Jack’s Redundancy Empowerment - Empowering Redundant Workers

Jack’s Redundancy Empowerment aims at adding value to redundant workers, those threatened with redundancy, and those seeking alternatives to paid employment. It explores opportunities, works on the mindset, and adds immense value to the concerned demographics. Jack Lookman has been made redundant twice, in the United Kingdom, and has come out stronger; exploring his latent strengths and transferable skills. Our mission is to Empower and Inspire Generations by leveraging the Internet. Ire o.

Sunday, 28 June 2026

DO YOU ACTIVELY EXPLORE VALUE CHAINS? Jack’s Redundancy Empowerment - Empowering Redundant Workers - Jack Lookman - Rita Nnamani

DO YOU ACTIVELY EXPLORE VALUE CHAINS?



When a worker is made redundant, the first instinct is often to search for the exact same job title somewhere else. A finance assistant looks for finance assistant roles. A warehouse operative looks for warehouse operative roles. A retail supervisor looks for retail supervisor roles. This is natural because familiar job titles feel safe. But if your industry is shrinking, your role is changing or competition is high, searching only for the same title may limit your options.

One powerful way to think differently is to explore value chains.


What Is A Value Chain?



A value chain is the full journey through which a product, service or idea is created, delivered, supported and improved. Every business has one, even if it does not use that language. A product may begin with sourcing, then manufacturing, storage, logistics, sales, customer support, finance, compliance, marketing and after-sales service. A professional service may involve client acquisition, consultation, delivery, quality control, administration, billing, relationship management and reporting. Each stage needs people, systems and skills.


Thinking Differently



For redundant workers, value-chain thinking can reveal opportunities that are not obvious when you only search by job title. Instead of asking, “Where can I do the exact same job again?” you begin to ask, “Where else is my knowledge useful within the wider chain of work?” That question can open doors.

Consider someone who has worked in retail. If they only search for shop-floor roles, they may miss opportunities in inventory planning, customer service operations, merchandising support, supplier coordination, e-commerce fulfilment, complaints handling, sales administration or regional operations. Their experience with customers, stock, promotions and store processes may be valuable beyond the shop floor.

The same applies to manufacturing workers. Someone who understands production flow, safety checks, quality issues and stock movement may be able to explore roles in logistics, procurement support, quality assurance, warehouse coordination, operations administration or health and safety support. The job title changes, but the underlying knowledge still matters.

This is why value-chain thinking is especially useful during redundancy. Redundancy can make you feel as if one door has closed completely. But often, what has closed is one role in one company. The wider chain around your experience may still contain many possible entry points. You may not need to start from zero. You may need to reposition your knowledge.


Methodology For Finding The Value Chain 



To explore a value chain, start with your current or previous role. Write down the work that happened before your tasks reached you. Who prepared the information, materials, customers, products or systems you worked with? Then write down what happened after your work was completed. Who used your output? Who depended on your accuracy? Who solved problems if something went wrong? Who reported the results? Who paid for the service? Who maintained the relationship?

This simple mapping exercise helps you see the ecosystem around your job. You may discover that your experience connects to suppliers, clients, regulators, software providers, finance teams, delivery partners, contractors or support teams. Each connection may represent a possible career direction.


Examples



For example, if you worked in hospitality, you may understand booking systems, customer expectations, complaint resolution, supplier deliveries, food safety, staff rotas and local marketing. That knowledge could support roles in events coordination, facilities support, customer success, travel operations, catering administration or service quality. If you worked in construction administration, you may understand project documents, subcontractors, materials, site timelines and compliance paperwork. That could support roles in procurement, project coordination, facilities management, housing association administration or health and safety coordination.

The key is to stop seeing your job as a box and start seeing it as part of a chain. Once you do that, your career options become broader.

Value-chain thinking also helps you identify growing areas. Some job titles decline while related needs grow. A high-street retail role may be affected by store closures, but e-commerce operations, fulfilment, customer support and returns management may still need people. A traditional administrative role may be reduced by automation, but compliance coordination, data quality, client onboarding and operations support may still be valuable. A print-based marketing role may decline, but content operations, digital campaign coordination and brand support may expand.


Expectation Management And Tips



This does not mean every transition is easy. Some moves require training, confidence and a carefully written CV. But it does mean you should not assume your experience is useless because one role has disappeared. Your experience may simply need to be translated into a new part of the value chain.

