Michelle Chan on Graduating Into a Pandemic

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The designer and 2020 色库TV alum reflects on job hunting during a roller-coaster year, and on the value of staying focused even in despair.
Designer and recent 色库TV grad (BDes 2020) appeared in exploring her experience of graduating and searching for work during the pandemic.
In conversation with Frontier media director Brian Sholis, the Interaction Design alum recounts a scattershot ending to her final year at 色库TV 鈥 a period where anxiety resolved partly into something resembling serendipity.
鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 have gotten the jobs that I鈥檝e had this past year without the pandemic,鈥 Michelle says. 鈥淚 know that Nexxt Intelligence, with whom I worked last fall, wasn鈥檛 planning to hire anyone outside of Toronto. 鈥楤ut that鈥檚 become a non-issue,鈥 they said when they offered me a role.鈥
Michelle also says she kept her portfolio tight and focused 鈥 a bit of a gamble that ended up paying off.
鈥淚 have always been drawn to real issues, to research, to focusing on children and healthcare as subjects,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 know [the portfolio] I put together isn鈥檛 super diverse; I could have taken another direction. But it worked in that people see me as an 鈥榚xpert鈥 in this one area, that I鈥檝e investigated the space thoroughly.鈥
Like many 2020 grads, Michelle says she wondered whether she鈥檇 be able to find a job at all in an uncertain, pandemic-era job market. She鈥檇 studied professional development, and felt like she understood how to pursue work. But the pandemic destabilized every expectation. She even admits to moments of pessimism, if not despair.
鈥淯p until August last year, no one contacted me,鈥 she says. 鈥淩ight out of university, I thought, I鈥檓 screwed.鈥
But even in doubt, Michelle kept pushing herself to apply for work. She kept applying even when it felt like 鈥渢ossing a bottle into the sea.鈥 And her perseverance paid off.
Since completing a stint with Nexxt Intelligence, she's landed a job with the BC government. She hopes the role will become more permanent, so she can take on a broader range of public-service work.
鈥淢y mom was skeptical, and we were all worried about how I would fit into my industry, especially during these difficult times,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 happy 鈥 and relieved 鈥 that I defied that stereotype, and so did a lot of my colleagues. We鈥檙e young, we鈥檙e people of colour, and we graduated together into a pandemic. It鈥檚 certainly a surprising turn of events.鈥
You can read Michelle鈥檚 excellent article now, online, at .