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Careers Introduction

Careers Introduction. Judith Baines Development Manager & Careers Adviser for BSSM Career Development & Employment Service. Lecture Plan. Introduction Graduate Labour Market Transferable Skills Ways to Develop Transferable Skills Resources. New World of Work.

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Careers Introduction

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  1. Careers Introduction Judith Baines Development Manager & Careers Adviser for BSSM Career Development & Employment Service

  2. Lecture Plan • Introduction • Graduate Labour Market • Transferable Skills • Ways to Develop Transferable Skills • Resources

  3. New World of Work • Gone is the job for life with planned career structure and company training scheme • Gone are the clear functional identities of jobs Instead: • World of customers, clients and adding value • Lifelong learning, portfolio careers, self development and staying employable Skills for Graduates in the 21st Century: Association of Graduate Recruiters

  4. “having a degree opens up more doors than without one …. Graduates have significantly higher earnings than non-graduates and the financial benefits of a degree increase markedly with age.” www.prospects.ac.uk, 2003

  5. Good News for Business Graduates • Graduate unemployment is low, 6.9% in 2002 • Graduate unemployment amongst Business graduates is lower, at 6.7% • Business & administrative studies graduates are a marketable commodity to employers Source: Prospects website

  6. Graduate Destinations 2002Source: Prospects Website

  7. Outlook for 2004 • Graduate vacancies expected to rise by 11.9% in 2004 • Over 40% of 2003/04 vacancies were in the capital • Recruitment in London is expected to increase by around 8% Source: Prospects website

  8. Some facts on Advertising • 30,000 people working in PR in the UK • Relatively small number of employees & popularity of the sector mean that competition is tough. • 76% of the employee base is in London • The UK advertising industry is regarded as being highly innovative and among the best in the world. • One advertising agency employs 7,000 people in 138 offices in 82 countries, ranging from Argentina to Zimbabwe

  9. However... We are in an era of mass Higher Education In 2003: • over 5000 graduated from London Met. • You are competing with a lot of equally qualified people. • A degree is an excellent start, but you need more!

  10. “The most recent labour market information appears to provide evidence that a degree on its own, without accompanying work experience, evidence of achievement, and/or transferable skills, is not enough. This is true especially against a backdrop of increasing participation in Higher Education…..” Prospects website, 2003

  11. Improve your career prospects • 1st Year • Find your feet • Explore your degree subject • Have fun • Develop some transferable skills • 2nd Year • Gain work experience in chosen field of study • Think about your placement • Final Year • Undergo your placement • Consider your career after graduation • Start applying for positions/training schemes

  12. Willingness to learn Commitment Dependability/reliability Self-motivation Team work Communication skills (oral) Co-operation Communication skills (written) Drive/energy Self-management Desire to achieve/ motivation Problem-solving ability What are Employers Looking For? Interpersonal & Transferable Skills: Source: Employer Satisfaction Survey, in AGCAS Making Applications booklet

  13. Advertising and PR Example One recent recruit to the The Ogilvy Group offers some advice “Throughout they are seeking teamwork, leadership (without pushiness), insight and enthusiasm. Make them smile as they are trying to work out whether they want you.” Source: Prospects website

  14. Communication skills Customer service Team working Problem solving Management skills Initiative Managing your own development Business awareness Interpersonal skills Skills Gaps Identified by Employers Source: Employer Skills Survey, Association of Graduate Recruiters 2002

  15. Question • Put your hand up if you think that you have already developed some of these skills?

  16. “Our employers look for individuals who have some knowledge of the world of work, have reflected on their experiences and can articulate in a job interview what they have learned.” The Council for Industry and Higher Education

  17. Key to Success • Gaining the experience to help you develop transferable skills • Learning how to communicate the skills to employers via the application process: • CV with covering letter • Application form • Interview process

  18. Developing Skills • Through school activities • Through your home life • Through your course • Through vacation and part-time work • Through a placement • Through extra curricular activities

