I lost my job, what do I do?

The Hiring Team

No notice. Just boom, gone.
In today’s market, job security is an illusion. But career resilience isn't. As a recruiter who has sat on both sides of the table, I’ve seen thousands of professionals handle layoffs. Some spiral; others treat it like a full-time headhunting assignment where they are the prize candidate.
If your access was cut tomorrow morning, you wouldn't spend the day mourning. You’d spend it executing. Here is my battle-tested, day-zero playbook for getting back in the game before the severance check even hits the bank.
Phase 1: The First 48 Hours (Audit & Infrastructure)
The biggest mistake people make is applying to jobs immediately. Don't do that. Your first 48 hours are about building your "Command Center."
- Audit the 'Product': Update your resume with metrics, not duties. "Managed a team" means nothing. "Scaled engineering team from 10 to 50 in 6 months with a 95% retention rate" is what sells. If you need inspiration for high-impact metrics, check out our Google Software Engineer resume example.
- Set the Tech Stack: I’d set up a Trello board or a simple spreadsheet. Every application, every referral, and every follow-up needs to be tracked. If you aren't organized, you're just gambling.
- File for Benefits: Do this on day one. It removes the immediate financial panic from your decision-making, allowing you to focus on strategy.
Phase 2: Personal Branding (Your Digital Storefront)
In a crowded market, you aren't just a resume; you are a brand. You need to signal expertise immediately.
Change your LinkedIn headline from "Recruiter at [Company]" to a value proposition: "Helping Series B Startups Scale High-Performance Engineering Teams." Tell the world what problem you solve, not just who signed your last paycheck.
The Recruiter’s Secret:
Write three posts this week. One about a hard lesson learned, one about a current hiring trend, and one "Open to Work" post that specifies *exactly* what you want (Industry, Stage, Role). Generic "I'm looking for anything" posts get ignored. Specificity gets referred.
Phase 3: Strategic Networking (The Superpower)
Referrals represent 7% of applications but 40% of hires. Blasting "Easy Apply" buttons is a low-ROI activity.
Reach out to your "Inner Circle" first. Message 10 high-value contacts—former managers or top candidates you’ve helped—with a personalized note: "I'm moving on from [Company]. I'm looking for [Specific Role]. Who should I be talking to?"
Then, use Reverse Recruiting. Identify 5 companies you admire. Find their Head of Talent. Instead of applying, send a brief note highlighting a specific gap in their current job postings you can fill. Show them you’ve done the work before they even ask.
Discover Your Market Value.
Our 15-Second Executive Career Diagnostic analyzes your trajectory against top-tier placements. Stop guessing and start strategizing.
Take the DiagnosticThe mindset shift is key.
A job search is a temporary project. Treat yourself like a consultant whose current client is "Me, Inc." Work 9-to-5 on your search, take breaks, and remember: you aren't defined by your last role, but by how you handle the transition to your next one.
Speed is important, but strategy is what wins the offer. Start executing.