Job Seekers: Stop Fighting Business Realities. Employers Want to See the Potential ROI of Hiring You.
- Nick Kossovan
- Employment
- Trending News
- March 17, 2026
Every second you spend on LinkedIn “raising awareness” about how the hiring system is supposedly broken or ranting about unicorn-hunting recruiters is a second you’re choosing to stay unemployed. Employers don’t care about your grievances; they have a business to run within the constraints of economic realities. By publicly and privately resisting the transactional realities that keep businesses and economies alive, you’re not being a martyr; rather, you’re showing employers you’d be difficult to manage.
The employer-employee relationship is more asymmetrical and transactional than ever, and completely indifferent to your personal needs. Getting hired requires refraining from playing the oldest unproductive game of all—making excuses for why you’re a victim—and instead showing employers how you can contribute to their profitability.
Increasingly, I see job seekers who treat their job search like a shopping list for their lifestyle and expect employers to be their parents. Before they’ve proven—shown their track record of accomplishments and results—how they’ll add value to the employer’s bottom line or solve their problem(s), they demand remote work, six-figure salaries, and unlimited vacation.
Employers aren’t responsible for your chosen lifestyle. Employers aren’t charities; it’s not their concern that your rent went up, your car insurance doubled, or that you “believe” you work better from a beach in Mexico. An employer is a profit-seeking entity that has a fiduciary responsibility to its current employees and shareholders. Therefore, if you’re not showing employers quantifiable numbers for how you’ve generated revenue, reduced costs, or removed risks for your past employers, you’re just noise, similar to the noise chacma baboons make when arguing, which describes most job seekers.
Even if you spend five percent of your day fighting the following variables, you’re leading equity. Accept them—don’t deny them—pivot and keep moving forward.
The Economy
AI and Automation Disruption
“Unfair” Hiring Processes
Aging
Change is Inevitable
Nostalgia doesn’t pay the bills, and ‘experience’ is a trap if not accompanied by constant evolution. If you can’t explain to your interviewer what you’ve done to rebuild your skillset over the last 12 months, you’re a dinosaur waiting for the asteroid. Rather than just ‘handling’ change, employers want to see that you thrive on it and are willing to master the tools that are terrifying many of their employees.
The Golden Rule
If there’s one business reality that’s pointless to oppose, it’s the Golden Rule. Whoever has the gold makes the rules. If you want to dictate your employment terms, start your own business. Until then, you’re playing the employer’s game on their turf by their rules. It’s not necessary to like the employer’s rules, but you must abide by them, especially during their hiring process, to be hired.
Arguing with business realities has the consequence of you always losing. Essentially, you are telling yourself comforting lies, or buying into comforting lies being told, to make yourself feel better about not getting what you want. Public outbursts on LinkedIn aren’t the answer. The only thing such behaviour does is signal to employers that you are unable to manage your emotions, making you a high-risk hire.
Resisting business realities is why many job seekers are experiencing prolonged unemployment; your job search strategy is to refrain from complaining and focus on proving to employers that you can contribute to their profitability.
