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Clinton Ekekenta
Clinton Ekekenta

Posted on • Originally published at blog.fastapply.co

How to Get a Job With No Experience: The New Grad Guide for 2026

Graduation was supposed to be the starting line. For many new grads, it feels more like a stall.

You apply to roles that ask for "entry-level" experience, only to find requirements you don't meet. You send out applications, tailor resumes, and still hear nothing back. Not because you're unqualified but because the system is built to filter you out before you get a chance to prove yourself.

The data backs it up. As of late 2025, only 30% of bachelor's degree graduates reported landing full-time roles in their field. The underemployment rate has climbed to 42.5%, meaning nearly half of graduates are working in roles that don't require a degree.

This guide breaks down what actually works when you have little to no formal experience, how to position what you have, where to find real opportunities, and how to apply at scale without blending into the noise.

Why the Entry-Level Market Is This Hard Right Now

Understanding the problem helps you stop blaming yourself and start solving it.

New grad hiring in 2025 peaked at a rate 44% lower than it did in May 2022. Employers projected just a 1.6% increase in hiring for the Class of 2026 compared to the Class of 2025.

Building Your Experience Story Without a Job Title

Your capstone project, thesis, group assignment, or research paper is not just coursework. It is evidence that you shipped something.

Write about each project the way you would write a job bullet.

How to Apply Without Wasting 300 Hours

It takes an average of 42 applications to land a single interview in 2025.

At 30 minutes per tailored application, reaching 100 applications takes 50 hours. Most new grads who tailor meticulously run out of steam before they build real momentum.

The Application Itself: What to Get Right

Your resume should be one page. Every line should answer one question: does this make me look ready to contribute on day one?

Recruiters spend an average of 6 to 8 seconds reviewing a resume, and only 1 in 4 resumes reach a human reviewer at all. Write for the first scan, not for someone reading every word.


Originally published at blog.fastapply.co

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