A practical way to begin is by studying job adverts in related areas. Do not only search your old title. Search for the problems you know how to solve. If you handled customers, search for customer operations, client support, customer success, complaints officer or service coordinator. If you handled stock, search for inventory, logistics, supply chain assistant, warehouse coordinator or procurement support. If you handled records, search for data administrator, compliance assistant, document controller or operations administrator.

As you read these adverts, look for repeated words. Employers may use different job titles but ask for similar skills. You may notice communication, attention to detail, problem-solving, reporting, scheduling, CRM systems, Excel, stakeholder management, compliance or process improvement, appearing again and again. These repeated skills are signals. They show where your experience may connect.

Your CV should then be adjusted to reflect the new target. If you are moving from one part of a value chain to another, you need to help employers understand the connection. Do not simply list duties from your old job. Highlight the transferable value. For instance, instead of saying, “Worked in a busy store,” say, “Handled customer queries, supported stock control, followed operational procedures and helped maintain service standards in a fast-paced environment.” That language can travel across sectors.


Opportunities With Business



Exploring value chains can also help you start a business or freelance service after redundancy. If you understand where people experience delays, confusion or poor service in your industry, you may be able to offer a solution. A former HR administrator might support small businesses with onboarding documents. A former social media assistant might help local businesses manage content. A former logistics worker might advise small sellers on delivery processes. A former customer service worker might support complaint handling or client communications.

However, self-employment should be approached carefully. Redundancy can create pressure to “be your own boss” quickly, but business requires planning. You need to understand customers, pricing, marketing, legal responsibilities, cash flow and delivery. Value-chain thinking helps because it shows where real problems exist. A business idea is stronger when it solves a specific problem in a chain you understand.


Leveraging The Bigger Picture



Another benefit of value-chain thinking is that it improves interview performance. When you understand how your work connects to wider business outcomes, you sound more commercially aware. You can explain not only what you did, but why it mattered. You can say how your role supported customers, revenue, compliance, efficiency or quality. Employers value candidates who understand the bigger picture.

This mindset is also useful during redundancy consultation. If your employer is considering removing your role, you may be able to ask whether your skills are needed elsewhere in the organisation. Are there gaps in customer support, operations, compliance, training, documentation or process improvement? Could your knowledge be redeployed into another department? There is no guarantee, but value-chain thinking helps you ask better questions.


Informal Consultations



You should also speak to people across the chain. If you know suppliers, clients, contractors, partner organisations or colleagues in other departments, ask about the roles they see growing. What skills are in demand? What problems are teams struggling to solve? What job titles should you search for? These conversations can reveal opportunities that job boards alone may not show.

Redundancy narrows your world emotionally. It can make you feel as if everything has ended. Exploring value chains widens your world again. It reminds you that work is connected, industries are connected and skills are connected. Your old role may be one point on a larger map, not the whole map.


Conclusion



So, do you actively explore value chains? If not, start today. Map your role. Identify what came before and after your work. Search related job titles. Study repeated skills. Speak to people across your industry. Translate your CV into broader value. Look for where your knowledge solves problems beyond your previous job title.

Your next opportunity may not look exactly like your last role. It may sit beside it, above it, behind it or further along the chain. If you only search what you already know, you may miss what you are capable of becoming.


DO YOU CHASE EVERYTHING AND GET NOTHING? Jack’s Redundancy Empowerment - Empowering Redundant Workers - Jack Lookman Limited

DO YOU CHASE EVERYTHING AND GET NOTHING?



When redundancy enters the conversation, panic can easily take over. One email from management, one vague announcement about restructuring, one rumour in the office, and suddenly your mind begins to run in ten different directions. You start thinking about applying for every job you see. You consider changing industries overnight. You sign up for random online courses. You update your CV in a hurry. You message old contacts without a clear plan. You look at business ideas, side hustles, agency work, remote jobs, temporary work, freelancing and relocation all at once. Before long, you are exhausted, confused and no closer to a solution.

This is what happens when you chase everything and get nothing.


The Importance Of Focus



The instinct is understandable. Redundancy creates fear, and fear wants movement. When your job is at risk, doing anything can feel better than doing nothing. But not all action is useful action. Some activity simply creates the illusion of progress. You may spend hours scrolling through job boards, saving vacancies, tweaking your LinkedIn headline, watching career videos or comparing yourself with others, yet still avoid the deeper work of deciding what you actually want and where you are genuinely competitive.

