Posts Tagged ‘Graduate Job’

Graduate Job Opportunities – Adventure, Work and Travel

December 11th, 2009

Think gap years are just for school leavers and time wasters? Think again!

Over 30% of the volunteers sent away last year by ‘The Leap’, one of the UK’s leading Gap Year organizations, were over the age of twenty. Be it a year off before submitting to the 9-5, a Summer gap between University terms or a few months career sabbatical, a gap year has opportunities and benefits for everyone and is proving an increasingly popular option for graduates. And the great news is that the range of projects and placements on offer is now bigger than ever, volunteering opportunities from managing luxurious Safari Camps in the Mara to teaching English to kids in the Amazon are yours for the taking. So, don’t follow the graduate crowd, meandering like lost sheep from one aimless temp job to the next…test your skills, use your brain and experience a once in a lifetime opportunity that will benefit your life and career forever!

Let’s face it, University (as much as we like to pretend otherwise) is bloody hard work. At least three years of gruelling mental exercise, high pressure late night essay writing all topped of with a tasty helping of last minute panic, anxiety and stress! Yes we had the time of our lives, but the last thing we want to think about as we walk triumphantly from the exam hall is the mountain of job application forms awaiting us at home. There has to be more to graduation than nagging parents and student overdrafts. If there’s ever a time in ones life that a holiday is earned then it’s post University. The notion of going straight from the lecture theatre to the graduate job is outmoded and doesn’t suit the development needs and interests of today’s University leavers. More importantly, it doesn’t generate the motivated, skilled and experienced job applicants that graduate employers are looking to recruit. There has to be another way. I believe the answer lies in a gap year. » Read more: Graduate Job Opportunities – Adventure, Work and Travel

The Day I Found the Path to My Dream Full Time Job

September 18th, 2009

Have you ever considered that your personality might be a factor in whether you get a full time job or not, or even whether you get a part time job or not? Well I know I hadn’t, until a friend pointed out that we all have one of these ‘personalities’. So on realising this, I decided to go out in to that enormously large universe of information that is the world wide web, on a mission to find out my true self, the true inner me, my personality as one would call it. All this in the hope that I find out what I need to know about myself to make the big step up from student life and student part time jobs, to the scary, but exciting world of being a graduate and getting my first graduate job which hopefully would lead to a great full time job.

So there I was, browsing the internet on your usual searching websites, getting nowhere, until all of a sudden as if a switch had just been flicked, exactly what I was looking for appeared before my very eyes on the screen in front of me. Yes, the answers to all my pondering thoughts about personality affecting what type of jobs in Newcastle that I will get or will not get, all within a click away. The website was Bluezonjobs.com  and it offered a free psychometric personality test. As I took a deep breath and was preparing to learn about myself things that I may already know, things that may pleasantly surprise me, or things that I subconsciously already know are true, but don’t like to admit to myself.

As I was preparing to make the big click, thoughts were flooding into my mind about previous employments that I’ve had, my part time jobs in Leeds while at University, my part time jobs in Cumbria while I was a boy in a man’s world and how these all compare to my potential future job or jobs in Newcastle that I was comprehending. What if I didn’t like what this personality test told me? What if it shattered my confidence, or what if it made everything I’d achieved at University seem worthless now? Well this was something I had to do, and with the comfort of older siblings telling me that a degree is a degree and as long as you’ve got one in whatever subject, you will always find a career in any field you want. You know they say to learn about yourself you need to stare down the barrel of a gun, well this was a similar feeling, only without the possibility of being shot at the end of it all. As I stared down the barrel, or at my screen in real terms, questions began to appear on my screen that instantly made me think about myself and my prospects of full time jobs that I enjoy, because the last thing I want is a job like my part time jobs that I had while at University. Then once the final question was answered, I nervously waited for the dreaded news as my results loaded (talk about walking on egg shells)…

Sitting there in my old roughed up chair that had taken the hammerings of a conveyor belt of students in the past, possibly all going through the same frantic full time job searching on Newcastle full time job websites as me, it sudden dawned on me that even before the results, the excellent questions on this Bluezonjobs.com website had already answered a lot for me and taught me a few valuable lessons about my inner personality. Then as I sat there with my eyes scrunched shut fearing what I was going to see, the inevitable ‘ding’ sound that my laptop makes when something has finished loading echoed in my ears, and before i knew it, as if by magic the information that I’d craved for so long was there in front of me for me to see. What I seen delighted me, it was as if the Bluezonjobs.com Psychometric Profile Testing tool had drilled into my deep mind and plucked out all the things I didn’t know I already knew about myself. It gave me several relevant pieces of information, types of jobs that were relevant to what I’d been studying for at Leeds, but also types of jobs that made me feel inspired and enthusiastic about my future – This was a great feeling.

