Inspired by insights from psychology literature about the use of plan-making prompts to bridge the gap between intention and behaviour, our team set out to test the following question: If young people make a concrete plan for their job hunt, does that help them to follow through on that plan, to search more effectively for work, and ultimately to be more likely to gain employment?
Evidence shows that planning and scheduling tasks can help people follow through on a variety of behaviours, from voting to exercising. To extend this to job hunting, we designed a job search plan template and launched a field experiment in collaboration with the South African Department of Labour (DoL). We worked with the DoL to randomly split 1100 unemployed youth from Johannesburg who were participating in the DoL’s standard 90‑minute career-counselling workshops into two groups. The control group participated in just the workshop, while the treatment group received extra encouragement and guidance on completing our job search plan template alongside the workshop.
The job search plan was designed to be simple, accessible and scalable. The template required participants to identify what they would do (e.g. search for work online) and when they would do it (e.g. Tuesday afternoons) and to add details on where/how they would do it (e.g. identify specific websites for an online search). The participants set weekly goals for how many hours they planned to search and how many applications they planned to submit. The template did not require participants to search in a certain way or to have any particular qualifications, making it accessible to all. It encouraged respondents to think carefully about their personal situation and design a plan that worked around their commitments and constraints. Running the experiment with the DoL and using its career counsellors to deliver the intervention enabled us to test a model for an action plan that was low cost, scalable and could be implemented by the government.