For UK workers facing redundancy, focus is not a luxury. It is a survival skill. The job market can be competitive, employers can be selective, and recruitment processes can be slow. If you scatter your effort across too many directions, you may weaken your chances everywhere. A strong job search requires clarity. A strong career recovery requires direction. A strong personal plan requires knowing what to pursue and what to ignore.


Do You Have The Right Mindset?



The first reason people chase everything is fear of missing out. You may think, “If I apply for everything, something must work.” But this is rarely the best approach. Applying for every role often leads to generic applications, weak cover letters and CVs that do not speak clearly to the employer’s needs. Employers can quickly sense when an application has been sent without proper thought. A CV that tries to fit every job often fits no job well.

Instead of applying for everything, you need to identify your strongest career lanes. A career lane is a category of work where your skills, experience and interests have a realistic chance of creating value. For example, if you have worked in customer service, your lanes may include customer support, complaints handling, account management, reception, sales support or client success. If you have worked in administration, your lanes may include office coordination, project support, HR administration, operations support or executive assistance. If you have worked in retail management, your lanes may include store leadership, team supervision, logistics, customer experience or area operations.

The goal is not to limit your future. The goal is to organise your effort. When you choose two or three strong lanes, you can tailor your CV properly. You can learn the language of those roles. You can identify the skills employers repeatedly request. You can speak to the right people. You can improve your interview answers. You can apply with confidence instead of desperation.


Knowing Your Strengths



The second reason people chase everything is lack of self-knowledge. Many workers know their job title but not their market value. They know what they were paid to do, but they have not clearly identified what they are good at. Redundancy exposes this gap. When a role disappears, you may feel as if your identity has disappeared with it. But your job title is not the whole of your ability. You need to separate the person from the position.

Ask yourself what problems you solve well. Are you good with people, systems, numbers, organisation, sales, technical tools, planning, writing, negotiation, supervision or crisis management? What tasks do people trust you with? What work feels natural to you? What results have you delivered? What feedback have you received? These questions help you avoid random chasing. They help you build a career plan around evidence rather than panic.


Pick And Choose Relevant Advice



The third reason people chase everything is pressure from other people. After redundancy, everyone may have advice. One person tells you to go into tech. Another says you should start a business. Someone else says care work is always hiring. Another tells you to move abroad. Another suggests freelancing. Another says artificial intelligence is the future. Some of this advice may be useful, but not all of it is right for you.

You must learn to listen without surrendering your judgment. Your career is not a social experiment. A path that worked for someone else may not fit your skills, responsibilities, finances or personality. Before you follow any advice, ask whether it is realistic, affordable and aligned with your situation. A good opportunity for another person can become a distraction for you.

This is especially important when it comes to training. Redundancy can make people vulnerable to the promise of quick transformation. You may see adverts saying you can become a project manager, data analyst, software developer, digital marketer or consultant in a few weeks. Some training can be valuable, but random training can waste money and time. Do not chase courses because they sound impressive. Study job adverts first. Speak to people already in the field. Check whether employers actually value the qualification. Choose learning that supports your chosen direction.


The Next Move



A focused redundancy plan should begin with a simple question: what is the next sensible move? Not the perfect move. Not the most glamorous move. Not the move that will impress everyone. The next sensible move. For some people, that may be securing a similar role quickly to protect income. For others, it may be moving into a related sector. For some, it may be accepting temporary work while retraining. For others, it may be starting freelance work alongside applications. The right answer depends on your financial runway, skills, responsibilities and risk tolerance.

Once you know your direction, build a weekly system. Instead of chasing everything daily, divide your effort. Spend time on targeted applications. Spend time improving your CV. Spend time contacting relevant people. Spend time learning one useful skill. Spend time preparing for interviews. Spend time resting. A system gives you structure. Without structure, anxiety will decide your schedule.


Measuring Progress



You also need to measure progress properly. During redundancy, it is easy to feel like nothing is working because you have not yet received an offer. But progress happens in stages. A better CV is progress. A clearer career direction is progress. A conversation with a recruiter is progress. An interview invitation is progress. A new skill is progress. A stronger LinkedIn profile is progress. These steps matter because they increase your chances over time.

