Seekers Navigate Career Transitions
Listed on 2026-01-12
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Education / Teaching
Youth Development -
Business
Help Job Seekers Navigate Career Transitions
Join to apply for the Help Job Seekers Navigate Career Transitions role at Lake Grove Job Seekers
Lake Grove Job Seekers has a 15+ year track record of helping job seekers to land jobs at Nike, Intel, and countless other companies and organizations.
Program OverviewWe have three major components to our program:
- In‑person weekly meetings at the Lake Grove Presbyterian Church in Lake Oswego. These meetings, held every Monday morning, feature subject matter experts on all aspects of job search from resumes and interviewing to stress reduction and managing finances during a transition. Job seekers also have a chance to practice their networking skills and get their week off to a productive start.
- Weekly online Skill Builder workshops that are a deep dive into the foundational components of the modern job networking, Linked In, resumes, and job search strategy.
- 1‑on‑1 coaching is also available from our volunteer mentors, who are primarily retired professionals from a wide range of industries with years of experience hiring and managing their own successful job searches.
In addition to education and coaching, we offer a positive and supportive community including networking opportunities to those in career transition.
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Ways to Volunteer- Become a mentor and support job seekers (5–10 hours per week, but flexible)
- Become a friend
- Assist with mock interviews (occasionally)
- Give a presentation at one of our weekly meetings (1–2 times per year)
- Offer your specialized services on an ad‑hoc basis (e.g., legal, counseling – occasionally)
Most volunteers elect to coach active job seekers in the career planning and job search process.
As mentors, we listen and advise, with the goal of enabling job seekers to eventually help themselves in this process.
Timing and CommitmentWe meet as a group on Monday mornings from 8:15 – 10:15. If you would like to become an active mentor and coach job seekers we ask that you attend these meetings as often as possible. We are very flexible about vacation schedules and help each other out when needed. Mentors work approximately 2–10 additional hours per week based on the number of job seekers they choose to mentor.
Ad‑hoc support (legal/admin) would be at your discretion.
We are looking for mentors who are seeking a long‑term commitment to helping job seekers. Many of our mentors have been with the organization for years. While we don’t require a years‑long commitment, that longevity gives you a sense of the commitment of our mentor colleagues.
StronglyPreferred Experience s For Mentors
- Supervisory / Management / Leadership Experience – mentors with solid experience in hiring, promoting, demoting/firing, and coaching employees can help job seekers understand the hiring dynamic. Their lived experience and familiarity with the thought processes of peers and senior management helps a mentor offer perspective about how a job seeker may be viewed by those on the hiring team.
- HR / Staffing / Recruiting Experience – familiarity with the internal or external recruiting and hiring process, especially what goes on behind the scenes, can be very valuable to job seekers.
- Career Coaching / Counseling Experience – those mentors with this experience are not only able to help with the outward aspects of looking for a job or navigating a transition, but they also offer invaluable knowledge and expertise in coaching job seekers through the internal turmoil caused when one is out of work, feels they are not in the right career or is having trouble working through the rejection inherent in the process.
a Mentor
You will have a mentor sponsor to guide you through the onboarding process of becoming a mentor. This person is there to help you understand more about the LGJS program and how we operate, but we fundamentally believe that, as an experienced professional you probably know more about coaching job seekers than you realize or give yourself credit. If you’ve hired, fired, or developed employees in your professional life before, you have much of what it takes to become a mentor.
What we suggest…
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