Archive for the ‘Job Seekers’ Category

Unemployment down, job ads up in August

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

Unemployment Rate Down

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) publication Labour Force, Australia shows that the Unemployment rate fell from 5.3% to 5.1% in seasonally adjusted terms, and remained steady at 5.2% in trend terms in August. The Participation rate also fell from 65.5% to 65.4% in seasonally adjusted terms, while remaining constant at 65.4% in trend terms over the month. In seasonally adjusted terms full-time employment increased 53,100 to 7,920,400 and part-time employment decreased 22,100 to 3,351,600. The number of persons looking for full-time work decreased 17,600 to 429,300 and the number of persons looking for part-time work decreased 4,900 to 178,400. In the ACT, the unemployment rate fell from 3.2% to 3.1%, while the participation rate also fell from 72.7% to 72.5% in August.

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Job Advertisements Rise

The ANZ Job Advertisements Series shows that the total number of jobs advertised in major metropolitan newspapers and on the Internet rose by 2.6% in August, to an average of 176,239 per week (seasonally adjusted), following a 1.4% increase in the previous month. Newspaper job ads rose 1.5%, while Internet job ads rose 2.6% in August. The series is now 36.1% higher than it was a year ago, and just short of the historic annual high of 40.2% that was achieved in May 2007. However the total number of job advertisements remains 36.6% below the all-time peak reached in April 2008. In the ACT the average number of newspaper job advertisements per week fell by 7.3% in seasonally adjusted terms, but was still up 0.4% in trend terms in August.

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Leading Indicator of Employment Up

The Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR) Monthly Leading Indicator of Employment has risen for the fifth consecutive month to stand at -0.028 standard deviations from the cyclical trend in September 2010. However this is still one month short of the number of rises needed to confirm that a trough has occurred in the Indicator. If confirmed, this would mean that, in the months ahead, employment would be predicted to grow more quickly than its long-term trend rate of 2.1% per annum.

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This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here:http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au






A third of candidates happy to be scrutinised online: Hays

Saturday, August 7th, 2010

More than a third of all job seekers accept that employers are entitled to check out their social media profiles when assessing them for a role, according to a new poll from Hays.

However, while 34% of the 900 candidates surveyed expected employers to check their social media profile and found this acceptable, a larger group – some 46%, felt employers were invading their privacy by screening them on social media.

The remaining 20% of candidates didn’t think employers were checking them out online.

Hays director Grahame Doyle said the majority of job seekers seemed to feel that “their personal life is their personal life, and their social media profile should not be used as part of the [recruitment] decision-making process”.

However, he noted there was a a sizeable group who believed that any actions that took place in the public domain were open to public scrutiny and assessment.

“In our experience, most employers do not leap to check a candidate’s online profile.

“It is far more common that an employer will extend their vetting process to include social media only if they feel a candidate might not be what they are portraying themselves to be in their face-to-face interview.”

In any event, he said, it was common sense for people searching for a job to change their privacy settings so not all of their posted content was shared.

He noted that it wasn’t just the main social media sites that candidates should be worried about, as employers that were using the internet to research candidates “will not stop at Facebook”.

Employers were also looking at content uploaded to video-sharing sites like YouTube, online forums and blogs, comments on social bookmarking sites (like Digg and Reddit), and much else, Doyle said.

Shortlist has covered the legal ins and outs of candidate privacy and social media previously. 


This article appeared in Shortlist News, an email service providing the latest news and analysis on recruitment and human capital management






Skills Shortages: The Sequel (Part II)

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

In last week’s InSight lead article, ‘Skills Shortage: The Sequel’, I highlighted the recent flurry of publicity in the mainstream media about the skills shortage. Contrary stories have also made the news. Recruitment industry veteran, Bob Olivier, made headlines in the AFR (Friday 23 July, 2010, page 46) by stating he believed the skills shortage was ‘overplayed’ due to ‘quality candidates being unwilling to move jobs’  and industry news service, ShortList quoted ICT Training Executive Clinton in’t Veld as saying;

“Generally speaking, when an environment starts to pick up economically, there is this sort of knee-jerk reaction to think that given the increase in economic activity, we don’t have enough skills.”