This was a real valuable learning exercise for me, and thanks to this, after working my way up through various typical graduate jobs in Newcastle and then working my way up with promotions from jobs in Cumbria, I now have a really successful career in the property business which is a job in Leeds that I love and that pays me a wage better than I could ever have imagined. Bluezonjobs.com is a website that I would thoroughly recommend as not only did this site help me with the Psychometric testing, but it was where I found my graduate jobs, and then my jobs in Newcastle and ultimately my amazing career and life that I now have. My job now really is a far cry from my previous part time jobs and student jobs.

By Ben Little ©




By: Beniano

Graduate Job Opportunities: Adventure, Work and Travel

August 30th, 2009

Think gap years are just for school leavers and time wasters? Think again!

Over 30% of the volunteers sent away last year by ‘The Leap’, one of the UK’s leading Gap Year organizations, were over the age of twenty. Be it a year off before submitting to the 9-5, a Summer gap between University terms or a few months career sabbatical, a gap year has opportunities and benefits for everyone and is proving an increasingly popular option for graduates. And the great news is that the range of projects and placements on offer is now bigger than ever, volunteering opportunities from managing luxurious Safari Camps in the Mara to teaching English to kids in the Amazon are yours for the taking. So, don’t follow the graduate crowd, meandering like lost sheep from one aimless temp job to the next…test your skills, use your brain and experience a once in a lifetime opportunity that will benefit your life and career forever!

Let’s face it, University (as much as we like to pretend otherwise) is bloody hard work. At least three years of gruelling mental exercise, high pressure late night essay writing all topped of with a tasty helping of last minute panic, anxiety and stress! Yes we had the time of our lives, but the last thing we want to think about as we walk triumphantly from the exam hall is the mountain of job application forms awaiting us at home. There has to be more to graduation than nagging parents and student overdrafts. If there’s ever a time in ones life that a holiday is earned then it’s post University. The notion of going straight from the lecture theatre to the graduate job is outmoded and doesn’t suit the development needs and interests of today’s University leavers. More importantly, it doesn’t generate the motivated, skilled and experienced job applicants that graduate employers are looking to recruit. There has to be another way. I believe the answer lies in a gap year.

There has been much debate in the media recently as to why graduates are not matching the standards and expectations of employers. Some of this country’s biggest and most influential graduate recruiters such as Price Waterhouse Coopers and Gold and Sachs have complained that new recruits don’t have the practical skills, life experience or right attitude to learning excel in business. They suggest that the fault lies with degrees and teaching styles at Universities not adequately preparing students for the world of work. In response, educators are expanding methods of learning and assessment to match employers needs and are also introducing accredited modules in interview, computing and public speaking skills to name but a few. But isn’t it time for individuals to take responsibility for their skills base and work experience- rather than blaming a faceless system for churning out unsuitable applicants, graduates and students need to do more to prepare their CV and take control of their futures.

In a competitive market where thousands of people with the same degree classification are applying for limited job opportunities how can a graduate make sure their CV stands out? Taking a structured gap year, which develops and showcases your abilities is a practical and exciting way to achieve what every graduate employer craves- an application form that shines with experience and motivation. Best of all, having completed three months volunteer work in the wilds of Africa or rain forests of Costa Rica you will have something extra ordinary to talk about at interview. Show interviewers you’ve got what it takes to organize, fund raise and work your way through a gap year- giving something back to those less fortunate and you’ll make a lasting impression they wont forget in a hurry. Don’t just talk about soft skills you have, demonstrate them by taking a gap year.

For many, a gap year after University has the additional benefit of allowing time away from home and education to reassess your long-term goals. So many of us leave our studies with next to no idea of what we want to do in life, feeling daunted about the future and overwhelmed by the changes taking place around us. A year out gives the opportunity to take a step back, discover something new and even experiment with career prospects. Combining work experience in industries that interest you with adventurous travel and worthwhile volunteer projects allows you to do this and, as mentioned will enhance your chance of landing your dream job when you finally work out what it is!

Finally and most importantly, I would like to advise those among you who are put off the idea of a gap year post university by the financial burden of Student loans and the grumblings of parents desperate to see the returns of their life long investment, don’t be. A well planned year off can be totally self funded with just a few months of paid work, it needn’t leave you in debt and could actually improve your earning potential by the benefits it gives to your employability. Although you may feel shackled by debt and responsibility right now, this is may be the last period in your life where you have freedom from jobs, contracts, mortgages and childcare and are able to have a gap experience. Whether it’s a gap year or just a few months, now is the time to act…and with so many great volunteer opportunities for graduates, it’s clearly time to call The Leap!




By: Alice Baines