Friday 26 April 2013

Experience in job fairs

"University job fairs are probably the biggest wastes of time for international writers looking to get sponsored and work in the publishing industry", according to blog.grades.co.uk.


The experience she had in some job fairs shows frustration. The job fairs she have visited do not have the companies she wanted to work for, and the fairs have not been helpful in assisting her to find a job.

Caren, (2012). Job Fair Realisations. [online] Available at: <http://blog.grads.co.uk/2012/11/05/job-fair-realisations/>[Accessed 26 April 2013].

The Graduate Market in 2013, a study by High Fliers Research



The Graduate Market in 2013 is a study of the latest graduate vacancies and starting salaries at one hundred of the UK’s best-known and most successful employers, conducted by High Fliers Research during December 2012. 

Their study shows: 

  • Despite optimistic initial targets for the 2011-2012 recruitment season, the UK’s leading employers recruited fewer graduates than expected in 2012 – entry-level vacancies decreased by 0.8% compared with recruitment in 2011. Employers had increased their graduate recruitment by 2.8% in 2011 and 12.6% in 2010, following sharp falls of 17.8% in 2009 and 6.7% in 2008.
  • The biggest cuts in vacancies in 2012 were at the accounting & professional services firms and the investment banks – employers in these sectors reduced their graduate  intake by more than 1,200 places, compared with their original recruitment targets.
  • The outlook for the current recruitment season has improved and employers are expecting to increase their graduate recruitment by 2.7% in 2013. 
  • Almost half of employers expect to recruit additional graduates in 2013 and a further third plan to maintain their intake at 2012 levels – employers in eleven out of thirteen key industries and employment areas are expecting to take on more new graduates than in 2012.
  • The biggest growth in vacancies is expected at public sector employers, retailers and engineering & industrial companies – graduate recruitment has increased significantly in all three sectors over the last three years. 
  • Whilst the total number of graduate vacancies is set to increase in 2013, recruiters expect that over a third of this year’s entry-level positions will be filled by graduates who have already worked for their organisations – either through internships, industrial placements or vacation work – and therefore are not open to other students from the ‘Class of 2013’.
  • Three quarters of the graduate vacancies advertised this year by City investment banks and half the training contracts offered by the leading law firms are likely to be filled by graduates who have already completed work experience with the employer.
  • The largest recruiters of graduates in 2013 will be Teach First (1260 vacancies), Deloitte (1,200 vacancies) and PwC (1,200 vacancies).
  • Benchmarking graduate vacancies in 2013 with those available six years ago shows that recruitment is still well below pre-recession levels – across all the organisations featured within the research, the number of vacancies on offer this year remains more than 10% lower than in 2007.

Students warned not to get stuck in low-skill jobs


Squeeze on labour as graduates dumb-down in recession, then find it hard to move on, says NUS

Graduates who "dumb down" their employment aspirations can find themselves stuck in low-skilled jobs for years, according to research to be published later this week.
A study by the New Economics Foundation shows one in four graduates who take non-graduate jobs – such as in retail, construction or catering – can find themselves employed in the same position three and a half years later.

The reverse is true, too, with researchers claiming "a strong positive relationship" between those employed in graduate jobs six months after leaving university and 36 months later.


The report, commissioned by the National Union of Students for its annual conference on Tuesday, says the spectre of "underemployment" (where people want to work longer hours or in higher-skilled jobs than they do) among graduates is likely to continue well after any economic recovery; prospects for entering low-paid employment and top-ranking jobs are improving but median-paid employment remains scarce. At present 3.3 million adults fall into this category, compared with 2.3 million five years ago.

"Study leavers face a perfect storm," says the report. "Underlying fractures in the labour market, such as pay polarisation, have surfaced.

"Even those with good graduate degrees are facing months of unemployment or free interning in order to gain access to paid work. Those with no or few qualifications are being left out in the cold."

Students, now leaving university with increased debt following rises in tuition fees, are likely to face years of hardship.

"Study leavers face a rude awakening," the report says. "Some will see low returns, at least in the short to medium term, to the personal and financial investment they have made in their education.

"Intense competition in the labour market has created a bumping-down effect where graduates are working in lower-skilled jobs and those who would have formerly taken these positions are further squeezed out of the labour market.

"While the situation seems easier for those graduating from Russell Group universities, the conditions are not ideal for anyone."

The report adds that there has also been an increase in "zero hour" contracts, whereby employees are asked to be available for work but with no guarantee that any will be available.

