Everyone starts with no experience. The trick to getting your first job — or breaking into a new field — is understanding what employers actually want and showing you have it even without a traditional work history.
What employers actually want
Most entry-level employers aren’t looking for experience — they’re looking for evidence that you’re capable of learning and doing the work. That evidence can come from many places: internships, volunteer work, personal projects, freelance gigs, certifications, and coursework. Your job is to create that evidence.
Build a portfolio of real work
Whatever field you’re entering, do the work and show it. Aspiring graphic designers create spec work. Aspiring marketers run a small social media account or write a blog. Aspiring programmers build small apps and put them on GitHub. Aspiring data analysts find public datasets and create visualizations. Portfolio projects beat a blank resume every time.
Certifications signal credibility fast
Many fields have entry-level certifications that signal basic competency to employers. Google’s free certifications in Digital Marketing, Data Analytics, and Project Management are recognized by thousands of employers. HubSpot’s marketing certifications, AWS certifications for tech, and CompTIA for IT all carry real weight.
Network before you need a job
Most jobs are never posted publicly. They’re filled through referrals. Connect with people already working in your target field on LinkedIn — not to ask for jobs immediately, but to learn about their work and build genuine relationships. Informational interviews are powerful and underused.
Target smaller companies first
Big companies get flooded with applications and have strict filters. Smaller companies — 10–50 employees — often need people who can wear multiple hats and are more willing to take a chance on someone hungry to learn. A year of experience at a small company often beats a rejection letter from a Fortune 500.