Thursday, 31 January 2008

Graduate Jobs Outlook 2008


Hi, this news reaches you hot off the press. As a member of the Association of Graduate Recruiters (AGR) we get the latest reports and surveys on the industry before anyone else. Today was the launch of the findings of a survey among 217 graduate recruiters about their hiring predictions for 2008.
Despite the current economic climate, the news is good. Graduate vacancies are up 16.4%; Salaries expected to increase by 2.1% to a median of £24,000 and the surprising thing is they expect difficulties filling their vacancies despite the choice of 404,700 graduates leaving in the Summer.
The top reasons for jobs being unfilled were graduates' perception of their industry sector (this has in the past affected Engineering and Accountancy whereas Marketing or PR is stronger). Also employers weren't finding graduates with the right skills. So how do they plan to recruit graduates like you?
Well, they target certain universities (21 on average which seems crazy when there are 123 in the UK). They go along to careers fairs, advertise with careers services, make presentations and various campus events; they design brochures and websites and they experiment with new media like social networking sites or second life. A new trend to emerge was the strategy of recruiting graduates from Europe because they do not want to lower the entry requirements which can often be 2.1 with a string of strong A Levels. You can understand that global firms need to recruit globally but even UK based firms are considering this.
You have to understand that recruiters want a graduate that will provide a "return". The cost to hire a graduate can be anything over £2500 so they have to make a business case for hiring graduates so they can be very fussy. But graduates need to be fussy too. They want to work for a firm that looks impressive on a CV, provides training and a work life balance. It just seems that the language of recruiters and the language of graduates is very different and time after time there are mismatches between a graduates needs and the employers needs. This is what GRB do everyday - career matchmaking - and it is truly satisfying setting graduates off on the right track and seeing their career progress within the same firm.
So how can you increase your chances of finding work for when you graduate?
First, I think you need to get as much careers advice as possible to help you get a rough idea about what skills you have and what roles they can be best utilised. Your University Careers Service are there to help so use them before you leave.
Second, sell yourself. Get your CV checked; practice interviews; dress to impress; practice your handshake and be enthusiastic - it can be infectious!
There are more jobs out there than ever before so you are entering the job market at an ideal time. GRB have hundreds of jobs with recruiters across the UK and our consultants can guide and advise you throughout the whole job application process. Recruiters pay us to find you so it does not cost you anything. With predicted shortfalls we therefore expect many to turn to recruitment agencies to plug the gap. That's good for us and good for our registered users.
There is much media coverage of this survey so when I have read through it all I will give you all an update. Here's one I have just spotted> http://www.recruiter.co.uk/Articles/336095/Graduate+recruitment.html

Tuesday, 29 January 2008

Helicopter Parenting - Fact or Fiction?


Have you heard about helicopter parenting? Well this is a subject that fascinates many graduate recruiters at the moment. Helicopter parenting is where a parent has total involvement in many aspects of their offspring's life including job hunting. Employers are wondering whether these graduates are hiding behind their parents because they are shy or maybe they are very confident but just have no control over their pushy parents!


Graduate recruiters have witnessed parents attending careers fairs with their newly graduated sons or daughters; ringing up recruiters to ask if they have any jobs available; attending interviews; negotiating salaries and even turning up on the first day of a new job.It all started in America and like many things has blown East to our shores - but has it? Is it just a few neurotic parents displaying this behaviour or a national phenomenon. Tell me - what kind of help are you comfortable with from your parents? A bit of worldy advice and guidance or a fully paid up life coach?

Monday, 28 January 2008

CVs

In ten years I have seen loads of graduate CVs. We put CVs forward to recruiters every day, we get interviews for candidates every day and we get jobs for graduates every day. We know it all starts with a CV and we know what works.

Some CVs we receive from newly qualified graduates are outstanding - they are relevant, catch my attention, were easy to read and gave evidence of success. Other CVs can look flat in comparison. Very little thought has gone into it, there are mistakes and you have to hunt for the information you need to make a decision. Poor CV construction multiplied by hundreds that pass the selector's desk mean that it is a skilled job to read through CVs and identify the right candidates to interview. Due to high volumes of applications and time pressure, selectors are forced to identify suitable applicants from their CVs in seconds - yes seconds. Maybe just 15 seconds!

Problem is you need to spend 3 hours getting your CV at its best to pass the 15 second test. I run a CV clinic at GRB in Brighton and help graduates do just this. The transformation can be amazing and can turn around someone's chances of finding their first job - an important step for a graduate.

I remember meeting a guy at a seminar once who had just retired from recruitment and he gave me a great bit of advice about CVs. A CV should show how great the things you have done are and NOT how great a person you are.

To get you started I have produced a CV Makeover kit which is a free download here>
http://www.grb.uk.com/cv_makeover.0.html


Happy job hunting

Dan Hawes

Wood on the beach


Here is evidence of all the timber that washed up on the south coast. This is shoreham beach on Saturday.

Race Face


This is me after mountain biking on the South Downs on Sunday morning. Thanks Jake for taking the picture - pretty good for an 8 year old!

Graduation in Brighton


We met some graduates today from Sussex Uni. Congrats to you all!