• AI for Interview Prep: 4 Strategies to Ace the Conversation
    Mar 31 2026
    Nervous about your next interview? Discover how Generative AI can level the playing field for students and help you land that entry-level job. Interviews bring significant stress, but tools like ChatGPT and Perplexity can act as your personal career coach. In this episode of From Dorms to Desks, we break down Keith Spencer’s expert advice on using AI to reduce anxiety and boost confidence. Learn to decode job descriptions, practice your pitch, and avoid sounding like a robot. Research the Role: Use AI to translate dense job descriptions, identify key skills, and uncover company culture. Predict Questions: Identify common behavioral questions specific to your industry or target role. Mock Interviews: Simulate the conversation and get instant feedback on your answers to identify areas for improvement. Ask Smart Questions: Generate strategic questions to ask the hiring manager regarding team dynamics and performance expectations. Don’t let AI replace your prep; let it enhance it. Tune in to master the art of the interview. Read the full article at College Recruiter.
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    20 mins
  • Networking Feels Fake? 4 Ways to Build Real Connections
    Mar 24 2026
    Does networking make you feel like a used car salesman? Stop faking it. We reveal how to build genuine connections without selling your soul. In this episode of From Dorms to Desks, we dive into Keith Spencer’s expert advice on authentic networking. If the thought of handing out business cards gives you the "ick," this episode is for you. Discover why the best career connections start with curiosity, not transactions. Whether you are a student or a recent grad, you will learn how to leverage your existing circle and turn awkward small talk into meaningful opportunities that employers value. In this episode, we cover: Reframe your mindset: Why leading with curiosity beats a sales pitch. Start close to home: How to find hidden opportunities in your existing circle of professors and classmates. Reach out authentically: Tactics for sending DMs that actually get a response. The power of follow-up: Simple steps to maintain relationships and build trust. Read the full article by Keith Spencer at College Recruiter.
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    24 mins
  • Get Hired in 2026: 4 Ways to Bring Receipts & Prove Skills
    Mar 17 2026
    Stop hoping your resume is enough. In 2026, employers don’t just want potential—they want proof. It’s time to bring the "receipts" to your job search. Generic buzzwords like "hard worker" won't cut it anymore. To land the job this year, you need to move beyond listing duties and start showing concrete evidence of execution. Join Alex and Jordan as they discuss how to swap vague claims for tangible data, "invoice" your brain, and prove you are ready to perform on Day 1. In this episode, we cover: The "Alex Solution": Why specific metrics (like growing a newsletter) beat general adjectives every time. The Skills Receipt: How to write a 10-line impact memo that travels across your application. The 30-60-90 Day Plan: The secret weapon to reducing hiring risk by outlining exactly what you will learn and fix. Pre-suasion: Using behavioral insights and "permissionless apprenticeship" to remove doubt before the interview even starts. Read the full article at College Recruiter.
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    22 mins
  • Is your boss human or a dehumanizing algorithm?
    Mar 10 2026
    HR is disconnected from the 80 million hourly workers who want dignity, not culture. In this episode, we explore the stark divide between corporate Human Resources and the more than 80 million Americans who make up the hourly, frontline workforce, which represents over three out of every five US workers. For this majority, whose jobs were deemed "essential" during the pandemic, work is often physically demanding, micromanaged by machines, and just dangerous enough to be life-altering, but not lucrative enough to change their lives. Welcome to the From Dorms to Desks Podcast, where we pull back the curtain on the real modern workforce experience. Today's episode as inspired by Matt Charney's brilliant article, Disposable or Essential? Rethinking How HR Sees Frontline Talent. Corporate HR, often sitting hundreds or thousands of miles away in a "center of excellence," spends millions on employee engagement and company culture, while frontline workers are dealing with challenges closer to daily survival, often lacking enough cash to cover a $400 emergency expense. These workers, 44% of whom are classified as "low wage" with a median hourly rate of $10.22, are primarily managed by algorithms and metrics, like the automated time clock, which acts as their "algorithmic boss" and enforces intractable policies with penalties like warnings or termination for clocking in even one minute late. Workers like Carlos, who clocks in three minutes early every day to avoid infractions, or Dani, who had 40 minutes of pay deducted due to an outsourced time system error, illustrate how HR technology often acts as an inhibitor and a trap, not an enabler. This culture is enforced by fear, where high performers merely get to keep their jobs and their paychecks. Workers frequently encounter on-the-job retaliation and punitive policies for things outside of their control, leading many to form informal safety nets in the breakroom rather than trusting formal HR processes. What these workers need most is not stock options or wellness apps, but control, predictable schedules, basic amenities like clean bathrooms, and dignity, as they simply ask, "Treat me like a human, not a barcode." The episode concludes with a challenge for future managers and HR professionals: these "most disposable" jobs are actually the least automatable, and if HR wants to matter, it cannot outsource empathy or automate dignity; it must "show up" on the floor, walk the line, and fix what is broken because, as the saying goes, "those people are watching, and they’re counting on you."
