Happy Birthday USA!
To celebrate, we are launching a new service that should help everyone who lives in USA
Welcome to NextActs — a weekly read on the American labor market, written for the people the numbers are actually about.
Every Thursday at 8:30 a.m. Eastern, the U.S. Department of Labor releases the number of people who filed for unemployment for the first time the week before — initial jobless claims. It’s one of the most current signals we have about how the job market is holding up. And roughly once a month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the Employment Situation — the headline unemployment rate and how many jobs the economy added or lost.
We read both, the moment they land, and turn them into something you can use in two minutes.
What you’ll get here
Every week — a short note on that week’s initial and continued claims: what moved, what didn’t, and whether it matters.
Jobs-report weeks — when the monthly unemployment rate comes out, that week’s edition covers the rate and payrolls alongside the week’s claims.
The trend, always — our live dashboard at nextacts.xyz/trends tracks the full picture week over week, so you can see past the one-week noise.
We track the weekly claims data every week — including jobs-report weeks — because the trend is the story. A single week bounces around for reasons that have nothing to do with the economy (a holiday, a storm, a seasonal-adjustment quirk). The direction over a month or a quarter is what tells you something real.
Why NextAct is the one writing this
Behind every tick in the claims data is a person who just lost a job and has to file for unemployment. We’re building NextAct for exactly that moment — to make filing an unemployment claim simpler and less error-prone, by preparing the correct state forms, filled in and ready for you to review and submit.
Reading this data every week keeps us close to the people we’re building for — and keeps you oriented in the labor market you’re navigating.
Subscribe and you’ll get each edition the morning the data lands.
See you soon.

