WELCOME TO EHOST.COM.NP

Sunday, April 30, 2017

250 applications and no job

ads space

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announced on Facebook on April 18 that the government would scrap the controversial 457 visa-. He had not yet fronted the media. ?We?re putting jobs first, we?re putting Australians first,? Turnbull said. ?We are an immigration nation but the fact remains Australian workers must have priority for Australian jobs. So we are abolishing the 457 visas; the visas that bring temporary foreign workers into our country. ?We will no longer allow 457 visas to be passports to jobs that could and should go to Australians.? Turnbull said the visa would be replaced with another that will require qualified applicants meet a need for their skills, as well as outlining their previous work history and ensuring English proficiency. ?To help train Australians to fill skills gaps, we will also establish a new training fund,? Turnbull said. Credit: Malcolm Turnbull via Storyful

IT graduate James* says he’s applied for more than 250 jobs in Australia that he believes he’s qualified for, but can only find work in the US.

AT 25 years old, James was living a tech-head’s dream.

The university graduate had been snapped up by a global tech giant after a short stint in software development at a Melbourne company.

As a project manager at Amazon’s Seattle campus, he was in a high responsibility role and leading projects with massive scale.

The pressure was huge and the reward proportionally significant. The young techie was developing skills and gaining experience that would put him in good stead for the rest of his career. He’d be was dealing with problems that involved 20 to 30 other teams, servicing a large portion of the company’s customer base, on projects that needed to be turned around super fast.

James loved the work and the culture, but he didn’t necessarily want to work his way up at one of the Silicon Valley giants where most IT graduates dream of making their mark. He wanted to come home, and bring his skills to Australia.

But, bizarrely, he says he’s found the tech job market down under far more difficult to crack.

James is not his real name by the way, he’s chosen to withhold that so not to further limit his career opportunities.

IT graduate James* says he's applied for more than 250 jobs in Australia that he believes he's qualified for, but can only find work in the US.

IT graduate James* says he’s applied for more than 250 jobs in Australia that he believes he’s qualified for, but can only find work in the US.Source:Supplied

Since leaving his job at Amazon, James has tried to get a job in Australia that he believes his experience from Amazon and previous roles have readied him for.

The jobs are out there and he’s been putting his hand up for them, but nothing’s biting.

Over the past six months, James says he has applied for 10 to 20 jobs in the tech industry each week. By his own count, the would-be IT worker is up to 250 applications, and still, nothing.

“It’s incredibly disappointing,” he told news.com.au. “One thing I’ve started asking recruiters a lot is ‘what have I done wrong?’ They tell me ‘you actually haven’t, your resume’s solid, your history is solid’.

“There’s nothing wrong. It’s just the mentality in this country is that you must have three years or you must have five years experience.

“They’re looking for a number on a piece of paper but not looking at skills and ability. Why do I need specific experience when I have the ability to learn on the run?”

The jobs James has been applying for are mainly project manager, business analyst and delivery lead roles.

In the few call backs he’s had, the 28-year-old says he’s been told he was rejected because he doesn’t have three years experience.

“The three-year mandate is an IT thing that’s happened for the past 20 to 30 years. It’s considered a good amount of time that you’ve learnt the job,” he said. “The problem in Australia has become that no one wants to train anyone to get that three years to take on a more senior job.

“The mentality is if we train them, they leave, and then it’s a waste of money. So, let’s never train them.”

Amazon’s futuristic campus in Seattle. Picture: Elaine Thompson/AP Photo

Amazon’s futuristic campus in Seattle. Picture: Elaine Thompson/AP PhotoSource:AP

James got in touch with news.com.au after reading an article about the tech industry’s response to Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s decision to restrict 457 visas, the program that allows companies to hire foreign workers to do jobs they can’t find Australians with the right skills to fill.

In it, CEO of IT industry group TechSydney Dean McEvoy argued there were no available Australians that could fill some senior tech jobs.

“The thing to understand about the growing of fast growth technology company is it takes a very different skills set than the companies that exist already within the industry in Australia,” he said. “Some of these are skills that can’t really be taught, you only get them through experience. So the best way to learn is only by doing, and the only people who have done these jobs, at the moment, are overseas.”

