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Layoffs Are Real, But U.S. Workers Are Hopeful, According to a New CareerBuilder Survey of Full-Timers

CareerBuilder Offers Survival Tips

RESTON, Va., Sept. 7 /PRNewswire/ -- Workforce reductions and layoff stresses are real, as indicated by today's announcement of the August unemployment figure at 4.9 percent -- the highest level since September 1997. Although worried, most workers remain hopeful about job security, according to a new CareerBuilder survey tracking the opinions of full-time workers during the same August period as measured by the unemployment figure.

Thirty-seven percent of workers say they work for employers who have undergone layoff s in 2001. In addition, 65 percent say layoff threats exist at their companies. In addition, 56 percent say they are working under stressful conditions. Fifty-seven percent say workloads have increased and 48 percent say their workloads are too heavy.

"Layoffs are stressful and are closing some doors for workers, but other doors will continue to open for people who are prepared, have valuable skills and remain flexible," said Diane Strahan, a senior career advisor and vice president of marketing with CareerBuilder, the force behind the most powerful local and national career network on the Web.

Strahan offers the following tips to help workers manage their careers in the current economy:
* Stay continuously connected to the job market.
* Look outside of your industry for new opportunities.
* Be open to relocation.
* Develop new career roles.
* Keep a strong cash reserve.

"Workers who are open to new locations, industries and challenges will continue to thrive," Strahan said. "For workers who are layoff survivors at companies where there have been cutbacks, this is an opportunity to be positive and expand skills and experiences."

Forty-one percent of workers say job security in 2001 is about the same as it was in 2000, with 32 percent of workers claiming that they have more job security this year, and 27 percent claiming that they have less job security.

Another encouraging note is that workers remain relatively hopeful about their abilities to find new jobs if they are impacted by layoffs. If laid off, almost half of workers estimate that they can find a comparable job in less than a month, according to the CareerBuilder survey of more than 1,200 full-time workers; 64 percent say a new job hunt will take them less than two months and three-fourths say they can land a comparable job in less than three months.

Additional job seeker advice can be found at careerbuilder.com in its special report, Are You Happy at Work: State of the Worker 2001, featuring its new radio show with celebrity guest, Ben Stein. Articles include Expanding Corporate Diversity, Test Your Career Knowledge and Facing the Reality of Non- stop Work.

About the Survey
The CareerBuilder Workers in the New Economy of Choice: A Career Portrait was conducted August 9, 2001, through August 15, 2001. A total of 1,264 full- time workers participated in the survey. To collect data for the survey, CareerBuilder commissioned SurveySite to use an e-mail methodology whereby individuals who are members of SurveySite Web Panel were randomly selected and approached by e-mail invitation to participate in the online survey. The results of this survey are accurate within +/- 2.8 percent.

About CareerBuilder, LLC
CareerBuilder, backed by media giants Tribune Company (NYSE: TRB) and Knight Ridder (NYSE: KRI), is the leading provider of targeted Web recruiting. Through the CareerBuilder Network, employers can post jobs to pinpoint exactly the right candidates by location, industry or diversity. Job seekers can instantly search more than 70 of the Internet's best career sites, in just a couple of clicks. CareerBuilder also provides personalized career services and advice. The CareerBuilder Network is the most powerful career network on the Web, including careerbuilder.com - the flagship career center - and the career centers of premier destination sites including MSN, Bloomberg.com, iVillage.com and latimes.com, Philly.com, chicagotribune.com and BayArea.com. Visit CareerBuilder at http://www.careerbuilder.com.

CareerBuilder Media Contact
For all media inquiries and interview requests, contact:

Jennifer Grasz
(P) 773-527-1164
(E) jennifer.grasz@careerbuilder.com