However, you must also be honest when something is not working. If you have applied for fifty roles and received no responses, do not simply apply for fifty more in the same way. Review your CV. Check whether you are targeting the right roles. Ask whether your applications are too broad. Get feedback if possible. If you keep chasing without learning, you may repeat the same mistake for months.

Focus also protects your mental health. Constant chasing creates constant disappointment. Every job advert becomes a possible rescue. Every rejection feels personal. Every silence feels like failure. But when you have a clear plan, rejection becomes information, not identity. You can adjust without collapsing. You can keep moving without becoming desperate.


Reflection



Redundancy is difficult, but it can also force a necessary career reset. It can push you to stop drifting. It can make you ask serious questions about your strengths, goals and future. But this only happens if you stop running in every direction. You need to become selective. You need to pursue opportunities that make sense. You need to conserve your energy for the doors that are most likely to open.

So, ask yourself honestly: are you chasing everything and getting nothing? If the answer is yes, do not judge yourself. Fear often creates scattered action. But now is the time to slow down, think clearly and choose your direction. Three strong applications are better than thirty careless ones. One relevant course is better than five random ones. One clear career lane is better than ten vague possibilities.

You do not need to chase everything to survive redundancy. You need to chase the right things with discipline, patience and purpose.


Saturday, 27 June 2026

DO YOU EFFECTIVELY MANAGE YOUR RESOURCES? Jack’s Redundancy Empowerment - Empowering Redundant Workers - Jack Lookman Limited

DO YOU EFFECTIVELY MANAGE YOUR RESOURCES?



When people think about redundancy, they often think first about money. This is understandable. Losing a job or being placed at risk of redundancy can immediately raise difficult questions. How will I pay the rent or mortgage? How long will my savings last? What happens to bills, food, transport, childcare, debt and everyday living costs? Money is important, but it is not the only resource you need to manage. During redundancy, your resources include your time, skills, relationships, health, information, confidence and ability to make decisions.

The workers who cope best with redundancy are not always those with the highest salaries. Often, they are the ones who organise their resources early. They do not wait until panic takes over. They take stock of what they have, what they need, what they can reduce, what they can improve and who can help. Effective resource management turns redundancy from a frightening unknown into a situation that can be planned.


Money Management



The first resource to manage is money. If your job is at risk, you need a clear picture of your financial position. This may feel uncomfortable, especially if you already know things are tight. But avoidance makes fear grow. Start by writing down your essential monthly expenses. Include housing, council tax, energy, water, food, transport, phone, internet, insurance, childcare, minimum debt payments and any unavoidable family responsibilities.

After that, list non-essential or flexible spending. This may include subscriptions, takeaways, clothing, entertainment, premium services, impulse shopping or expenses that can be paused for a few months. The goal is not to punish yourself. The goal is to create breathing space. When income becomes uncertain, every pound needs a job.

If redundancy is confirmed, check what payments you may be entitled to. Depending on your length of service and contract, you may receive statutory redundancy pay, contractual or enhanced redundancy pay, notice pay, holiday pay or other final payments. Do not rely on guesswork. Read your contract, review official guidance and ask your employer for a clear breakdown. If anything is unclear, seek advice before making major decisions.

You should also consider how long your available money could realistically last. A redundancy payment can feel large at first, but it can disappear quickly if there is no plan. Divide your available funds by your essential monthly expenses. This gives you a rough survival timeline. If the number worries you, do not freeze. Use it as a planning tool. It tells you how urgent your job search is, how much spending needs to be reduced and whether you need additional support.


Time Management



Your second major resource is time. Many workers waste precious weeks after redundancy because they are emotionally overwhelmed. This is human and understandable, but time still matters. The job market can move slowly. Applications take time. Interviews take time. Recruiters take time. Training takes time. If you wait too long before acting, financial pressure may force you into rushed decisions.

Create a weekly redundancy plan. This does not need to be complicated. Set aside time for job applications, CV updates, networking, skills development, rest and personal admin. Treat your job search like structured work, but do not let it consume your entire life. A healthy routine protects your motivation. For example, mornings may be for applications and career research, afternoons for learning or networking, and evenings for family, exercise or rest.

