Wednesday, 13 July 2011
Wednesday, 29 June 2011
3 Things you must know before heading off to University
Wednesday, 15 June 2011
Is your CV headed for the graveyard?
Monday, 16 May 2011
Can you apply a formula to getting a job?
- Use your initiative - Among other things on my irregular placement year, I showed good use of my initiative when I set up and ran my own drinks catering service. I carefully managed the brand, including promotional work and also was capable of securing person ell for bigger events which I could not manage on my own. Today more than ever graduate's need to show good use of initiative taking something and making it better or starting your own business is only going to add to your array of skills.
- Networking - Believe it or not, I didn't think much of networking when I was applying for placement applications, I am regretting that now though. Who ever you are, what ever you know there will be someone out there that will share the same knowledge and idea's, you connect to them and future opportunities may arise. Networking is seen as a fundamental new approach in the work place, but it should be utilised more so now, post recession. I am heavy user of social networking sites such as LinkedIn and Twitter these not only allow me to gain new connections but also expand my horizons on subjects that I may not have had opportunities to develop in the past.
- Act Professional - gone are the days of University being about the late night antics and the two days recovery period and maybe turning up to a couple of lectures. Your university degree means something and with a £9,000 a year burden resting on your shoulders the time to act professional is now. Creating business cards, developing your own corporate website will only strengthen your on-line presence and make you become more noticed.
- Utilise the recruitment websites - What is familiar about the jobs that myself and my colleagues have all got is that they were mostly through recruitment sites. Peoples perception of these sites are strange, with many criticising there usefulness, I was one of these before when it was common for me to receive job notifications for jobs which weren't entirely related to my degree. The perception now is completely different, recruitment consultants will take your CV and give it a make over, provide you with the excellence and professionalism to make you get that job. It must be said that these people often know what they are talking about and therefore should not be disregarded.
- Be resilient - You may have got rejected from one or two jobs, you may feel that your are the exact match for that role and no one else could have beaten you. Graduates especially, need to learn that even if you have the skills sometimes you fail. The best graduates are the ones that can pick themselves up and brush themselves down, the more you learn the more you will gain and this has never been more true in my search for a job.
Tuesday, 5 April 2011
Nick Clegg Vows to break 'Who you know culture'
Tuesday, 1 March 2011
Internship game heats up as competition for graduate jobs rises
- Enternships - People often say that you get more of a buzz out of working for smaller organisations, Enternships offers Internships from a range of small to medium sized enterprises.
- WEXO - Work Experience On-line - a community portal offering access to a range of Internships opportunities within small, medium and large corporations. Downside to WEXO is you have to pay, but on the positive side most of the Internships on this site are advertised as paid, so if you are successful it will be quick to recoup your original investment.
Internships game heats up as competition for graduate job rises
- Enternships - People often say that you get more of a buzz out of working for smaller organisations, Enternships offers Internships from a range of small to medium sized enterprises.
- WEXO - Work Experience On-line - a community portal offering access to a range of Internships opportunities within small, medium and large corporations. Downside to WEXO is you have to pay, but on the positive side most of the Internships on this site are advertised as paid, so if you are successful it will be quick to recoup your original investment.
Wednesday, 16 February 2011
Tuesday, 15 February 2011
How the bankers bonuses are affecting graduates?
Thursday, 10 February 2011
The Graduate Gap
Tuesday, 18 January 2011
Graduates warned "You will struggle without experience"
Graduates without work experience will struggle to find jobs this summer, despite an increase in vacancies, research has suggested.
Three-fifths of employers are warning that graduates who have no previous work experience have little or no chance of getting a job offer, according to a study by High Fliers Research.
Around a third (32%) of this year's graduate vacancies are likely to be filled by applicants who have already worked for the employer as an undergraduate, and in some sectors, such as investment banking and law, this rises to 50%.
The study says: "Many recruiters commented that irrespective of the academic results that a graduate had achieved, it would be very hard for an applicant to demonstrate the skills and competencies that they were looking for if they'd not had any prior work experience."
The report, called The Graduate Market in 2011, analysed graduate vacancies and starting salaries at Britain's 100 leading employers. It found that employers expect to hire 9.4% more graduates this year than they did last year, with three-fifths of firms expecting to recruit more people than in 2010. But graduate recruitment has yet to recover to 2007 levels, it says. A quarter of entry-level vacancies at the UK's top employers were cut during the recession in 2008 and 2009.
Vacancies at high street banks have risen by a quarter, the study found, while there are also more job opportunities at city investment banks and accounting and professional services firms. But recruitment at many public sector firms has been cut. Half of employers questioned for the study said they had received more applications from graduates in the early part of this year's recruitment season than they did last year. In 2010 overall, employers received an average of 45 applications for every job - this could be higher this year.
Martin Birchall, managing director of High Fliers Research, said: "Today's report includes the stark warning that in this highly competitive graduate job market, new graduates who've not had any work experience during their time at university have little or no chance of landing a well-paid job with a leading employer, irrespective of the university they've attended or the academic results they achieve."
Employers have been marketing their vacancies at between 10 and 20 universities in the UK, the study found, with Cambridge, Warwick, Manchester, Oxford and London institutions including Imperial, University College London and the London School of Economics the most often targeted, the study found.
For students seeking to boost their employment chances, almost all of the UK's top graduate employers are offering work experience programmes in the 2010-11 academic year. In total, 10,665 places are available. Graduates who do find a job are likely to earn around £29,000 on average, but a quarter of programmes will pay more than £30,000 and seven organisations are offering at least £40,000.
Universities Minister David Willetts said: "Whilst we welcome signs of an improvement, the job market remains competitive for new graduates, as it does for everyone, and graduates need to work hard to maximise their chances of success. However, a degree remains a good investment in the long term."
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