Interview with Stephen Drew in Involved Magazine.

Architecture Job Hunting During a Crisis

Architecture job hunting during a crisis is not solved by sending more rushed applications. It needs a calmer plan: better evidence, better targeting, better follow-up and enough resilience to keep going when replies are slow.

This piece began as an Involved Magazine feature with Sarah Osei, where Stephen reflected on architectural employment during the 2020 market shock and the early growth of Architecture Social. The market has changed since then, but the job-search lesson still holds.

Watch: job hunting in architecture is tough

If the market feels quiet, start here. This short Architecture Social video is useful because it says the honest bit first: job hunting can be hard, but you are not the only person finding it difficult.

Why difficult markets feel so personal

When practices slow hiring, candidates often blame themselves immediately. Sometimes the issue is your CV or portfolio. Sometimes it is timing, budgets, project delays, hiring freezes or a practice waiting for a client decision.

The danger is reacting emotionally to every silence. A better approach is to improve the parts you can control, then keep enough structure that you do not lose momentum.

Go deeper with Architecture Social

These related Architecture Social episodes add more context once you have the practical framework.

Listen: practical architecture job-search habits

This related episode gives a more structured set of job-search habits, including goals, CV and portfolio updates, organisation and how to use quieter periods properly.

A practical reset for your job search

  • Check whether your CV makes your level, software and project evidence obvious.
  • Send a focused sample portfolio, not every page you have ever produced.
  • Apply to roles where your evidence actually matches the brief.
  • Track applications so follow-up is organised rather than random.
  • Use slower periods to improve one weak part of your application.

What to improve before sending more applications

If you have sent plenty of applications and heard very little back, pause before sending another twenty. Look for a pattern. Are you applying too broadly? Is the first portfolio page weak? Does the CV hide the software or project experience practices are scanning for?

How to keep momentum without burning out

A job search should not become a full-time panic spiral. Set a weekly rhythm: applications, follow-ups, portfolio improvements, conversations and learning. That gives you movement without making every day feel like a referendum on your career.

  • Pick a realistic number of quality applications each week.
  • Follow up politely after a sensible period, usually around a week unless the advert says otherwise.
  • Keep one version of your CV as the master, then tailor copies for specific roles.
  • Save strong portfolio captions so you can reuse and improve them.
  • Talk to people in the industry, not only job boards.

What employers scan for when the market is tight

In a slow market, practices tend to become more selective. That does not always mean they want a perfect candidate. It often means they need the evidence to be easier to understand because they have less time, less budget and less appetite for risk.

Make the first scan simple. Your level, location, right-to-work situation, software, project types and portfolio link should not be hidden. If the hiring manager has to work too hard, a decent candidate can still get missed.

Job-search reset checklist

Before you send another application, do this quick reset. It is better to send five good applications than twenty vague ones.

  • Choose one clear target role or level.
  • Update the first half of your CV first.
  • Cut the weakest portfolio pages.
  • Write one short follow-up template.
  • Track each application and response.

Common mistakes

  • Sending the same CV and portfolio to every practice.
  • Letting a quiet market convince you that your whole career is broken.
  • Applying without checking salary, location or role level properly.
  • Following up too aggressively or not at all.
  • Improving the visual style of a portfolio while leaving the evidence unclear.

Architecture Social view

Stephen’s view is that job hunting is part psychology and part process. You need the honesty to improve weak material, but also the discipline not to spiral every time a practice is slow to reply.

Next step

Browse current architecture jobs, then use the Architecture Social resources to improve your CV, portfolio and interview preparation before the next application goes out.

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