Picking from a growing pool of job hunters

Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Print RSS Tweet This!

Despite evidence that the worst of the current global recession may be behind us, unemployment will continue to ratchet up for some time to come. It remains a lagging indicator of the economic cycle. The economic and social costs of mass unemployment are impossible to deny although hard to measure accurately. For some employers looking to recruit new workers, the growing pool of unemployed workers does provide - on the surface - an opportunity to hire well-skilled and motivated people often desperate for a fresh chance in work. Chris Tighe focused on employers in the North East in this revealing article in the Financial Times.

“More than 9,000 people in the North East are seeking work as sales assistants, it said, but only 191 such jobs have been advertised. Morrisons, the supermarket operator, has just reported an “amazing response” at its new Wallsend store in north Tyneside: more than 900 people applied for 35 posts............At Manchester Airport, where an advertisement posted online for just two weeks in February for four places on its graduate training scheme produced almost 2,000 applications.”

The high and rising ratio of applicants to unfilled vacancies should give businesses the scope to find the right people and perhaps unearth some gems who might rise through the business in the years to come. But although the pool of workers is high, businesses must also face the challenge and considerable cost of screening each application. Few smaller businesses have the luxury of being able to employ human resources personnel. Hiring recruitment companies can be expensive. Often the best new employees fall into your lap because of their vigorous approach to job hunting and an ability to keep their nose to the ground to spot what might be the right job for them.

Rate this article:   

Print RSS Tweet This!



BUSINESS TEACHER RESOURCE NEWSLETTER
Get first news of business teaching resources, ideas and other materials from tutor2u. Over 5,000 business teachers from the UK and around the world receive our regular teacher email newsletters. Sign up for free here!

*  Your Email Address:
*  Preferred Format:
    Full Name:
*  Country:
    Job / Position:
    Postcode:
    School / College:
    Town / City:
    AS/A2 Applied Business Board:
    AS/A2 Business Studies Board:
    BTEC First:

    BTEC National in Business:

    GCSE Applied Business Board:
    GCSE Business Board:
*  Enter the security code shown:

Recent Threads Business Teacher Discussion Forums:
Posts in: General Business Studies Teaching

internet access at school
Business Studies Blog - Email Notifications

Posts in: GCSE Business

Edexcel GCSE Business Studies - New Specification (2BS01 (full course) 3BS01 (short course))
Interview Help

Posts in: AS/A2 Business

Asda ovetake M&S;
Second Life
Ways to teach AQA AS market research
Enterprise Trading Game
A2 Business Studies
Unit 3 and Unit 4 AQA Business
Two Ronnies

Posts in: BTEC First in Business

Anybody have Unit 10 resources

Posts in: BTEC National in Business

Can anybody help me please??
Unit 18 Managing a Business Event: Advice needed
Are BTEC Nationals at the end of the Product Life Cycle?




Comments

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Smileys

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below:




Get a daily email update of new resources on the Business Studies Blog

Business Teacher Discussion Forums

Follow tutor2u on Twitter

 Jim  | Geoff  | Others

Latest entries

Categories

Monthly Archives

Tags

demand, price, entrepreneur, costs, profit, recession, aqa, downturn, startups, strategy, investment, capacity, revision, production, profits, risk, quiz, prices, competition, tutor2u, pay, retailers, employment, supermarkets, cash flow, banks, supply, debt, advertising, edexcel, product, motivation, manufacturing, tesco, inflation, trade, unemployment, product life cycle, philip allan, location, airlines, losses, stakeholders, enterprise, shareholders, google, recruitment, confidence, stocks, suppliers, innovation, productivity, startup, franchise, customer service, football, aqa business, british airways, ian marcouse, diversification, starters and plenaries, retailing, breakeven, brands, housing, china, credit crunch, training, venture capital, new product development, merger, bank overdraft, oil, nelson thornes, globalisation, marcouse, facebook, kelloggs, food, start-up, incentives, exports, asda, sources of finance, takeover, gdp, bank loan, buss1, slowdown, dragons den, buss4, ethics, euro, hbos, malcolm surridge, starbucks, business review, e-commerce, redundancy, bbc,
All tags

Syndicate