"Graduates are having difficulty getting traditional graduate jobs," said Liam Burns, president of the NUS. "We're not saying there is no added value in getting a degree but this shows that the idea that a degree is a golden ticket to good, well-paid employment is not true."

Are you a Events Management Student?

Linkedin has a 'Events Management UK Group' that updates regular discussion and news in the events industry. There will also be some events professionals post upcoming vacancies and answer your questions on the forum.


"Have you ever gotten a job from a job fair?"


Here is another bad experience in job fairs. The reps at the job fairs that this blogger visited directed her to visit their company sites and she never receive any responses for her applications from these sites.

She indicates that these companies who attend job fairs show no intention in recruiting people from these events.

For more detail reading....
Ask A Manager, (2011). Have you ever gotten a job from a job fair? [online] Available at: <http://www.askamanager.org/2011/03/have-you-ever-gotten-a-job-from-a-job-fair.html> [Accessed 26 April 2013].

Thursday 25 April 2013

HEA Employability Conference

The HEA Employability Conference will be held on 20th June 2013 at the Studio Birmingham at 10.30 to 16.00. 



Mayor launches new website from The Careers Group to help graduates find work


Boris Johnson
Photo ©: James O Jenkins
The Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, today launched a brand new employment and careers website for Londoners, ‘Helping Graduates into Work’ , which has been developed in partnership with The Careers Group, University of London.

The content and technical build of the website were provided by The Careers Group, University of London, which this year celebrates a 100 years of providing careers advice. The site, initially aimed at the 100,000 graduates in London who will be looking for work this summer, offers an extremely wide range of information and advice to graduates wishing to enter the London labour market.
A unique feature on the site enables graduates to enter their degree subject and access a range of job and career ideas and names of employers who typically recruit in that area and the salaries they pay. In addition, the site offers extensive advice on finding and applying for work, preparing CVs, and attending interviews, as well as providing information on job fairs in London, internship schemes and the many other post graduate opportunities that are available.

Boris Johnson
Photo ©: James O Jenkins
The Mayor said:
“There is no denying it’s tough out there, but I am reliably informed that there are still plenty of graduate opportunities to be had if you know where to look. That is why, with the excellent support of The Careers Group, we have developed this key initiative from our economic recovery plan – a careers site with clear sign posts to the uniquely diverse range of work opportunities that exist in this city.
“London will lead the way out of this recession but our longer term prosperity depends on nurturing the extraordinary pool of talent we have on our doorstep. Much of that talent emerges every summer from London’s renowned universities, and we cannot afford to see our graduates’ futures blighted by unemployment as they leave study. With a lack of opportunities in the capital, many may leave for good and that would be a disaster.
“London is undoubtedly the place to be for young people and graduates and my clear message is that we want you, we need you and I will work endlessly to keep you here, in the world’s greatest city.”
Anne-Marie Martin, Director of The Careers Group, University of London said:
“The portal helps graduates expand their career thinking, an essential pre-requisite in these difficult economic times. It has been a truly collaborative project bringing together information and expertise from the Mayor’s Office and from across the Higher Education sector in London, an activity that the University of London, through The Careers Group, has been proud to facilitate.”
‘Helping graduates into work’ is the first phase of efforts to help Londoners through the economic downturn and the website will soon be expanded with advice and information targeted at other groups of Londoners to help them find work and training opportunities.
Notes:
1. The new website’s address is: www.london.gov.uk/graduates 
2. 100,000 graduates are expected to enter the London labour market this year and half of these student job hunters have little confidence that they will find a graduate position. The most recent survey of the top 100 recruiters showed vacancies down 13.5% on 2008 and the Association of Graduate Recruiters report this month that one in four graduate vacancies have disappeared. However, there is much anecdotal information that there are still many graduate opportunities in London, but graduates are not applying believing there are none. Tesco, for example, have taken on 45 London based graduates this year alone.
3. Since 1909, The Careers Group, University of London has provided the careers services at Birkbeck College, Courtauld Institute of Art, Goldsmiths College, Institute of cancer research, Institute of Education, King’s College London, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Queen Mary University of London, Royal Holloway University of London, Royal Veterinary College, Saint Georges University of London, School of Advanced Study, School of Oriental and African Studies, School of Pharmacy and University College London – delivering crucial employability and careers support to more than 100,000 students per year.
For further information contact:Anne-Marie Martin
Director
The Careers Group, University of London
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7863 6002
Email: Anne-marie.Martin@careers.lon.ac.uk 
Reference:
University of London, (n.d.). Mayor launches new website from The Careers Group to help graduates find work. Available at: <http://www.london.ac.uk/1348.html> [Accessed 25 April 2013].