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Best part-time and casual jobs for students

WITH the busy holiday season approaching, many companies are hiring part-time and casual workers. It’s a good time for students to secure a job for next year.

YOUNG people who plan to search for part-time work to fit around study commitments in the new year should instead begin their job hunt now.

The hospitality and retail sectors — both known for flexible jobs — often hire before the busy holiday period, but coffee shops, fast-food kitchens and supermarket check-outs are not the only workplaces on offer.

As well as a need for an extra 14,100 bar attendants and baristas, 4800 fast-food cooks and 700 checkout operators and office cashiers in the next five years, Jobs department data forecasts 5400 extra delivery drivers.

Nationally, this occupation is expected to increase by 9.5 per cent between 2018 and 2023.

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Think outside the box when choosing a part-time job to fit around studies. Picture: iStock
Think outside the box when choosing a part-time job to fit around studies. Picture: iStock

It includes workers with a truck license needed to deliver large volumes of products such as fresh produce, and those with a car license to drive courier vans or utes and deliver smaller packages.

Workers who do not hold a driver’s license can still work in the delivery sector, walking or riding bicycles.

Uber Eats, for example, partners with drivers and riders who deliver meals from restaurants to customers who order via a mobile phone app.

State manager Anjuli Steffen, says more than 80 per cent of its delivery partners average fewer than 20 hours’ work a week, which is ideal for university students hoping to fit work around their studies.

“People can log in or out of the app when and where they choose, and are free to do deliveries with other apps,” she says.

In this set-up, drivers and riders must establish themself as a sole trader who is contracted to work and therefore responsible for their own tax obligations.

However, workers can also apply for jobs directly with businesses if they prefer the more traditional employer-employee relationship.

Domino’s chief executive Nick Knight says the pizza company is always looking for e-bike (electric bike) riders to deliver meals.

Levi Johns is a pizza delivery rider for Domino's Pizza.
Levi Johns is a pizza delivery rider for Domino's Pizza.

“It’s a big challenge for us to find and recruit enough team members,” he says.

“Anyone who holds a learner’s (car) license can apply for a job as an e-bike rider so it suits people who don’t have a car available to them.”

Knight says riders do not need past work experience, just a good attitude.

He says there are also opportunities for people to start in a delivery role and work their way up company ranks.

Domino’s e-bike rider Levi Johns enjoys the flexibility of his job as it allows him time to train as a professional cyclist.

He says the job was more appealing than working behind a checkout or in a kitchen because he could spend his days being active outside.

“It’s definitely a fun job,” he says.

“It’s not just monotonously doing the same thing all the time.

“You are doing deliveries but also you learn to serve customers and take orders and learn to handle cash and think quickly — all things that come in handy in the hospitality business.”

READ MORE EMPLOYMENT NEWS IN CAREERS IN SATURDAY’S THE COURIER-MAIL, THE ADVERTISER, THE HERALD SUN AND THE DAILY TELEGRAPH.

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Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/business/work/best-parttime-and-casual-jobs-for-students/news-story/1e6ff75efbffbf82f3914079e8f73807