Employers tell me they seek job applicants who are motivated, reliable, and dependable. Yet many people struggle with motivation, especially those with anxiety, depression, or neurodivergence.
Motivation isn’t something you wait for; it’s something you build with structure, safety, and small wins. This post offers a framework that breaks job searching into phases, each with small, manageable steps.
This is not a checklist or a linear process. You may move forward, sideways, or pause, and that still counts. You don’t need to complete these steps according to someone else’s timetable, and you do not need to complete all of them at once. Many people will move in and out of these phases more than once.
Each step builds confidence and motivation, even when it doesn’t feel like it in the moment. Progress counts when it’s visible, and it still counts when it’s quiet. Taking one or two steps, stopping to regroup, or revisiting an earlier phase are all signs that you are engaging in the process, not failing at it.
Think of motivation as a process, not an attribute, it is a continuum that can be constructed over time, with support, patience, and practice.
Phase 1: Building the Foundation
If motivation can be built, everyone needs a starting point, and to choose a place with clarity, without minimizing the pressure.
Seek out a community employment advisor. Many communities provide this service at no charge. They will work with you, encourage you, and challenge you as well. The good ones work at your pace, not theirs.
Decide, without committing to a timeline, that you want to work. Basic, but a vitally important first step.
Explore what kind of work interests you. Your family, friends, and support staff will have ideas, but you are the one who will be doing the work. You decide. You can also choose multiple paths at the same time.
Define what success would look like for you. You can have short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals. Often, your first job is simply the first step of many.
Consider whether full-time or part-time work feels right. You may choose to start part-time, build confidence and skills, and then pursue full-time work later.
Identify where you would like to work, location, environment, and whether remote or in-person. Consider transportation carefully. Access to public transit or a vehicle that aligns with employer schedules can be a limiting factor.
The first step in building your resume is listing the skills you already have. Include transferable skills from life, school, caregiving, or volunteering. People are often surprised by how many skills they already possess.
Notice and acknowledge your skill gaps without judgment. Confidence, skills, and motivation are built one step at a time.
Identify your social and work-related anxieties and the levels you are experiencing. Be honest with yourself and gentle in how you name them.
Looking for work is a journey that comes with anxiety for everyone, regardless of experience or confidence. Anxiety does not mean you are doing something wrong—it means you are doing something that matters.
The secret is small, clear steps combined with patience for yourself. Predictability, clarity, and repetition reduce anxiety over time, even when the fear does not disappear right away.
Phase 2: Adding Support and Learning About Accommodation
Motivation grows best when basic needs and support are in place. If these needs are not addressed, it is much harder to sustain motivation, no matter how capable or willing you are.
Don’t rush yourself or the process. Stability is not a luxury; it is a foundation.
Identify your life stabilization needs: safe and affordable housing, finances and medical coverage, health needs, and daily routines.
Work with your career advisor to ensure you are receiving all the governmental support to which you are entitled. This may include income support, housing assistance, food programs, transportation support, mental health coverage, and dental or drug coverage. Supports vary by region and may include legal aid when needed.
Check whether your taxes are filed. Even if you have not earned income, filing annually may make you eligible for government benefits.
Learn about workplace accommodation that may support your integration into the workforce.
Identify allies, references, or safe people in your network who can assist with your job search. The more people who know you are looking for work, the better.
Practice self-advocacy and assertiveness in low-risk situations.
Acknowledge and accept that asking for help is a strength—not a failure.
Phase 3: Upgrading and Skill-Building
This phase builds motivation by increasing confidence through competence, not pressure.
Review job postings to identify the skills in demand for roles you are interested in. Digital skills, customer service, time management, and soft skills training are often available through community adult learning centres or online providers at no cost.
Explore low-barrier ways to upgrade skills at your own pace. Start with one. Add more as your confidence and motivation grow. Many courses are short and focused. These are often called micro-credentials, and they help strengthen your resume and reputation.
Consider certifications that support employability, such as a driver’s license, first aid or mental health first aid, food safety, alcohol service, or other role-specific credentials.
