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Parents are so panicked about the job market that they’re paying career coaches $15,000 years before their kids graduate from college


The escalating cost of higher education is no longer the final bill for many families. With tuition averaging over $38,000 annually, parents are increasingly shelling out thousands more for a new kind of "competitive insurance": private career coaching.

As the entry-level job market turns increasingly hostile, firms like Next Great Step are stepping in to bridge the gap between a degree and a paycheck—often starting as early as a student’s sophomore year.

The Rising Price of an Edge

While traditional career services are baked into college tuition, they often fall short of the intensive, one-on-one navigation many students now require. Specialized agencies are filling this void with premium services:

  • Premium Coaching: Firms like Next Great Step charge between $4,200 and $15,000 for six-month mentorship programs.

  • Outsourced Applications: Companies like Reverse Recruiting Agency and Career Agents go a step further, actually applying to jobs on behalf of the candidate.

  • AI Mastery: Beyond resume reviews, coaches now teach students how to leverage platforms like Claude and Perplexity to automate research and build custom AI agents.

Why Parents are Panicking

The "early bird" approach is driven by a perfect storm of economic and technological factors:

  1. The Unemployment Gap: Data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York reveals that unemployment among recent graduates is currently higher than the national average for all workers.

  2. The "Ghost Job" Era: Applicants are battling AI-heavy screening systems and "ghost jobs"—postings that remain open but are never filled—leading some to send out thousands of resumes with zero response.

  3. The AI Skills Gap: While 77% of executives say AI proficiency is mandatory for career growth, many universities still ban the tech in classrooms, leaving students unprepared for the modern workplace.

The "Friction Point" Factor

Beyond the professional benefits, these services offer a psychological reprieve. Beth Hendler-Grunt, CEO of Next Great Step, notes that outsourcing the job search helps remove the "friction point" between anxious parents and their young adult children.

"We’re kind of offloading it from the parents. They’re kind of relieved that there’s someone else who can help."

The Human Element in a Tech-Heavy World

Despite the emphasis on mastering AI, the ultimate goal remains centered on "luxury" skills: critical thinking and relationship building. Even in a market dominated by algorithms, the industry consensus remains that people hire people. The $15,000 investment isn't just for a better resume; it's for the networking prowess required to bypass the machine entirely.

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