The remuneration I'd imagine.
I have a friend in retail who earns over £100k and several more who earn well over the national averages. I think there is a member on these forums who earns close to £100k in a supermarket as well....
The remuneration I'd imagine.
For a few exceptions, but when people usually say retail they mean for the majority - for those it's pretty much minimum wage - the mode income for retail or hospitality isn't good & a most of them receive little in the form of remuneration.I have a friend in retail who earns over £100k and several more who earn well over the national averages. I think there is a member on these forums who earns close to £100k in a supermarket as well....
99% of students live in a bubble thinking they will swan into a 25k a year job just as they have a degree....this is the real world...welcome to normality!
The world is harsh and you have to fight hard to get anywhere...it won't just fall on your lap. Get on with the job hunting and suck it up...
For a few exceptions, but when people usually say retail they mean for the majority - for those it's pretty much minimum wage - the mode income for retail or hospitality isn't good & a most of them receive little in the form of remuneration.
physical labour is underpaid by a vast amount. Some of us would go loopy if we had to sit behind a desk all day.
I feel really sorry for today's graduates, the grad job market was tough when I graduated in the late '90s but it's so, so much worse now. I agree that grad recruitment is a joke, I work for a software engineering company and basically you haven't got a hope today unless you have a 2:1 or above from a top 40 university - which would be fair enough if the sort of grads we were getting could write software and be useful to the company but no they all want to work in Marketing or HR or go straight into Project Management or Service Delivery Management without having a clue about what it is we actually do.
99% of students live in a bubble thinking they will swan into a 25k a year job just as they have a degree....this is the real world...welcome to normality!
The world is harsh and you have to fight hard to get anywhere...it won't just fall on your lap. Get on with the job hunting and suck it up...
Indeed, so many think they can just walk into well paid job just because they have been to uni, i see it all the time.
For a few exceptions, but when people usually say retail they mean for the majority - for those it's pretty much minimum wage - the mode income for retail or hospitality isn't good & a most of them receive little in the form of remuneration.
The thing I'm finding as I look for graduate schemes for next year is the sheer cost of attending all of these interviews. 90% of graduate schemes require a trip to London which soon adds up if you apply for hundreds. The process favours those with enough money to be able to volunter as a mountain goat herder over summer or some other bull**** as they look for all this nonsense about your life experiences and how you've helped others. I've spent the last 5 years struggling to help myself as I'm from a poor background but working at Asda whilst being at university doesn't have the same ring to it as helping starving African children to read.
Luckily I had 5 years work experience before going back to university and I'm seriously considering spending most of my time looking for non0graduate based jobs.
Probably because that used to be the case, it's not anymore but that's what they are still being told.
I feel this probably isn't the point at which I should point out I just graduated with an economics degree and have a job at one of the leading financial services firms....
Seriously, OP, it's not the hardest thing in the world to achieve. Realise that whilst you're getting rejected some people are being accepted, and are meeting the standards. This is going to be a bit of tough love, but whilst you might think its ridiculous trying to get a place, other people are managing to, and are meeting the standards required...
I'm also presuming you got a 2:1? Because if not, in your industry, there's no point even trying to apply for grad jobs.
kd
It doesn't take a genius to realise that the more people going to University, the more graduates there are, the more competition there is, and the more employers are going to use other markers for differentiating between applicants.
As I said, Devaluation of a University Degree, it simply doesn't hold the significance it once did,basically because everyone and their dog has one.