But many companies were only considering the primary, formal skills of their IT staff – in essence their current job title – rather than looking at all of the other skill sets they had picked up along the way, he said.”So who is right? Is there a skills shortage or not?

As you would expect, the answer is not definitive. It depends upon who you are and what you are measuring.

Let’s look at some typical reasons why a skills shortage might exist.

One dimensional sourcing: If you are an employer and all you do is run a job ad in the local paper or online and from that process you aren’t able to hire the ‘ideal candidate’, then you are likely to scream ‘skills shortage’.

No development of employees: If you are an employer who doesn’t invest in building the skills and motivation of their employees because ‘all that happens is that people leave to get a better job, with more money, elsewhere’, then you are likely to believe there is a skills shortage.

Geographically isolated: If you are a Council in a regional or rural area, desperate to find a doctor for your area, then you know there is a skills shortage. This topic was recently given excellent coverage in the SBS documentary Desperately Seeking Doctors.

Low pay: The maximum base pay for classroom teachers in any state of Australia does not exceed $85,000 p.a. The baby boomer wave of teachers are now retiring, creating concerns about the likelihood of the higher paying careers in the technology, finance and resources sectors, luring away potential teachers from undertaking (arguably) the most important paid job in any community.

Unsociable hours: Would you like a job whose core hours are when 99% of your friends and family are asleep? Try a career as a baker.

Dangerous and dysfunctional work environment: Forget all the faux glamour of Masterchef. The reality of life as a chef is a combination of unsocial hours and a work environment combining flames, heat, sharp knives, slippery surfaces and ‘tired and emotional’ colleagues. No wonder the most recent Clarius Skills Index rated chefs as the #1 ranked job where demand exceeded supply in Australia. Let’s hope all those Masterchef-inspired enrolments in hospitality colleges around the country stick with their choice.

A skills shortage is not just a function of the things I have listed above, it’s a function of expectations; the expectations of employers of being able to hire exactly what they are looking for at the price they want to pay.

Training of employees has traditionally been seen as a function of the education system, funded and supplied by the government. Once a ‘trained’ employee started their job, the typical employer took little, if any, responsibility for the further development of that employee. If the employee somehow managed to pick things up as they went along then they were a ‘good’ employee and if they didn’t, they were ‘no good’.

Unfortunately, investing in the ongoing training and development of employees has not been a key feature in the history of Australian organisational life. Too often, training and development has been provided only to those employees who are not meeting performance expectations and therefore needed ‘fixing’.

High performing organisations understand how important a culture of ongoing learning and development is in avoiding the worst of a skills shortage by:

  • Not having to purchase ready-to-go skills at a premium from the open  employment market
  • Lower staff turnover costs
  • Higher innovation
  • Higher morale
  • High productivity
  • Better bottom line results

I wrote in detail about this sort of high performance culture in March 2009 in a feature article What Australia’s Champion Cricket Coach Can Teach Recruiters for recruitment extra.

I think an excellent corporate example of what is possible, is evident at Australian publicly listed travel company, Flight Centre.

Travel agencies were commonly regarded as a dying sector and choosing a career as a travel agent was seen as a dead-end option, primarily due to the internet being able to provide instant self-service for travel bookings as well as  destination information and recommendations.

Flight Centre has been very pro-active about the recruitment and development of their people in an industry that has been traditionally characterised by low margins, low pay and high staff turnover.

Flight Centre own 50% of high-volume recruiter, Employment Office. They invest heavily in training and development, reward their staff with many non-monetary benefits and provide many opportunities for career advancement, both domestically and internationally.

The result? Flight Centre are consistently listed in the Hewitt Associates list of Best Australian Employers To Work For (four of the past five years) and earlier this year, Flight Centre forecast a pre-tax profit for the 09/10 financial year of between $180 million to $200 million, representing a doubling of the 08/09 full year profit result.

