Layoffs Still Weigh on the Tech Workforce
After years of explosive growth, the tech industry continues to see waves of layoffs that have displaced tens of thousands of skilled workers. But for many, being laid off isn’t the end of the road, it’s the start of a reset.
According to Jessica Lin, a veteran Silicon Valley recruiter and founder of TechHire Collective, the biggest mistake jobseekers make after a layoff is “treating it like a career death sentence.”
“It’s not,” she said. “It’s an interruption. How you respond in the first 30 days determines whether that interruption becomes an opportunity.”
Lin has spent 15 years placing engineers, designers, and data professionals across major firms, from Google to early-stage startups. She says resilience, not résumé gaps, separates those who bounce back from those who stall.
Here are her four key strategies for getting back in the game.
1. Reset Your Mindset Before You Rewrite Your Résumé
Lin says the first step isn’t tactical, it’s emotional.
“You can’t market yourself effectively when you’re still processing loss,” she explained. “Take a week to reset. Reflect, journal, talk to mentors, and identify what you actually want next.”
Many candidates, she adds, rush to apply for any open role just to fill the gap. “That’s a mistake. Hiring managers can sense desperation. Clarity and composure are far more attractive.”
Instead, Lin recommends reframing the layoff as “a forced moment of recalibration.” Use the time to define your ideal role and company culture before re-entering the job market.
2. Update Your Brand – Not Just Your LinkedIn
“Your LinkedIn headline isn’t your identity,” Lin said. “It’s your pitch.”
She advises recently laid-off professionals to treat themselves like startups, rebranding to reflect the problems they solve, not just the titles they held.
That might mean rewriting your summary to highlight measurable impact (“shipped X product,” “cut costs by 20%”) rather than listing duties.
And visibility matters. “Start posting small insights about your craft or the industry,” Lin said. “It reminds your network you’re still in the game, and it builds momentum.”
3. Activate Your Network Early (and Authentically)
“Most people wait too long to tell others they’re available,” Lin noted. “But the hidden job market is real.”
She recommends sending personal messages, not mass emails – to trusted peers, mentors, and former colleagues.
“Don’t say, ‘I need a job.’ Say, ‘I’m exploring new opportunities in [your field] and would value your perspective.’ People want to help, but they respond best to sincerity and specificity.”
Lin also suggests joining Slack groups, niche Discord communities, and alumni networks, where many roles are shared before they ever hit job boards.
4. Treat Interviews Like Collaborations, Not Tests
After securing interviews, Lin says mindset again makes all the difference.
“The candidates who get offers are the ones who treat interviews as problem-solving sessions, not auditions,” she said.
That means asking thoughtful questions about company challenges and volunteering ideas, rather than rehearsed talking points. “When you collaborate, you demonstrate value in real time,” Lin said.
She also emphasizes preparation: “Research the company’s current priorities and use specific language – metrics, milestones, and outcomes. That’s how you turn curiosity into credibility.”
The Bottom Line
Layoffs may be unavoidable in tech’s new reality, but how workers respond determines how quickly they rebound.
“Every layoff creates a vacuum of opportunity,” Lin said. “Someone will fill it. It might as well be you.”
For those navigating uncertainty, her advice boils down to one thing: treat yourself like the product, and market accordingly.





