Employment is a driving factor for consumer income and spending and therefore must underlie any strategic thinking about the economy and financial services. In this essay we take an expanded view of several aspects of the “consumer as worker” experience. First we highlight the cyclical pattern of employment with emphasis on the extent of the deviation of the current experience relative to the recent past. We conclude that the extent of the pressure on the consumer is far more significant today relative to recent cycles. Next, we break down employment by macro categories such as education, industry, and region. These characteristics distinguish the winners and losers in the search for the best jobs, with some results reflecting short term shocks and others representative of long term trends. We focus on education in particular, which has been a long running theme in our work.1 The results reinforce our view that, even in a recession, the economic returns of an investment in education are significant. We then examine the employment experience at the industry level. Emerging themes here include the long-term secular decline in manufacturing employment, the highly cyclical nature of construction employment, and the very few parts of the service sector which have escaped the otherwise omnipresent loss of jobs. Finally, we highlight some regional trends we find interesting. In particular we note the boom/bust pattern associated with the housing and energy cycles, clearly a driving factor in the success of households to find or lose employment in a national business cycle.