Clearly, Flight Centre has taken responsibility for their own supply of required skills and they are reaping huge benefits, culturally and financially, from this approach.

Yes, there is demonstrably a skills shortage in this country in many areas but before too many employer groups start bleating at the Federal Government to issue more Class 457 Visas, they might want to look at their own industry’s record of providing high quality, ongoing training and development programs for all their employees.

This article is reproduced with permission from Ross Clennett’s blog – http://rossclennett.blogspot.com/2010/08/skills-shortage-sequel-part-2.html

As a professional recruiter, between 1989 and 2003, Ross screened over 80,000 resumes, interviewed over 3,000 people and successfully placed over 500 people in work. Over this time he worked in London, Sydney, Adelaide and Melbourne. Ross now works as a speaker, trainer, coach and recruitment industry commentator.

In 2009 Ross launched Australia’s first professional development website for recruitment company owners and managers which provides a variety of training and strategic resources in various multi-media formats. For more information visit www.rossclennett.com






Job Vacancies Up in July

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

The Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR) Vacancy Report shows that the Skilled Vacancy Index (SVI) increased by 0.3% to 46.4 in July. Vacancies fell for two of the three occupational groups: Associate Professionals (-1.4%) and Professionals (-1.1%) while Trades increased by 1.0% over the month. In annual terms, the SVI is 22.7% higher than in July 2009 with Trades up by 51.4%, reflecting very strong growth for Construction Trades (+119.3%) and Metal Trades (+101.2%). The Internet Vacancy Index (IVI) increased by 0.9% to 80.3 in June, and in annual terms is 11.5% higher than in June 2009. In the ACT, the IVI fell by 1.8% in June, the only jurisdiction to record a drop in vacancies over the month.

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This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here: http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au






Unemployment steady, employment indicator and job ads rise

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) publication Labour Force, Australia shows that the unemployment rate remained steady at 5.1% in seasonally adjusted terms in June. The trend unemployment rate was also unchanged, remaining at 5.2% for the month. The participation rate exhibited a 0.1 point increase to 65.2% in seasonally adjusted terms, but remained at 65.1% in trend terms in June. The rise in employment was driven by a rise in part-time employment, up 27,500 people to 3.306 million. This was reinforced by a rise in full-time employment, up 18,400 people to 7.795 million. In the ACT the unemployment rate was unchanged at 3.3%, and the participation rate was also unchanged at 73.1% in June. The ACT’s unemployment rate is second only to that of the NT which stands at 2.8%.

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The Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR) Leading Indicator of Employment has risen for the third consecutive month, to sit at -0.599 standard deviations from the cyclical trend in July 2010. It is still too early to confirm that a renewed quickening in the pace of employment growth above its long-term trend rate of 1.9% per annum is in prospect, because the Indicator has risen for fewer than six consecutive months. Cyclical employment has now risen for the ninth consecutive month, although the rate of growth is diminishing.

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The ANZ Job Advertisements Series shows that the total number of jobs advertised in major metropolitan newspapers and on the Internet rose by 2.7% in June, to a seasonally adjusted average of 169,690 per week. This follows a 2.7% increase in May (originally reported as a 4.3% rise). In seasonally adjusted terms, newspaper job ads fell 1.6%, while Internet job ads rose 3% in June. In trend terms, total job ads grew 1.8% in June and 30.2% over the year to June. In the ACT, the number of newspaper job advertisements per week fell by 1.3% (seasonally adjusted) but was up 0.1% (trend) over the month.

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This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here: http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au






ACT Targets Skilled Workers in WA

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Skilled workers and students living in Perth are the latest to be targeted by the ACT Government’s Live in Canberra team. The Team is promoting Canberra at the National Careers and Employment Expo in Perth. The expo is the fourth in a series of five National Careers and Employment Expos the Live in Canberra team will attend around Australia this year. This is the second visit by the Live in Canberra team to the Perth expo; last year the team generated over 100 enquiries from skilled workers and skilled migrants looking to relocate to Canberra from Perth. Canberra has already attracted over 20 skilled workers from Perth in the last 12 months.

