Stop. Read This Properly.

People who rush this mess it up. This takes 3 minutes to read. Save it first.

🎓 GRADUATED.
NO EXPERIENCE.
NOW WHAT?

Honest advice for 2026. Not corporate fluff.

Stop applying to grad schemes. Read this first.

💀 The traditional graduate job market is broken. Here's what actually works instead.
💀 Nobody else will say this

THE HARD TRUTH FIRST.

🚨 Stop applying to big grad schemes cold

Most large company graduate schemes get 50,000+ applications for 50 places. Without experience, a placement, or an internal referral — you are noise. Not because you're bad. Because the system is broken. Stop wasting months on them.

🚨 Indeed and LinkedIn Easy Apply are black holes

Hundreds of people apply to every post within hours. Your CV sits in a pile. ATS software filters it out before a human sees it. Applying cold to job boards is the least effective way to get a job in 2026.

None of this means you're screwed. It means you need a different strategy. Here it is.

📊 Economics degree specifically

ECONOMICS GRAD? YOU'RE ACTUALLY BETTER PLACED THAN YOU THINK.

🎯 Perfect fit

Government Economics Service (GES) Fast Stream

The Civil Service is the UK's largest recruiter of economists. The GES scheme is specifically for economics graduates. Starting salary £31,554 rising to £45-55k on completion. Needs a 2:1. Apply via Civil Service Jobs.

This is the single best option for an economics grad with no private sector experience. Government doesn't care that you haven't worked at Goldman Sachs.

GES FAST STREAM →
🏛️ Civil Service

Civil Service Fast Stream — General

17 different schemes. Most accept a 2:2 in any subject. Structured career path, permanent contract, pension. Nationwide. Not just London.

FAST STREAM →
💰 Finance

Bank of England, ONS, OBR, HM Treasury

Economics grads are exactly what these organisations hire. Less competitive than private sector. Apply directly via their websites. Not via recruiters.

BANK OF ENGLAND → CIVIL SERVICE JOBS →
✅ What actually works in 2026

THE REAL STRATEGY. DO THIS.

1

Target small and medium companies — not big ones

SMEs hire based on personality and potential, not CV box-ticking. Find 20 companies in your area or sector you'd like to work for. Email the MD or owner directly. Most get zero speculative applications. You stand out immediately.

2

Temp agencies — get in any door fast

Reed, Hays, Adecco, Manpower. Walk in or register online. Tell them you're a grad looking for anything in finance, admin, or data. Temp work gives you references. References open every other door. This is how most people actually start.

REED → HAYS → ADECCO →
3

LinkedIn — post, don't just apply

An economics grad posting once a week about something in the news — inflation, interest rates, budget analysis — gets noticed by recruiters fast. Takes 20 minutes. Most grads never do it. You will stand out.

LINKEDIN →
4

Volunteer for 4-6 weeks — anywhere

Charity finance team. Credit union. Food bank accounts. CAB. Even 4 weeks of voluntary work in a relevant role transforms your CV from "graduate with no experience" to "graduate with experience." It works every time.

5

Do NOT pay for "graduate programmes" or CV services

They're scams. Every single one. Your university careers service is free. Citizens Advice can help with benefits while you job hunt. Nobody legitimate charges you to get a job.

🔧 The option nobody wants to hear

INTERNSHIPS. YES, IT'S FREE WORK. DO IT ANYWAY.

✅ The honest truth — no sugarcoating

Yes. It's free labour. They know it. You know it. The whole thing is a bit of a con. But a reference from a real company plus 3 months of not having a gap on your CV is worth more right now than the wage you're not getting.

If you can't get a warehouse job, can't get a grad scheme, and can't get through the door any other way — an internship is a door. It's not fair. It's still a door.

🎯 The one rule

Only intern somewhere that could actually hire you

Don't do unpaid work for a company that will never have a job for you. Pick somewhere with real staff, real turnover, and real reasons to bring on junior hires. 40% of interns get offered a job by the same company. That's the whole point.

📋 What you get from it

It's not nothing. Here's what you actually walk away with.

A named reference from a real employer. A line on the CV that stops the "no experience" rejection. An inside view of how a company actually works. And the contacts — because most jobs are never advertised and most people get hired by someone they've already met.

⚠️ What to avoid

Unpaid internship red flags

More than 3 months unpaid — that's exploitation, not an internship. Walk away.
No named supervisor — if nobody owns your development, you're just cheap labour.
"Expenses only" with no expenses — they mean free. Know that going in.
No chance of a job — ask in the interview: "have previous interns been hired here?" If they hesitate, it's a no.

🔍 Where to find them

Internship sites that actually work

Skip the big job boards. Go direct.

RATE MY PLACEMENT → PROSPECTS → MILKROUND → TARGET JOBS →

Or email 10 SMEs in your sector directly. Most big companies post internships; most small ones don't — but they'll take a good one if you ask properly.

