Time abroad can crystallise career ideas

Travelling abroad can be a learning experience for students before they embark on their chosen careers. File picture: David Gray

Travelling abroad can be a learning experience for students before they embark on their chosen careers. File picture: David Gray

Published Nov 20, 2016

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Johannesburg - Choosing a career path after matric or entering the workplace after studying can be intimidating.

Being forced into making a rash decision can lead to dropping out of a course or going into a career with no job satisfaction, warns Manpower SA managing director Lyndy van den Barselaar.

“Our high unemployment rate puts more pressure on students and job-seekers to make careful decisions around what career path to pursue. Factors such as job availability, job security and future of the position or industry all have to be considered, which can make the process overwhelming,” she says.

ENCA last year reported that 50 to 60 percent of students at higher learning institutions drop out during their first year.

“This is often owing to students realising in their first year of study that the course they have chosen is not something they want to do.”

And, those working without job satisfaction are less likely to be productive in their positions and passionate about their jobs.

“We spend a large portion of our lives in the workplace, so it’s important to have a job one is passionate about.”

Many students who complete their matric or their tertiary education chose to spend some time overseas before settling into a career.

“This can be a positive experience in terms of the travellers’ future career development,” says Van den Barselaar. “Besides assisting to develop one’s interpersonal and social skills, independence and confidence, finding work overseas can assist in gaining valuable, worldly experience.

“Taking up part-time work will introduce the traveller to the workplace and could assist them in figuring out what their chosen career path may be, whether this is an internship or contract position.”

Platforms such as oDesk, now Upwork, are evidence of the evolving workplace. They allow job-seekers to create profiles, citing their skills and experience in any particular field, anywhere.

Those seeking professionals for casual jobs can then interview, hire and work with job-seekers through the platform - it’s completely digital, making distance between employee and employer superfluous.

“Platforms such as these ensure that time spent overseas will not be time wasted, where one could be gaining work experience,” explains Van den Barselaar.

“For example, a student who was part of the school newspaper may be able to assist a business looking to expand its social media footprint.”

Van den Barselaar suggests that matriculants or graduates look for work within their field of interest and where their strengths lie. “This will ensure that the traveller also becomes an asset to the business they are looking to work for.”

Volunteer programmes also offer a positive way to explore the world while working and making a difference to the community in which you are living at the time.

“The digital nature of the evolving employment landscape makes overseas travel a valuable part of one's personal development and even one's career path,” she concludes.

* Visit the www.manpower.co.za website for more information.

THE STAR

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