When I first moved to London, I was full of optimism. I’d wrapped up life in Australia, packed my bags, and landed here ready for a new chapter. I knew finding work might take a while — friends had warned me that it could be months, even six or more, before landing something. I was mentally prepared for that.
What I wasn’t prepared for was the silence. I sent out application after application, often without hearing anything back. It started to chip away at my confidence — that quiet voice that says "maybe you’re not as good as you thought."
I kept tweaking things to try and improve my chances. I rewrote my CV several times, trying different formats, styles, and tones, hoping to figure out what was missing. It was hard to know whether the issue was the job market, my positioning, or just timing.
By late July, it had been four months since I arrived. Then, one afternoon, I got an email from Reed.ai saying an employer wanted to connect with me. It sounds simple, but that message changed my whole mood. It reminded me that something was working — that someone had actually seen my profile and was interested.
I was walking through a park when I joined the voice chat. The call felt easy and natural — more like talking to a recruiter who genuinely wanted to understand me than a formal interview. The AI conversation covered all the bases: my work history, skills, and even salary expectations. That part was invaluable — as someone new to the country, I wasn’t sure what was realistic, so getting guidance in that moment made a real difference.
The platform was still in beta, so there were a few small things that needed refining, but overall it felt intuitive and human — something rare in recruitment tech.
After that chat, I finished setting up my profile and shared it. The next day, I got invited to an interview. Eight days later, I had a job offer — from Reed.ai itself.
The speed of it all blew me away. After months of trying to get traction, everything suddenly clicked. But it wasn’t just about timing — it was about how seen I felt in the process. The video chat, the way my profile highlighted both my experience and personality, and how quickly it connected me to the right opportunity — it all felt like what recruitment should be: personal, simple, and fair.
Looking back, that one email was more than a notification — it was a turning point. It reminded me that the process of finding work doesn’t have to feel cold or discouraging. When tech is built around people, it can actually make job searching feel hopeful again.
If you’re out there applying and waiting to be noticed, keep going. You never know which message could be the one that changes everything.
Linda Keys, Senior Product Designer, Reed.ai
Published 17/10/25