  19. Work ExperienceHelps you findout: • Whether you are suited to working in a large or small company • Whether you prefer to work in the commercial or not-for-profit sector • Reality of every day working eg. timekeeping • Whether you want to work indoors, outdoors, at home or abroad • What you like and don’t like doing • What you are good at • Whether you might want to start your own business Liz Rhodes, National Council for Work Experience http://nusonline.co.uk

  20. Employment Online • Part time work • Vacation work • Placements • Internships • Graduate jobs • Jobs by email Register online www.londonmet.ac.uk/careers/employment

  21. Benefits of a Placement • You often need experience in order to get a graduate job!! • Practice for the graduate recruitment process • Get a thorough understanding of a sector, organisation or job role • Gain real evidence of achievement and the skills employers look for • “Test-drive” a specific job without long term commitment • Become aware of the culture and structure of a working environment

  22. Business Placements Unit • Helps students into sandwich placements • Advice and guidance on skills audit, planning, making applications, interview technique • Advertises hundreds of placement vacancies every year • Offers advice on work experience for non-sandwich students • Stapleton House, Room 213 • Helen Kidd: h.kidd@londonmet.ac.uk

  23. Employability Unit • For students who do not have a compulsory placement as part of their degree • A minimum of 5 weeks during summer vacation after year 2 • A period which is equivalent to 5 weeks (25 days) during year 3 • Provide you with structured guidance and workshops on CVs, applications, interviews • Room M10 The Learning Centre

  24. Extra- Curricular Activities • Volunteering placements • Tutoring/coaching • Role model • Mentoring • Part-time work within the university/peer support • Self reflection/skills development

  25. Volunteering “Put aside preconceptions: volunteering is work experience… the act of choosing to be a volunteer can show greater initiative and commitment” Miles Killingley, Senior Manager, Executive Education at HSBC “Volunteering can be a great way to develop the skills we look for when recruiting graduates.” Helen Feltham, Marks and Spencer’s Director of UK Retail, Human Resources

  26. Arsenal Double Club(tutoring/coaching) • Mentors act as tutors/coaches to primary school children for Maths, English, IT and football or hockey. • Mentors trained as tutors and coaches • 90 minutes per week - forty-five minutes (one half) is spent on academic study Forty-five minutes on sports • Over 30 weeks a year • No automatic certification but promising mentors can be put forward to the coaching certification

  27. Aim Higher Project – ethnic minority achievement service(role model) • Run by CEA (Cambridge Education Authority). • Links student volunteers as mentors to pupils from ethnic minority backgrounds • 8 students mentor pupils in Year 10/11 who are studying for their GCSE’s - scope for students to provide reading support to primary age students • To talk to students about their lives and career aspirations; to encourage them to give serious consideration to their futures

  28. www.londonmet.ac.uk/careers/stan

  29. What’s Going On? • Careers Fairs • Workshops • Skills/Development Schemes • Events Careers 2004 www.londonmet.ac.uk/careers/events

  30. Career Development & Employment Service • CVs, application forms, covering letters • Quick careers queries • Vocational guidance • Workshops • Information on jobs, careers and employers • Job vacancies “Employment Online" • Visiting employers-presentations, stands, workshops • Computer-aided guidance • Psychometric test sessions • Free take-away literature

  31. Resources Books • Marketing and PR Uncovered • Careers in Marketing, Advertising and PR • AgCAS sector briefing booklets to take away Videos • Advertising show reels – J. Walter Thompson, TBWA, AMV BBDC • Direct Marketing – is it the career for me?

  32. How to get in touch Student Services, 1st Floor, Tower Building Open 9-6pm Drop-in 12-3pm, Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri term-time Wed. 12-3pm phone to book on the day Tel: 020 7133 2094 careers.north@londonmet.ac.uk www.londonmet.ac.uk/careers

  33. Prospectswww. prospects.ac.uk

  34. Conclusions • You will already have many skills and abilities that employers will value • You will further develop these and learn additional ones whilst at university • Work experience and/or volunteering are vital • Learning how to communicate your abilities to employers is essential • Use the resources that the university provides to get ahead in the job market

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