isaac123 wrote: » The intern will gain practical experience in Bla Bla Bla Are there any Real jobs advertisded in Ireland, is this a new form of Slavery where people have to work for people making millions but still get no pay? Is it advisable for people with cleaning positions to advertise for placement as if no one in the world can clean. This whole work placement internship schem is a scam and needs to be adressed. if this scheam is not there employers will still employ workers who should work and be paid. and unemployment will not be this much. companies who should employ workers to fill certain positions, take interns to exploit them for 9 moths and let them go and take up new workers, Companies are looking for 10 years of experienc mean while the same job is advertised as an internship position so that if you dont have the 10 years experience, you will take the 9 months for free with the hope of getting a job at the end which is not or never there, a new intern will be taken and you sent away, mean while you can never get a job with the one year experience you just go,(they start from twoyears) what has the woorld become. We can keep writting without stop but is anyone feeling this punch? Recent Graduates, unemployed, people on work placement comeon we have to do something..............................................
Brussels Sprout wrote: » If Jobbridge had been implemented correctly it may have had some value but it's been ruthlessly exploited by too many companies as an infinite source of free labour.
hatrickpatrick wrote: » The real question is, why are so many people accepting them?
nig1 wrote: » Read some of the posts here, Name and Shame Job Bridgehttp://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=2056531481&page=28
Sand wrote: » And those were the ones that didn't have basic spelling or grammatical errors in their CV.
Godge wrote: » I really don't understand the point you are trying to make. You make a number of unrelated statements with no evidence to back them up.
Sand wrote: » For what its worth, I was very happy when we were able to arrange a permanent role for an intern who really impressed us.
RUCKING FETARD wrote: » :rolleyes: I'm sure you were.
Sand wrote: » Having carried out several interviews with graduates for permanent and temporary roles this year, graduates need all the experience they can get. The ones I saw were inarticulate, staggered by some basic questions about information on their CV and were never really able to sell themselves. And those were the ones that didn't have basic spelling or grammatical errors in their CV. There was clear blue sky between graduates and the more experienced candidates in their interviews, and their CVs. I do feel a great deal of sympathy for graduates in this market. It isn't 2002 anymore. Companies are not desperate to hire - quite the opposite. Unemployment is 14.8% and graduates are competing with people who have 5-10 years experience under their belts who are realistic enough to be willing to work for whats on offer. Even if graduates only get a 9 month internship and a pat on the back at their exit then at least they have 9 months experience to put on their CV and use to sell themselves at the next job interview. The idea of interns as some sort of free source of labour for companies doesnt make practical sense. You get in an intern, set them up for systems, roles, securities, train them (taking away experienced staff from their duties and hurting their productivity) and build up their experience. You take the risk of them screwing up or aggravating clients and need to have someone ride shotgun on everything they do to control that risk (again hitting productivity of the team). All of this costs time and resources. And by the time they're fairly productive they're gone and you're back to square one with a new intern setting them up for systems, roles, securities and training all over again. And again. And again. "Free" interns rapidly become a semi-permanent drag on the teams productivity. The maths don't add up unless the Interns are simply photocopying all day long, which isn't really a career so not a job lost. For what its worth, I was very happy when we were able to arrange a permanent role for an intern who really impressed us. If someone is going for one of these intern roles, my advice would be to ask the interviewers if they can explain to you what skills and experience the role offers (its the only benefit an internship promises) by the end of 6-9 months. If all they can tell you is you'll know a photocopier back to front by the end of it, then don't take up the offer.
Dotsie~tmp wrote: » Its just a way of depressing labour costs because they don't have the guts to tackle a minimum wage that is killing job creation and essential services that are so costly people forego essential things like doctor/dental visits and endure pain and ill-health. So little honesty and critical thinking in our governance.
Heroditas wrote: » Sums up my thoughts exactly. I got my company to take on an intern this year and we have now made him permanent. Some of the other people I interviewed were dreadful. We've invested a lot of time in him and he's now on the books. He certainly didn't spend the time photocopying or making tea though. He spent a lot of time shadowing me and learning.
Sand wrote: » The idea of interns as some sort of free source of labour for companies doesnt make practical sense. You get in an intern, set them up for systems, roles, securities, train them (taking away experienced staff from their duties and hurting their productivity) and build up their experience. You take the risk of them screwing up or aggravating clients and need to have someone ride shotgun on everything they do to control that risk (again hitting productivity of the team). All of this costs time and resources. And by the time they're fairly productive they're gone and you're back to square one with a new intern setting them up for systems, roles, securities and training all over again. And again. And again. "Free" interns rapidly become a semi-permanent drag on the teams productivity. The maths don't add up unless the Interns are simply photocopying all day long, which isn't really a career so not a job lost. For what its worth, I was very happy when we were able to arrange a permanent role for an intern who really impressed us. If someone is going for one of these intern roles, my advice would be to ask the interviewers if they can explain to you what skills and experience the role offers (its the only benefit an internship promises) by the end of 6-9 months. If all they can tell you is you'll know a photocopier back to front by the end of it, then don't take up the offer.