Saturday, April 18, 2026
16.4 C
London

I graduated from Stanford and couldn’t find a job, so I created my own. I turned it into a six-figure business.


  • In my senior year at Stanford, I began my job search but couldn’t secure a full-time offer.

  • I was frustrated because I felt overqualified, yet I wasn’t even getting interviews.

  • I started my own PR business, which has since made six figures.

I started applying for jobs in the first week of my senior year at Stanford University, assuming I would have something lined up by graduation, if not sooner. I was surrounded by friends entering finance and consulting, where recruiting begins early and offers are secured months, sometimes years, in advance.

While I wasn’t part of a traditional corporate pipeline, I had spent my college years building inroads in Silicon Valley, managing marketing for hot startups.

For nine months, I tracked every application in a spreadsheet. Over time, I simplified it, deleting the “Second Round Interview” column. I wasn’t even making it to the first round. Most of the time, there was no update at all.

By graduation in 2025, I still didn’t have a full-time job offer.

I had experience, but it didn’t seem to count

When I did hear back, it wasn’t for full-time roles; it was for internships. One came through an alumni referral. Another was in a field unrelated to my experience.

What made the situation more frustrating was how well-qualified —perhaps even overqualified — I felt.

I started doing marketing work at 15, helping local small businesses. In college, that work expanded into roles at tech companies, often taking up 30 to 40 hours a week alongside my classes. By graduation, I had seven years of experience.

As a sophomore, I switched from engineering to English and linguistics. Mastery of language and narrative made me a better marketer. But as a senior, I began to worry I might end up as the stereotypical unemployed English major.

I was a financial aid student who didn’t want to burden my parents after graduation. I found myself considering roles that would only prolong the search I was trying to finish.

The job market felt different from what I expected

At highly competitive universities like Stanford, most students spend every summer interning, expecting it to lead to full-time offers. I followed that path.

But when I started applying, the road seemed to lead to a cliff rather than the golden gates of adulthood.

In 2025, I wasn’t just competing with other graduates. I was up against candidates who had recently been laid off. Many of my target industries were slowing hiring or cutting roles entirely.

I started taking on whatever work I could find

With graduation approaching, I started saving whatever I could.

A professor of mine asked me to help run her book campaign. I told her I had never worked in publishing or in public relations, but I said yes anyway.

Around the same time, I began assisting a journalist through my school’s alumni network, editing her writing, pitching stories, and managing her newsletter.

Even in the midst of my own misery, I could see the difference my work made. It was exciting, even if it paid less than I was used to.

I turned that work into my own business

Three weeks before graduation, after being rejected from a minimum-wage internship I had gone through three rounds of interviews for, I created my own role: publicist and founder of Punctuation PR.

While finishing my thesis, I filed paperwork to start an LLC. I built a website. I told my parents that instead of staying unemployed in an uncertain economy, I was starting a marketing and publicity agency for writers. The return on my effort would be more within my control.

They were unexpectedly supportive. My mom told me she was proud — not just because I was creating a job for myself, but because I was building something that could one day create jobs for others.

The day after graduation, I drove from the Bay Area to Los Angeles and started working full-time from a barely unpacked apartment.

I turned my side projects into clients and cold emailed academics and authors. I wrote contracts, set up billing, and raised my rates.

Referrals came in. One project led to another.

It became my full-time income

For the first few months, I lived paycheck to paycheck. When I couldn’t pay off my credit card, I sold my clothes and furniture. I often worked more than 12 hours a day.

Within six months, I was earning more than the entry-level roles I had been applying for.

In early 2026, Punctuation PR became a six-figure business. I had worked with over a dozen clients, built relationships with publishers and media outlets, and helped my books reach hundreds of thousands of new readers.

What began as a stopgap became my full-time income.

It changed how I think about work

I used to believe that graduating — and similar milestones — followed a sort of ideal inertia: once success was in motion, it would naturally continue, uninterrupted.

In reality, life is a series of unbalanced forces. You change speed and direction. In 2026, the institutions that once felt stable now feel far less certain for many.

Starting a business is still one of the riskiest things a person can do. I hope to scale my company from six to seven figures in the coming years. There’s no guarantee that I will, but there’s also no guarantee that I won’t.

It’s up to me to decide.

Read the original article on Business Insider



.

Hot this week

Beloved NKY LGBTQ+ leader Katie Meyer dies at 41

A beloved Cincinnati-area LGBTQ+ leader has passed away, officials...

Trump, IRS In Talks To Settle U.S. President’s $10 Billion Lawsuit

April 17 (Reuters) - Lawyers for Donald Trump and the Internal Revenue Service...

Iran reimposes restrictions on the Strait of Hormuz as gunboats fire on tanker

Iran shut the Strait of Hormuz back down Saturday,...

Se cierra el cuarto Fuego en La Casa de los Famosos 6

Se cierra el cuarto Fuego en La Casa de...

Local lawmakers pass over 30 bills this session

Apr. 18—Local legislators from Morgan, Limestone and Lawrence counties...

Topics

Beloved NKY LGBTQ+ leader Katie Meyer dies at 41

A beloved Cincinnati-area LGBTQ+ leader has passed away, officials...

Trump, IRS In Talks To Settle U.S. President’s $10 Billion Lawsuit

April 17 (Reuters) - Lawyers for Donald Trump and the Internal Revenue Service...

Iran reimposes restrictions on the Strait of Hormuz as gunboats fire on tanker

Iran shut the Strait of Hormuz back down Saturday,...

Se cierra el cuarto Fuego en La Casa de los Famosos 6

Se cierra el cuarto Fuego en La Casa de...

Local lawmakers pass over 30 bills this session

Apr. 18—Local legislators from Morgan, Limestone and Lawrence counties...

Progressive leaders rally in Barcelona to defend the traditional liberal order

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Progressive and traditional democratic leaders...

Ukraine believes Russia will try again to involve Belarus in the war

April 17 (Reuters) - President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img