Week 1: the admin and foundation
Day 1–2: Handle the immediate practicalities.
- File for unemployment benefits immediately. Delays in filing delay your first payment.
- Review your severance agreement carefully before signing. If it's a large package, consider 30 minutes with an employment attorney.
- Understand your health insurance situation and timeline (COBRA, marketplace, or spouse/partner's plan).
- Collect any personal items, contacts, and files from work systems before your access is cut off.
Day 3–5: Update your professional materials.
- Update your resume — add your most recent role with accomplishments, not just duties. Quantify where possible.
- Update your LinkedIn profile. Set yourself to "Open to Work" (recruiter-only visibility initially is fine).
- Write a brief, professional message explaining your availability that you can use with your network: "I was recently laid off as part of a company restructuring and am now actively looking for [role type] opportunities. I'd appreciate any introductions or connections."
Week 2: activate the search at full intensity
A layoff is one of the rare moments when you can treat job searching as a genuine full-time commitment. Use that window.
Set a daily application target. For an unemployed job seeker, 20+ applications per day is achievable and appropriate. At 2–3% response rate, 20/day generates 4–6 callbacks per week — enough for multiple simultaneous interview processes.
Activate your network immediately. 30–50% of jobs are filled through referrals. Message former colleagues, managers, and professional contacts within the first week. Be specific: "I'm looking for [specific role type] at companies like X, Y, Z — do you know anyone I should talk to?"
Set up job alerts across multiple platforms. LinkedIn, Indeed, Glassdoor, and any niche boards for your industry. New postings get higher response rates — the alerts ensure you see and apply to them within hours.
Use automation to handle the volume. At 20+ applications per day, manual submission isn't sustainable. LoopCV handles submissions across 30+ boards automatically while you focus on network outreach, interview prep, and tailoring for priority roles.
The mindset: urgency without panic
A layoff creates financial pressure that can push toward poor decisions: accepting a bad offer out of desperation, neglecting to negotiate, or giving up on a search that's statistically on track.
The most useful mindset shift: job searching is a numbers game with predictable outcomes. At sustained high volume (20+ applications/day) and a 2–3% response rate, the math produces interviews within weeks and an offer within 4–8 weeks in most fields. The danger is letting the emotional difficulty of the situation reduce your daily volume below the threshold that makes the math work.
Track your pipeline metrics daily: applications submitted, callbacks received, interviews scheduled. Watching these numbers move is more productive — and more emotionally sustaining — than refreshing your application status dashboards.