From Dorms to Desks

Welcome to "From Dorms to Desks", brought to you by College Recruiter job search site, which believes that every student and recent graduate deserves a great career. Every week, our AI-generated hosts dive into relatable topics, from landing that first internship to acing job interviews. With quick, 10-minute episodes full of upbeat, humorous dialogue, they make job searching feel less like a chore and more like an adventure. Whether you're a student navigating the last days of college or an early-career professional starting your first job, "From Dorms to Desks" is here to help you make the leap from campus life to career success—with plenty of laughs along the way!

  1. 4D AGO

    Job seekers are fighting back against online assessments

    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. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    17 min
  2. FEB 3

    How to stand out in a sea of AI-generated resumes

    The application crisis is here. Applications are up 45% due to AI agents that send 50 resumes daily. Learn the five ways employers fight back. This episode of the From Dorms to Desks Podcast reveals what job seekers need to know about how employers are moving away from reactively trying to spot spam and moving toward proactive prevention methods designed to stop generic, low-interest resumes from entering the applicant tracking system.  AI-driven software agents, which submit generic resumes showing little regard for a candidate’s qualification, fit, or genuine interest, are leading to significant consequences for companies, including extended hiring times, recruiter stress, and poor hiring quality, with 62% of companies already firing new hires because their skills didn’t match their AI-inflated resumes. Employers are adopting five key defensive strategies to combat this high volume.  Candidates should prepare for the "pay to apply" model, which 20% of employers are considering, involving a small fee usually between $10 and $25, which acts as a barrier because AI agents cannot make payments. Other strategies include limiting applications per candidate per month, often with a penalty for violation, and requiring applicants to complete the familiar "I am not a robot" verification features.  Crucially, companies are prioritizing employee referrals, which represent measurably superior candidates with the highest probability of being interviewed and hired, and they are avoiding job boards that offer one-click "easy apply" features. For students and recent graduates, the path to a great career involves prioritizing targeted applications and networking over relying on the quick, high-volume methods that employers are actively trying to eliminate. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    16 min
  3. JAN 27

    Job scams on trusted job boards like LinkedIn, ZipRecruiter, and Indeed

    Job scams are sophisticated and rising 19%, costing Americans $300M. Learn to spot fakes on LinkedIn, ZipRecruiter, Indeed, and other trust job search sites. The current labor market, marked by high long-term unemployment and intense competition, is exploited by increasingly innovative scammers who post jobs nearly indistinguishable from legitimate listings, even on highly trusted platforms.  These complex schemes prey on job seekers' desperation and fear, aiming to lure them into handing over sensitive data like Social Security numbers or bank account details, or to install malicious software via deceptive links. On this episode of the From Dorms to Desk Podcast, we discuss how online job scams have risen significantly, costing Americans nearly $300 million this year, with a typical victim losing around $2,000.  The vulnerability is high because the data contained in a résumé or provided during an interview is highly valuable and can be monetized over time. We share real-life stories, including how tech-savvy individuals were fooled until they noticed subtle red flags, such as slightly incorrect email domain names or bizarre recruiter behavior, and discuss associated financial traps like the fraudulent check scam for remote equipment purchases. To combat this threat, job seekers must remain extremely vigilant and look for warnings like alleged recruiters with little activity, immediate pressure to move conversations to third-party platforms like WhatsApp, or requests for personal information early in the process. College Recruiter enhances candidate security by requiring all job postings to be paid for by the employer, creating a financial barrier that deters fake employers who tend to gravitate to sites that don't require payment, a crucial step likened to locking your front door. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    19 min
  4. JAN 13