✉️ The email that works

Word for word. Send this.

Subject: Internship enquiry — [Your degree] graduate, available immediately

Hi [name],

I'm a [subject] graduate from [uni], available immediately and looking for 2-3 months of hands-on experience in [their sector]. I'm not expecting a salary — I want the experience and the reference.

I've looked at what you do and I think I could genuinely contribute to [specific thing they do]. Happy to come in for a chat with no obligation.

[Your name]

That's it. Short. Specific. Costs them nothing. Most will reply.

🚨 Graphic designers, creatives, arts grads — read this

AI has eaten most of the entry-level creative work that used to exist. Junior design briefs, stock illustration, basic copywriting — gone. The graduates surviving right now are the ones who can do TWO things. Design + basic web. Design + social video. Writing + SEO. Pick a second skill and spend 6 weeks learning it. It changes everything.

📄 The thing nobody tells you

YOUR CV IS WRONG. EVERY TIME.

🚨 One CV for every job = guaranteed rejection

If you're sending the same CV to every job and wondering why nobody's replying — that's why. Hiring managers can tell instantly. ATS software filters you out before a human even sees it. One CV fits no one.

✅ What actually works — from someone who did it

Someone on Reddit spent 6 months job hunting. Zero interviews from generic CVs. The moment they started tailoring — new intro, new key skills, new description of their most recent job to match each role — interviews started landing. Not one interview before tailoring. Three job offers after.

Yes it takes longer per application. That's the point. 5 tailored applications beats 50 generic ones every single time.

1

Read the job description properly

The words they use are the words you use. If they say "stakeholder management" — your CV says "stakeholder management." ATS software is literally scanning for their exact phrases. Mirror their language back at them.

2

Rewrite these three things every time

Personal statement at the top. Key skills section. Most recent job description. You don't need to rewrite your whole life history. Just those three. Takes 20 minutes when you've done it a few times.

3

Apply for jobs you actually want

It's a thousand times easier to write a good cover letter for something you'd genuinely like to do. Your energy comes through. And if you get an interview, you won't have to fake enthusiasm in the room. One real application beats five half-arsed ones.

🚨 Don't let AI write your CV

AI doesn't know you. It doesn't know what that employer actually cares about underneath the job ad. Popular roles get hundreds of AI-written applications that all look the same. You need to sound like a person. Use AI to check spelling and grammar. Not to write it. And if you get an interview, you'll have to defend everything on that CV in person. Make sure it's yours.

🎤 When you get in the room

INTERVIEWS. HOW TO STOP WINGING IT.

Job hunting is a skill. Like anything else — you're bad at it at first, you get better by doing it. The first few interviews will feel horrible. That's normal. Keep going.

⭐ The one thing that changes interviews

STAR answers. Learn them. Practise them.

Every interview you ever do will have a question like: "Tell me about a time you dealt with a difficult situation." Or: "Give me an example of when you had to balance competing priorities."

STAR is the format that makes your answer land:

S

Situation

Set the scene briefly. Where were you, what was happening? One or two sentences.

T

Task

What was the problem, goal, or challenge you were facing?

A

Action

What did you specifically do about it? This is the important bit. Not "we did" — what did you do.

R

Result

What happened? Numbers are good if you have them. You're allowed to frame things in your favour — within reason. Nobody's going to fact-check that you "improved team output by 20%."

✅ How to actually prepare

Google "common STAR interview questions" the night before. Pick five that match the job. Write out your answers. Say them out loud — yes, actually out loud, to yourself, in your room. You'll feel stupid. You'll sound a hundred times better in the interview.

Don't wing it in a high pressure moment when 20 minutes of prep would have sorted it.

💡 The real talk

Rejection is part of the process. It's not personal.

You will get rejected. A lot, probably, especially at first. That's not evidence that you're useless — it's evidence that you're learning a skill you haven't done before. The people who get jobs are not the smartest. They're the ones who kept going after the rejections.

💷 Money while you look

KEEP MONEY COMING IN WHILE YOU JOB HUNT

Universal Credit — yes graduates can claim it ✅

If you're not working or working under 35 hours — you can claim UC while job hunting. Most graduates don't know this. Apply immediately. Don't wait.

APPLY FOR UC →

Student loan repayments — you don't pay yet 😮‍💨

You only repay student loans once you earn over £25,000. Below that — nothing comes out. Stop panicking about the debt. It's not like a normal loan. It effectively disappears after 40 years anyway.

Freelance your degree immediately

Economics grad? Offer tutoring — A-Level economics students pay £25-40/hr. Put it on Tutorful and Superprof today. Immediate income while you job hunt. Looks great on a CV too.

TUTORFUL → SUPERPROF →

Check what else you're owed 💸

Council tax discount, housing benefit, free prescriptions. Graduates on low income are often entitled to more than they think.

CHECK WHAT YOU'RE OWED →