Break learning into short, predictable sessions. Track your progress and celebrate both effort and completion.
Know that your goals may change as you learn more. That’s okay—and it’s also progress.
Phase 4: Building Practical Job Search Tools
As you complete each step, your confidence and motivation will grow, often in ways that only become obvious when you look back.
This is the time to add practical tools, but only at a pace that feels manageable. If a step feels overwhelming, it is okay to pause, simplify, or ask for help.
With your career advisor, build a resume that stands out, is easily scannable by Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS), and can be customized for each application. Your resume should evolve as you do.
Always use a cover letter. Avoid standard templates. Build flexible, adaptable cover letters that reflect each employer’s needs and use relevant keywords.
Learn and refine job search basics: where to look, how often, and how long. Ideally, work toward two hours per day, five days per week, at your own pace.
Learn about the hidden job market and begin building your network. Start with family and friends. Go slowly. Many jobs are never posted, and networking often feels uncomfortable at first.
Attend job fairs after practicing with your career advisor. These events are challenging initially, but with preparation and patience, they are an excellent way to stand out.
Use simple tools, such as a job seeker’s playbook or spreadsheets, to track applications and contacts.
Practice interview skills gradually. Focus on solving the employer’s problems and meeting their needs.
Seek mentors who can guide and support you. Ask questions, listen carefully, and adapt what you learn.
Phase 5: Applying with Intention
This is often where motivation begins to catch up with action. Many people notice that they still feel nervous or unsure, but they are more willing to keep going anyway.
When reviewing job postings, identify the employer’s priorities. Reflect those priorities clearly in your cover letter and by reorganizing your resume the most relevant skills appear first.
Take time to learn the hiring manager’s name. Call the employer if appropriate, and practice what you want to say beforehand.
Track applications using a simple chart. Follow up on applications after five days and interviews within 24 hours.
Submit applications in small, manageable batches.
Expect improvement with practice. Everyone feels nervous during interviews or when approaching employers. Motivation doesn’t mean you won’t feel anxious—it means your motivation becomes stronger than your anxiety.
Continue developing soft skills that support confidence and workplace success.
Treat interviews as skill-building opportunities. Acknowledge your courage and effort with every application and conversation.
Work with your career advisor to adjust strategies as your experience grows and your sense of success evolves.
Phase 6: Fine-Tuning and Adaptation
Finding work is not a destination—it’s a learning process. Each application, conversation, and pause teaches you something about what works for you and what doesn’t.
Track what is working and revisit what isn’t. Adjust accordingly.
Explore additional networking tools, such as LinkedIn, when you are ready.
Expect periods of procrastination or discouragement. When this happens, stay connected with your career advisor and support network rather than withdrawing.
Connect the dots. This process builds confidence and motivation most effectively when steps are used together.
Aim for a good fit, not a perfect one, especially for your first job.
If you need a break, take one, but set a clear return point.
Phase 7: Keeping the Job
These steps support your ability to maintain employment, not just secure it.
Prepare emotionally, physically, and practically for returning to work. Adjust your schedule, arrange transportation, plan meals, and anticipate changes to your comfort zone.
Accept a job with clarity. Ask questions about expectations. The only unhelpful question is the one that goes unasked.
Complete hiring paperwork with support if needed.
Orientation and onboarding can be stressful. Ask for help and stay connected to your support.
Learn, understand, and protect your workplace rights.
Expect moments of frustration. This is not easy, but it will be worth your effort. Address challenges early using the skills and confidence you have been building.
Motivation does not happen overnight. Like building confidence, it takes time and is rarely built in a straight line. Thinking of it as a continuum, a series of steps, phases, and small challenges will help you to build your own levels of motivation.
This approach of learning, practicing, and taking the next small step will build you up. Even when progress feels slow or invisible, progress is still happening.
Don’t look at the length of this framework and think it is too much. To succeed, you only need to focus on the next step. Keep what Martin Luther King Jr. once said: “You don’t need to see the whole staircase to start a journey, just the first step.”
Good luck,
Paul