
Job openings
You need a job but where do you look? Here, of course.
Jobcentre Plus
New jobs come in here on a daily basis, look around on the notice boards, look online, or ask an advisor to look at their nationwide database for particular types of jobs. Jobcentre Plus can also put you in touch with organisations like local job clubs, training organisations or groups who can help you set up your own business.
Connexions
Connexions are a service which provides advice and information on careers, education and more. For people in England aged 13-19. On their website, you will find a guide to hundreds of different job titles and job vacancies in your area. There are also sections specifically for people at 16, 18 and over 18 years old that need careers advice. You can also get in touch with an advisor face-to-face, online or over the phone.
Apprenticeships
Doing an apprenticeship can be a great way to earn and train at the same time. Check out apprenticeships information for England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Employment agencies
There are hundreds of them in the phone book and they can get you temporary or permanent work. You usually have to fill in an application form and sometimes take a test for skills like typing. After that you should phone daily for vacancies.
Online job sites
Register with these sites, then browse for jobs, put your CV up for employers to see and be automatically emailed about work you might want.
As well as signing up for bigger recruitment sites like Monster, Reed and Total Jobs, look for smaller, more focused sites dedicated to a particular profession or geographical area.
Newspapers and magazines
Read the job sections of daily national newspapers; most advertise specific kinds of jobs on particular days. If you don’t fancy moving for work, your local newspaper can come in handy. Most newspapers list the jobs on their websites as well, or if you can’t get a particular paper try your local library. If you want to work in a very specialised field try magazines and journals for that subject.
Local notice boards
Keep an eye out locally for job ads in shop windows, or pinned to notice boards. If they aren’t suitable for you, tell your friends about them.
Networking opportunities
Let friends and family know that you are looking for work. They might know somebody useful and pull a few strings or have seen an ad you missed.
The speculative option
Seek out firms you’d like to work for. Check out news stories, the business sections of daily papers or use the internet to find out more. Then call their human resources manager and ask about possible vacancies. If they aren’t currently recruiting send then your CV to keep on file.
The university ‘milk round’
This one’s for the students. Once or twice yearly, the big firms go round UK universities giving talks and trying to sign up the best students for trainee jobs. Attend and remember to do some background reading about the companies you’re interested in.
2010-12-10 20:59:28
Thanks that's useful info, been searching for a proper job for quite long but can't seem to find one that suits me, probs cos there's such a demand for jobs :/
2011-02-23 10:34:25
The Job centre 'jobs' are just links to a number of agencies that I am sure pay a fee to be linked to the Job Centre. I was shocked when I used them and it seemed that ever job I looked at was via an agency. Its wrong, that is what the job centre is supposed to do, isn't it?
2011-04-16 16:31:21
Nice article but shame not to include our http://www.student-jobs.co.uk site as this is packed with part time jobs and holiday that are ideal for students looking to top up their income in between studies.
Answer correctly and win
funky points every day!
Q1 = 5 points
Q2 = 10 points
Q3 = 15 points