Introduction: A Reality from the Interview Table
As an HR Consultant and Director at Sourcemind, I’ve interviewed thousands of candidates over the years. From freshers to experienced professionals, I’ve observed changing mindsets, career expectations, and evolving priorities. But in the last five years, I’ve noticed a significant shift—especially among junior-level candidates and fresh graduates.
Recently, my recruitment team has raised consistent concerns. They’re encountering freshers with unrealistic salary expectations and a resistance to feedback or negotiation. Let me share a few real-world examples:
- A fresher mechanical engineer demanding ₹5 LPA, without any hands-on industrial exposure.
- A chemical engineering graduate expecting ₹7-8 LPAfrom their very first job.
- A Sc. graduate with just 2 years of experiencecurrently earning ₹6 LPA (after a 12% hike), now wants a 5-day work week and a 40% salary jump—and when we try to reason with them, they hang up the call without listening.
Frankly, it’s puzzling. Many of these candidates lack basic domain knowledge, communication skills, or understanding of the industry, yet hold expectations far beyond current market standards. Their attitude towards feedback, salary negotiations, or even listening to recruiters and mentors is often dismissive.
Concerned, I reached out to some senior HR Fraternity in my network, and to my surprise—they’re facing the same issue across industries.
So I decided to write down some thoughts—not as criticism, but as guidance for young professionals who are about to start or are early in their careers. These insights come from real interviews, market observations, and years of experience in talent acquisition.
Entering the job market for the first time is a mix of excitement, anxiety, and endless dreams. The current generation of freshers—bright, energetic, and tech-savvy—comes with big aspirations and a desire for immediate results. While ambition is commendable, the journey from fresher to a successful professional requires more than just dreaming—it demands direction, discipline, and realism.
1. The Current Mindset of Freshers and Young Professionals
Today’s freshers often enter their careers with:
High salary expectations without understanding market standards.
A desire for immediate growth without developing deep domain knowledge.
Reluctance to listen to seniors or parents, assuming advice is outdated.
A focus on job titles over skills, and chasing trending career paths without introspection.
Impatience for success, not realizing that career building is a long-term game.
This mindset, if left unchecked, can lead to frustration, frequent job hopping, burnout, and career stagnation.
2. Understanding the Job Market: Freshers vs 2-3 Years Experience
For Freshers (0-1 year):
The competition is fierce.
Companies expect attitude, learning capability, and basic skills, not mastery.
Salaries are often modest to begin with.
Employers look for team players, curious minds, and stability.
For 2-3 Years Experienced:
Companies expect ownership, delivery capability, and problem-solving skills.
You’re no longer a trainee—you are expected to add value immediately.
The salary grows if the skills grow, not just with experience.
3. The Problem of Over-Expectations
Many freshers assume a job will bring:
A high salary from Day 1.
A startup-like work culture with minimal hierarchy.
Rapid promotions and perks.
Less work, more flexibility.
Reality is different. The first 2-3 years are about learning, unlearning, and adapting. Without building a strong foundation, dreams of high-paying, top-tier roles remain just that—dreams.
4. Why Listening to Seniors and Mentors Matters
There’s wisdom in experience. Seniors and parents have seen cycles of success and failure. Their guidance may seem conservative, but it’s often rooted in long-term thinking. Rejecting mentorship in favor of social media trends or peer pressure can cost young professionals crucial years.
Listening doesn’t mean blind obedience—it means filtering what’s useful and applying it wisely.
5. The Myth of Instant Success
Social media celebrates unicorn founders, influencers, and 25-year-old CEOs. What it hides is:
The years of hard work behind that success.
The failures they went through.
The networks and luck that played a part.
Trying to mimic others’ journeys without building your own foundation is a shortcut to nowhere.
6. Strategy for Career Growth: The 5-Year Roadmap
Here’s a basic strategy young professionals can follow:
Year 1-2: Foundation
Focus on learning over earning.
Master the basics of your role.
Learn from every senior, client, and colleague.
Take feedback seriously.
Year 3-4: Deep Skill Development
Specialize in one or two areas.
Start mentoring juniors—you learn by teaching.
Build a portfolio of work, not just experience.
Attend industry events, online courses, or certifications.
Year 5: Evaluate & Evolve
Now decide: Do you want to go deeper (specialist), broader (manager), or pivot?
Start planning for higher education (MBA, M.Tech, certifications) if needed.
Negotiate better salaries with proof of performance, not just tenure.
7. Career Success Is a Marathon, Not a Sprint
Long-term success needs:
Patience
Continuous learning
Emotional maturity
Financial discipline
Self-awareness
Avoid comparing your journey with others. Focus on your own growth, even if it’s slow but steady.
Final Thoughts: Build, Don’t Chase
To all the freshers and early-career professionals—you are not behind, and you don’t have to “catch up” to anyone. But you do need to commit. Avoid shortcuts. Listen more. Ask questions. Learn like your future depends on it—because it does.
There is no single formula, but there is one universal truth: Those who prepare today with humility and hunger will lead tomorrow with confidence and clarity.
All the best for your Career!
Shailesh Nikam, Director & CEO


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