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This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here: http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au






Average weekly earnings and labour price rise: ABS

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) publication Average Weekly Earnings, Australia shows that full-time adult ordinary time earnings rose by 1.5% in trend terms and 1.1% in seasonally adjusted terms in the February quarter 2010. For males the increase was 1.6% (trend) and 1.4% (seasonally adjusted), while for females the increase was 1.2% (trend) and 0.8% (seasonally adjusted). In the private sector full-time adult ordinary time earnings increased by 1.5% (trend) and 0.9% (seasonally adjusted), while in the public sector it was up by 1.7% (trend) and 1.9% (seasonally adjusted) over the quarter. In the ACT full-time ordinary time earnings were up by 2.6% in trend terms and 2.7% in seasonally adjusted terms during the February quarter 2010. For more information click here

The ABS publication Labour Price Index, Australia shows that the Wage Price Index (WPI) for all employee jobs in Australia increased by 0.7% in trend terms in the March quarter 2010. The WPI was up by 0.6% for the private sector and 1.1% for the public sector over the quarter, and up by 2.5% and 4.2% respectively over the year to March 2010. The increases in the quarterly indexes at the industry level ranged from 0.2% for Wholesale trade to 2.1% for Education and training.

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This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here: http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au






Skilled Queenslanders Targeted

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

The Live in Canberra team has headed to Queensland for a National Careers and Employment Expo in Brisbane. Live in Canberra’s first Brisbane visit in March for the Reinvent Your Career Expo resulted in a high level of interest from skilled workers – over 400 Live in Canberra information packs were distributed over the two-day event. Queenslanders are being offered the lifestyle benefits of a city of four seasons, relatively low crime, no toll roads, less traffic and wonderful schools and community facilities. The Australian National University, University of Canberra and Canberra Institute of Technology have supplied Live in Canberra with material to promote opportunities to study in Canberra, and the ACT Division of General Practice information kits target GPs. The Live in Canberra team will attend careers expos in Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth and Sydney in May, June and August.

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This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here: http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au






Independent Contractor Guide released by Federal Government

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

The Federal Government has released a new guide entitled Independent Contractors: The Essential Handbook along with an online Contractor Decision Tool. The handbook is a practical reference guide for independent contractors and the people who hire them, with easy-to-follow guidance on such matters as tax, insurance, superannuation and dispute resolution.

As a basic definition, independent contractors run their own business, and hire out their time to businesses and other organisations as a service.

If you are classified as an independent contractor, your entitlements and obligations differ from an employee in many ways. You own your own business and generally you will be able to negotiate your own fees and working arrangements. Unlike most employees, you can choose to provide your services to a wide range of hirers. Many independent contractors can also work for a single hirer, sometimes through an agency.

Having an Australian Business Number (ABN) does not automatically make you an independent contractor. The individual circumstances of the working relationship are important in determining whether you are an independent contractor or employee.

Even if you are an independent contractor, certain state and federal legislation may still class you as an employee. This includes superannuation, occupational health and safety, workers compensation, payroll tax among other federal, state and territory laws.

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Banana Benders lured to Canberra

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

The ACT Government has targeted skilled Queensland workers at the recent Reinvent Your Career Expo in Brisbane in an effort to help address the ACT’s skills shortage. The ACT Government’s Live in Canberra program administrators travelled to the expo to convince skilled workers and their families to make the move south to the nation’s capital. Representatives from program supporter ActewAGL were also at the expo to promote employment opportunities across their organisation within the ACT. The Australian National University, University of Canberra and Canberra Institute of Technology also supplied the team with material to promote opportunities to study in Canberra. The ACT Government is attempting to convince residents in large Australian cities who are becoming fed up with the traffic jams, overcrowding and increasing rates of crime and that Canberra is a great alternative with a range of employment opportunities and a lifestyle second to none.

For more information click here

This post was drawn from the Canberra Business Council’s Business Bullets newsletter. To become a member of the Canberra Business Council, please visit the CBC website here: http://www.canberrabusinesscouncil.com.au