job

Posts tagged with job

I got a long list of a really good questions after the Lecture about SEO and Social Media Marketing on the University of Osijek. The lecture wouldn’t have been half as interesting if not fuelled by the challenging questions from the audience. The students and graduates of Faculty of Economics and Business Informatics showed deep understanding of the topics, and engaged in discussions on various topics.


I was really surprised by the quality of the questions, and the discussion that the same created during the official presentation and later on in the ‘unofficial’ chats later on.

When afterwards I found out that majority of them struggle to find a job, I simply couldn’t believe it. Some questions revealed some niche expertise like in depth understanding on Facebook marketing, that I thought must be a sought for skill. IN the same time I am told  the same person will find it really hard to get a marketing role since she has just finished her Masters degree, and has a very little work experience. By looking at her online activity on the social media networks – her reach is enormous.

The students will say that they are overeducated. The Employers will say that they are under experienced.

But what it seems to me is that employers actually need to understand the change in business better, and accept that there is more or less no experienced social media marketing manager in this world jet. Simply since the whole marketing aspect of the social media sites is only being commercialised recently, and there is no one with X years’ experience in it.

Perhaps there is another view on the current skills in demand and on offer mismatch. Perhaps it is not that the schools and universities are not producing what is actually needed for the industries. Perhaps the potential employers need to understand how to hire the talent in all this new industries, that didn’t even existed a few short years age when current graduates have ben choosing topics they will study.

Currently rated 4.67 by 3 visitor(s)

September is always a ‘Boom Month’ in the recruitment volume. This one is no exception. Recession or not, jobs are still here. All the industry is still here, there are jobs to be done. Ok, construction might not be here as it was, but more or less, all the other industries are still booming in Ireland. Dell closed the Limerick plant, but IT didn’t really die here. Low paid manufacturing aspect of IT did, but instead we got Google hiring like maniacs! Literally.

It’s not that we did not work hard during the boom, but there are some of us that simply didn’t have to work hard at all. There was just so much work to choose from. Clients cuing for almost any type of service you could provide. Just remember, up until not long ago we used to cue for a taxi. Today taxis are cuing up, waiting in the line for a customer. And when they do get a customer, they work on retention. They give you their number, with the special discount codes and rates. They will do everything to make sure next time you need a taxi, you ring them as oppose stopping a next free one on the street. Taxi drivers are fighting for their market share today. They acquire you, and work on retention of their customers. Well we all need to learn from our taxi drivers.

There are jobs everywhere and in every industry right now. Crisis of the economy – Yes. Recession – Yes. Downturn – some will say yes, but I am not sure we are actually going ‘Down’ any more. Not for some time now. But jobs are still here. 

It is harder to get a job today

Not only that far more effort is needed to get a job today, but it will also be harder to keep it. Simply more of you will be required from your employer. Harder work, and more hours. You will simply have to ‘produce’ more – since our salaries are still quite high compared to most of the  Europe. If you are a taxi driver, you will have to put in more hours. If your job does not let you put in more hours since your shift ends, you will most likely have to work faster, and more efficiently. Regardless of what you do, you are very likely to have to work harder to keep your job.

Some will fail. Some will decide they do not want to work harder. Some will find out it simply does not pay to do it. Voluntary redundancies have been offered in most of companies since the recession started. Layoffs done quietly with a small numbers or staff or on a grands scales with the whole factories being closed and hundreds of workers ending up on the street became normal news. It is tough to stand all this bad news. We have more suicides today in Ireland than we ever had. One and a half every day on average. Times are tough. But jobs are still here. Make sure you like yours, since you will spend more time doing it from now onwards.

Sounds kind of like Germans? Perhaps, but nowadays that is required of us. If we want to keep living as we used to, and if we want this country to be the one we are proud of – we will have to work for it, and work hard for it.
Currently rated 5.00 by 1 visitor(s)

Author: IvanStojanovic  Categories: Jobs Comments (0)