Time management also means applying wisely. Sending dozens of generic applications may feel productive, but it often produces poor results. A smaller number of targeted applications can be more effective. Read job descriptions carefully. Match your CV to the role. Use the language employers use. Highlight achievements, not just duties. Keep track of where you have applied, when you applied and whether you need to follow up.


Skill Management



Your third resource is your skill set. Redundancy can make people feel outdated, especially if their industry is changing. But before deciding that you need a completely new career, assess your existing skills properly. What can you already do? What systems have you used? What problems have you solved? What responsibilities have you handled? What feedback have you received? What do colleagues rely on you for?

Many workers underestimate their transferable skills. Communication, organisation, customer handling, leadership, reporting, compliance, problem-solving, scheduling, data entry, sales support, interpersonal skills, stock management, project coordination and conflict resolution can all transfer into different roles. Your task is to translate your experience into language that other employers understand.

At the same time, you should identify skill gaps. Look at five to ten job adverts for roles you want. What skills appear repeatedly? Are employers asking for Excel, CRM systems, digital marketing, project management, bookkeeping, health and safety, safeguarding, coding, data analysis, AI awareness or sector-specific qualifications? The repeated requirements are signals. They tell you what to learn next.

But be careful with training. When people feel vulnerable, they can be tempted by expensive courses promising quick career transformation. Not every course is worth your money. Before paying, ask whether the skill is genuinely demanded in job adverts, whether the provider is credible, whether you will receive recognised evidence of learning and whether there are free or lower-cost alternatives. The best training is not always the most expensive; it is the most relevant.


Network Management



Your fourth resource is your network. Many people only start networking when they desperately need a job. But your network can help you understand opportunities before they are advertised. Former colleagues, managers, clients, suppliers, friends, professional groups, alumni communities and local business contacts may know of vacancies, freelance opportunities or useful introductions.

Networking does not mean begging for work. It means letting people know clearly and professionally what you are looking for. You might say, “I’m exploring operations and administrative roles after redundancy. If you hear of anything suitable, I’d be grateful if you kept me in mind.” This is simple, respectful and specific. People are more likely to help when they understand what kind of opportunity fits you.

LinkedIn can also be useful when managed well. Update your headline, refresh your profile, add achievements, connect with people in your sector and engage with relevant posts. You do not need to post dramatic announcements if you are not comfortable. A professional update, a comment on industry discussions or a direct message to trusted contacts can be enough to restart conversations.


Information Management



Your fifth resource is information. During redundancy, poor information can lead to poor decisions. You need to understand your employment rights, consultation process, notice period, redundancy pay, benefits, pensions, tax position and job search support. Use reliable sources. Be careful with rumours from colleagues or social media. Someone else’s situation may not match yours.

If you are at risk of redundancy, ask your employer clear questions. What is the reason for the proposed redundancy? What selection criteria are being used? Are there alternative roles? What support is available? What happens during notice? What payments will be made? When will decisions be confirmed? Keep records of important communication.


Managing Your Wellbeing



Your sixth resource is your wellbeing. This is often ignored until it becomes a crisis. Redundancy can affect sleep, appetite, confidence and relationships. You may feel embarrassed, even though redundancy is not a personal failure. You may feel angry, especially if you gave years of service. You may feel anxious about age, competition, technology or starting again. These feelings are real and deserve attention.

Managing wellbeing does not mean pretending everything is fine. It means creating habits that help you function. Keep a routine. Move your body. Eat properly where possible. Talk to someone. Avoid spending the whole day refreshing job boards. Limit comparison with others. Give yourself permission to rest without guilt. Your mind is one of your most important resources; protect it.


Confidence Management



Finally, manage your confidence. Confidence is not just a feeling. It is built through action. Each time you update your CV, learn something useful, speak to a contact, apply for a suitable role or understand your finances better, you regain a measure of control. Small actions matter because they remind you that you are not powerless.


Conclusion



Redundancy may remove a job, but it does not remove your resources. You still have experience, relationships, skills, time, judgement and the ability to plan. The challenge is to organise those resources before fear scatters them.

Ask yourself today: do I effectively manage my resources? If the honest answer is no, begin with one area. Review your money. Then your time. Then your skills. Then your network. You do not need to solve everything in one day. You simply need to start managing what you have, with greater intention.

In uncertain times, resourceful people are not those who have everything. They are those who make better use of what they have.