To this, James said: “I want to stay in Australia, I am qualified, yet no one wants me. Think about the benefits our country would have by upskilling the many IT workers already here instead of always wanting a ‘senior’ position and therefore pushing out the younger management material.”

Encouraging training and giving Australians jobs first is the whole point of the government’s proposed visa overhaul. The tech industry has been vocal in denying that it fails to give Australian workers sufficient training, and that it needs to have the capacity to hire foreign workers.

The IT industry argues Australians applying for the jobs they need to fill don’t have the experience, but Aussies are crying out for training and opportunities. Picture: Thinkstock

The IT industry argues Australians applying for the jobs they need to fill don’t have the experience, but Aussies are crying out for training and opportunities. Picture: ThinkstockSource:ThinkStock

James doesn’t know if 457 visa holders are taking the jobs he’s applying for. He doesn’t know who is.

He’s not that worried either, because after six months of disappointment he was again approached and has already been accepted into the final round of interviews for a job at a leading tech company.

He says this is the danger the industry is causing itself, losing talent to the US and other labour markets by overlooking what right in front of it.

When he worked at Amazon, he said he’d have constant meetings with new teams, and every few meetings there’d be another Aussie in the room. He says they were all over campus, and that’s just one company.

“Then you’ve got Microsoft, Facebook, Google, Apple, etc. Australians are everywhere because they have a good reputation and a different way of thinking, and that seems to be less valued in Australia than elsewhere in the world,” he said.

“Australians have a great reputation. Great education, experience and a different way of thinking. Australians think differently and that is incredibly valuable, and it’s something that Australian businesses have stopped seeing.

“It’s really about the fact that the Australian industry is really not noticing the quality of people walking around their own country and they’re losing them rapidly overseas. I’m now 28 and I’m not valued in this country. That hurts. That sucks.”

ads space
ADS SPACE

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Categories

Article How-to All Posts WordPress Android Web design Blogger Plugins CSS Google JQuery Plugins Programming Reviews Web Hosting Blogger Blogging Blogging Tips Tricks Web Development Facebook Git Internet Make Money Online Social Plugins Tips Tips and Tricks Tools Tutorials Windows WordPress Plugins Blogging Tips and Tricks Freebies GSM Google Analytics HTML How To's JavaScript Plugin Development S.E.O SEO SMS SmartPhone Social Media Tips amp; Tricks Top-Most Updates Webmaster Tools Whatsapp Applications Apps Blogger Basics Documentary Downloads Entertainment Gadgets Games Gmail Google AdSense Guest Post IPhone Make Money Blogging SVN Security Softwares Web Hosting Tips and Tricks Wordpress Tips Wordpress Tips and Tricks hostgator iOS Advertising Networks Advertising Technology Affiliates Antivirus Audience amp; Traffic Biography Blog post Blog post Blogger Blogger Errors Blogger Tips Blogger Tools Blogger Widget Blogosphere Bogger Widgets CSS selectors CSS symbols CSS3 Computer amp; Internet Content Writing Coupon Codes Data amp; Analytics Deleted blog Design DoubleClick for Publishers Email and newsletter marketting Email marketing Excel Tips Excel Tips and Tricks Facebook Tricks Feed Feedburner Feedburner subscribers Font Fun GitHub Giveaways Gmail primary inbox Gmail tabs Google sign-in Guides HTML amp; CSS HTML5 Infographics Inspirational Instagram Internet Marketing Internet Tips amp; Tricks Job Listings Knowledge Life Hacks Lists Make-Money Monetization amp; Conversion Monetize Navigation Online Marketing Other PHP Tutorials Passport Publishing amp; Content Quotes RSS Sidebar Smartphones Social Networking Status Tech Tech Blog Technology Telegram Themes UI / UX User Psychology amp; Research VB.Net Web Tools Web browser Widget Windows Tips Windows-10 ad viewability admin notice blogging tools bluehost cherry-pick clone cors custom scrollbar customizer dismissible notices duplicate post feed title git branch git clone gpg gpg2 hybridauth iPad icon font notice responsive wordpress theme same origin policy scrollbar signed git commit smartsvn theme customizer vcs wordpress theme wordpress themes

Blog Archive