If you aren't leaving music school with a diploma and a job offer, graduation time can seem daunting.
In the immediate aftermath of graduation, you have a few options:
You may decide to exercise all of these options in different measure. That's fine too. Regardless, you will need to start putting together the building blocks of a professional job search. That way, when you are ready to make the full-time push in job searching to find that full-time job, your ducks will be in a row.
First step is to build a list of different types of jobs that suit your interests and talents. You may be a violinist, but playing violin professionally is only one of your career options. Indeed, anyone with a music degree, whether in music education or performance, has a wide array of potential job tracks ahead of them.
You can also research job sites like LinkedIn, Indeed, Music Jobs, and Musical America, just to name a few. This research will expand your vision as to what music jobs are out there, and it will give you a sense of what music jobs are in demand.
Understanding what the demand is for specific music-related jobs is critical to shortening your job search time.
Different jobs have different application demands. You don't want to scramble to get the right assets in place to submit your application on short notice. Here's a list of the collateral you need to get in order:
Constantly update and revise your job search collateral too. Whether you start volunteering somewhere or playing a gig here and there during your job search, get these new experiences into your job search collateral.
The truth about job searching is that most of the time – the juiciest job openings are never publicized. Hopefully, you've been networking throughout your college career, networking with your peers, your professors, and the other music professionals with whom you cross paths.
You can add a line to your social media profiles letting people know you're ready to work in the music industry. If you can be a bit more specific than "music industry," that's good. However, networking is mostly about direct relationships, not passive announcements.
Inventory your personal and professional networks. People you know who have nothing to do with music may still be valuable contacts in your job search. List out those with whom you have a close relationship, those with whom you only interact with now and again, and those with whom you've not connected in a while. Approach each with an appropriate level of expectation.
When you find a job or an organization you're interested in, do some research to find if anyone in your network has connection there (LinkedIn is fantastic for this). These are both great circumstances to reach out to the right person in your network too.
Finding a job sooner rather than later is better. If your first job out of music school isn't ideal or your dream, it's better than not working while you wait for the magic opportunity. When that unicorn position opens up, it may well get filled by someone who's been working in a music store for the past six months!