NewsBite

How to make yourself more employable: Simple tips to help grow your career

A UNIVERSITY degree might not light up your resume like it once did, but three simple tips could seriously boost your employability. Find out how to make yourself stand out from the crowd.

Your university degree might be useless

WORKERS who want to stand out in competitive fields may have to do more than just be qualified and turn up for work.

Almost two-thirds of Australians aged 20 to 64 now hold a non-school qualification, Australian Bureau of Statistics data shows. Between 2004 and 2017, the proportion with a bachelor degree or higher increased from 21 per cent to 31 per cent.

Workers now must think outside the box to stand out.

MORE: The top sectors for flexible work revealed

MORE: Why Aussies snub workmates and work drinks

Having a mentor or sponsor can give a worker an edge. Picture: iStock
Having a mentor or sponsor can give a worker an edge. Picture: iStock

FIND A SPONSOR

Sponsors are typically mentors who hold sway within a company. They can advocate for a worker when they need to ensure their work is recognised, and suggest the worker for suitable career opportunities.

The key to gaining sponsors is for workers to go above and beyond in their work, have clear career goals, and put their hand up for special projects.

MORE: The jobs cashing in on the health care boom

Learning shouldn’t stop after high school or university. Picture: iStock
Learning shouldn’t stop after high school or university. Picture: iStock

CONTINUALLY LEARN

For blue collar workers, it may mean upskilling from labour work into a trade, or from a single trade into a dual trade.

Panelbeating and spray-painting, for example, go hand-in-hand and training for the second skill will typically take less time, as tradespeople can leverage Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL).

TAFE Queensland describes RPL as credit received “for both the formal and non-formal learning you have completed, including industry experience and volunteer work”.

For white collar workers, continual learning may mean online courses. For example, a marketing professional might study data science to gain insights others cannot.

MORE: Australia’s “future proof” jobs

Gus Bellekens and Steve Buhagiar developed a fuel gauge for scuba diving while they were at university and entered it into a competition. Picture: Peter Wallis
Gus Bellekens and Steve Buhagiar developed a fuel gauge for scuba diving while they were at university and entered it into a competition. Picture: Peter Wallis

ENTER COMPETITIONS

Awards and competitions acknowledge excellence and that a person takes pride in their work.

Steve Buhagiar and Gus Bellekens’ scuba-diving invention The Canary was national runner-up in the 2017 James Dyson Awards, which allows engineering and design students to showcase their work on a global stage.

Buhagiar says the experience opened doors for them in the dive industry.

“People had seen or heard about our device and it allowed us to have conversations with people that we may have never had the chance to have otherwise,” he says.

Bellekens says the experience of creating the product while finishing a Bachelor of Industrial Design made life very busy, but it was worth it.

“Our fourth and final year at uni (QUT) was huge, between driving Canary forward, writing a thesis, completing course work and undertaking an internship,” he says.

“(Since graduating) it’s pretty much been 8am to 5pm at the office and 24/7 thinking about the Canary.

“As chief technology officer, I deal with the technical aspects of the design process from initial drawings to arranging prototypes and testing and certification. I’m also working 30 hours a week as a duty manager of a local pub just to keep out of trouble and finance this venture.”

ENTRIES IN THE 2018 JAMES DYSON AWARDS ARE OPEN UNTIL JULY 20

Visit jamesdysonaward.org

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

Originally published as How to make yourself more employable: Simple tips to help grow your career

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/finance/work/careers/how-to-make-yourself-more-employable-simple-tips-to-help-grow-your-career/news-story/6b2bf0c541ba192217546dc29e1f7355