink=article_copyURL_share