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    16 mins
  • How to negotiate your salary and other compensation like a pro
    Mar 3 2026
    Stop leaving thousands on the table! Recruiters expect you to negotiate your total compensation, one some of which is your salary or wages. Learn the insider secrets now. On this episode of the From Dorms to Desks Podcast, we expose the number one amateur mistake made by emerging talent: focusing only on base salary. Base pay is the most rigid component, so you must strategically negotiate your Total Compensation, which is the holistic valuation encompassing cash, long-term assets, and valuable perks. We discuss the excellent work of former talent acquisition executive, Julia Levy, who shares the non-negotiable secrets of how recruiters think. She explains that the initial offer is just a starting point, and your counter-proposal tests your financial sophistication. Learn to calculate the value of Variable Compensation, which includes negotiable elements like the sign-on bonus—a key leverage point for new graduates that does not impact the long-term operational budget. Additionally, understand how to assign a dollar value to Intrinsic Compensation, like a 401(k) match, which is literally free money, and health insurance premiums, where a robust plan can be equivalent to a six thousand dollar raise in base salary. To justify your request, use your negotiation currency: quantifiable impact, framed by the A plus Q Formula (Action Verb plus Quantifiable Result), proving the Return on Investment you will deliver. Before accepting, take up to forty-eight hours to craft a polite, strategic email focusing your asks on realistic wins like the sign-on bonus, a dedicated Learning and Development budget, or increased Paid Time Off. Secure your asset; do not just take the paycheck.
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    18 mins
  • The 40 jobs most at risk from AI...and those most likely to benefit
    Feb 24 2026
    Artificial intelligence, whether you love or hate it, is already changing how people get their work done, and even whether that work is still available to people. But certain jobs are more at risk from the impact of AI than others, and some of those others stand to benefit. In this episode of the From Dorms to Desks Podcast, we dive into the "Wild West" of the AI workplace, drawing on data published in October 2025 that ranked the top 40 jobs at risk from AI exposure based on analysis from Microsoft Research. This research assessed 200,000 US user conversations on Copilot in 2024, measuring how well AI performed tasks and the task’s applicability to specific occupations, assigning an overall score where a higher score means higher exposure. The job title with the highest overall exposure was Interpreters and Translators with a score of 0.49, reflecting that 98% of its work functions corresponded with Copilot conversations showing relatively strong completion rates. Other highly exposed knowledge occupations include Historians with a 0.48 score, Writers and Authors with 0.45, and News Analysts, Reporters, and Journalists with 0.39. High-volume service roles are also impacted, with Customer Service Representatives, a job category representing nearly three million jobs in the US, ranking high at 0.44, along with Passenger Attendants at 0.47 and Sales Representatives of Services at 0.46. Other significant roles showing overlap include Data Scientists, Management Analysts, and Personal Financial Advisors, all scoring 0.35 or 0.36. We also explore the growth opportunity in the digital infrastructure powering this revolution, as data centers serve as the backbone of the digital economy by storing, managing, and processing the world’s data. As of November 2025, the US leads the world with 4,165 data centers, accounting for nearly 38% of all facilities worldwide. This leadership is fueled by major tech companies and the historic build-out driven by companies like OpenAI to support AI workloads, involving projected spending commitments of $1.4 trillion between now and 2035. Europe is another major digital infrastructure force, hosting nearly 3,500 data centers, concentrated in the UK, Germany, and France, partly driven by the regulatory requirements of the General Data Protection Regulation. Beyond infrastructure, we examine the global cryptocurrency market, which stands at almost $3 trillion.
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    20 mins
  • Strategies and risks for negotiating a raise
    Feb 17 2026
    Stop leaving money on the table! Learn the high-risk gambles versus the safe strategies to secure the pay increase you deserve. This week, we dive into the tricky world of compensation, raises, and retention. On this week's episode of the From Dorms to Desks Podcast, we discuss the controversial, high-risk strategy of subtly signaling to your employer that you are interviewing for other jobs, a tactic that sometimes works for "important cogs" but can be career suicide for average performers, especially when companies may view it as extortion or disloyalty. The reality is that job hopping often remains the most reliable way to achieve significant salary increases, with some professionals reporting large pay jumps every time they change jobs. Many employees feel they have lost the social expectation of negotiation, forgetting that a raise is an estimate of what the company would lose if they walked away. When asking for a raise, you must be ready to leave, and you should always provide evidence of what fair compensation is for your role, as employers often don’t know what "fair" is. We also cover the critical importance of communicating your value proactively to your manager—you cannot assume they know the impact of your work—and the growing influence of artificial intelligence, which makes fundamental knowledge and initiative more crucial than ever for early-career professionals.
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    17 mins
  • Job seekers are fighting back against online assessments
    Feb 10 2026
    Stop gaming the ATS! Learn to ethically optimize your résumé for AI without getting flagged for hidden text or deception. The job market has entered an arms race where candidates are using chatbots and résumé tools to extract keywords and rephrase work history to nudge employer screening software because the first stage of screening is heavily automated. On this episode of the From Dorms to Desks Podcast, we separate signal from noise by distinguishing between ethical optimization and risky falsification. Optimization involves using AI to make your real experience clearer, mirroring the employer’s exact language for skills, and simplifying complex layouts to ensure the text parser doesn't stumble. This is encouraged by career coaches and recruiters because it improves communication. Falsification, on the other hand, is lying, such as fabricating titles or employers, which background checks and reference calls are designed to uncover. The gray area includes aggressive optimization tactics like keyword stuffing or hiding text in white font, which some candidates argue relates to the job, but employers view as deceptive gaming the system, similar to packing website meta tags. While these tricks can sometimes temporarily raise a résumé's rank, modern Applicant Tracking Systems neutralize formatting and prioritize contextual experience over raw keyword frequency. Humans still decide who gets hired, and if tricks like invisible text or page long keyword dumps are exposed, trust evaporates instantly. The most effective strategy is to use AI strictly as an editor to condense and clarify your genuine experience, ensure your layout is simple and text first, and back up all claims with verifiable artifacts like portfolios or metrics. This durable strategy focuses on fairness and proof of skill, increasing the odds that the right people get seen and hired.
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    17 mins