What color is my parachute? Black. Career options for the over-educated.

What is the degree in?

Anyway, there is always Government jobs, many of which reguire a Degree. That’s it: a degree. In anything. Pay is not so hot but job security is fantastic and benefits are above average.

Just generic advice here - but by golly the level of writing in the workplace and pop culture is really bad - there just has to be a demand for people who can reasonably construct a paragraph or two. Maybe not the exact job you want will be offered, but still - Vanishing mad skillz, I tells ya.

Keep current of all the trends in “marketing yourself” - resumes, and avail yourself of your local job corps or whatever it is called in your area. They really perform a valuable service in reviewing your resume or helping you fine-tune it.

Learn how to interview! Even if I don’t get the job - don’t “burn any bridges” so to speak, thank them for their time (it isn’t much fun for the interviewer either, really) and be sure to follow up with a thank you note. As an aside, in smaller cities always remember it really is a “small world.” The old fart you just cut off in traffic - golly he looks familiar… Oops. Finally, be willing to move. I know, I know - easy to say. But as they say, ya gotta go to where the jobs are.

The whole Training Department in a big chemical company I used to work for had degrees in English, English Lit or Journalism. They wrote the courses and trained the end-trainers, who in turn trained the general users.

Most of them were very bad at targetting their writing - they’d write a course which would be taken by mechanics and use words and phraseology more appropiate for a senatorial speech. If you can do this (and like I say, most of those guys of ours couldn’t), look at real, real big corporations; many have an in-house Training Department or a section in HR dedicated to Corporate Training.