    How internships and majors define your starting pay

    Internships are income multipliers, boosting starting salaries by 10-20% and sometimes $5,000 to $15,000, while your major sets your starting point, not your career ceiling. This episode of the From Dorms to Desks Podcast dives deep into how practical experience and educational choices influence your early career earnings.  Graduates who complete paid internships frequently receive starting salaries 20% higher than those without experience because employers view real experience as proof of practical ability and professional readiness. Companies reward experience because it lowers their risk, as candidates with hands-on practice can contribute faster with minimal training needs. A return offer from an internship acts as a powerful negotiating anchor, transforming your job search from a theoretical exercise into a competitive situation.  This proven capability positions you for quicker promotions and steeper salary growth over time, accelerating your career trajectory. While internships provide the leverage, your college major defines your starting line. STEM graduates, particularly those in engineering and computer science, tend to see higher initial pay due to the market's demand for specific technical skills. Technical majors create critical, early earning gaps, but this degree is only an entry ticket, not your destiny. After the first few years, your salary growth is driven by your skill velocity—how quickly you convert academic knowledge into operational value—and your demonstrated ability to produce measurable results for your employer, proving your value rather than just flaunting your degree. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    16 min
  5. JAN 6

    Corporate politics can be used for good

    The From Dorms to Desks Podcast tackles the concept of corporate politics, reframing it from a necessary evil into a tool for ethical leadership and influence, calling this approach "The Trust Playbook." Corporate politics is unavoidable because whenever people collaborate and resources like budgets, headcount, time, and leader attention are limited, influence is required.  The central question is not whether politics exists, but how one chooses to use it. Early-career professionals are taught skills in college and law school, but often miss the hidden rulebook of organizations. The simple rulebook—do good work, be reliable, help the company, and get promoted—is incomplete because people, being human, decide things based on facts, risk, relationships, fears, hopes, pride, and insecurities, which together form the human layer on top of the work. This layer is corporate politics, which is often used as a weapon through behaviors like hoarding credit, undermining peers, trading favors like poker chips, or delaying tactics. The episode draws heavily on the example of Marvin Granath, the Senior Vice President for Human Resources Legal at Fortune 50 company Honeywell in 1990 and 1991, who reported to the Chief Executive Officer. Although his position was high enough to be intimidating, Marv was different; he made people want to tell him the truth because he used the information to help, not to punish. Marv did not engage in the typical political games but was extremely effective because he used influence in the opposite direction. Instead of asking how he could win, Marv would walk into meetings asking, “What can I do to help these people succeed?” He genuinely wanted to know what problems were blocking others so he could help remove them. He built influence through the long game of trust by consistently making other people stronger without expecting quid pro quo, understanding that trust creates reciprocity—humans are wired to support those who consistently support them. The Trust Playbook outlines how early-career professionals can adopt this mindset. A key step is shifting the default agenda-driven mindset by adding the question, “What does everyone else in this room need to win?” Being helpful means offering specific support—expertise, a connection, or public endorsement—which is a rare currency. Building allies requires sharing credit for work done, using "we" instead of "I," to build a reputation that prevents people from stealing the spotlight. Influence also comes from listening for others' priorities, pressures, and fears, which is described as empathy with a purpose, allowing one to frame ideas in a way that fits others’ goals.  Crucially, the best political players reduce fear; Marv understood that influence is about lowering risk and making decisions feel safe. Furthermore, effective politics happens before big meetings, in the hallway, or in follow-up communication, ensuring critical players are on board before formal presentation. While toxic politics used as a weapon is still out there, building influence through trust makes one resilient, as people who are trusted and bring clarity are hard to take down. The best version of politics looks a lot like leadership, focusing on building trust and creating shared wins. The final takeaway is to consistently help others succeed without keeping a scorecard, allowing corporate politics to become a constructive tool rather than a swamp. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    15 min

About

Welcome to "From Dorms to Desks", brought to you by College Recruiter job search site, which believes that every student and recent graduate deserves a great career. Every week, our AI-generated hosts dive into relatable topics, from landing that first internship to acing job interviews. With quick, 10-minute episodes full of upbeat, humorous dialogue, they make job searching feel less like a chore and more like an adventure. Whether you're a student navigating the last days of college or an early-career professional starting your first job, "From Dorms to Desks" is here to help you make the leap from campus life to career success—with plenty of laughs along the way!

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