what do employers value? martin edmondson, ceo, gradcore
DESCRIPTION
What do employers value? Martin Edmondson, CEO, GradcoreTRANSCRIPT
What do employers value?
Universities UK – Enhancing Postgraduate Employability Conference
Martin EdmondsonCEO - Gradcore
Outline
• Introductions• Initial reflections• Review of employer perspectives• Analysis• Suggestions and questions for universities
About GradcoreEmployability strategy and
delivery
Run regional jobsites
Design and operate graduate schemes
University capacity building
Operate internship programmes
University/business engagement
Research and benchmarking/healthchecks
Initial reflections
20%20%20%
LETS LOOK AT WHAT GRADUATE RECRUITERS ACTUALLY DO
Audit of large graduate recruiters
10 large graduate recruiters from the Times top 100 reviewed. Organisations spread across public, private and third sector and most major industry groups (inc. Health, finance, retail, FMCG, engineering)• 4/10 mention postgraduate qualifications• 2/10 have some specific roles where a Postgraduate
qualification may be an advantage• 1/10 of mention postgrad qualifications as an
alternative to an undergrad degree• 1/10 incentivises postgraduates – bonus upon joining
Specific examples
FAQ approach - “If you have an MBA, Masters or PhD degree, you are still eligible to apply for the graduate scheme”Reassurance - “Will take a 2:2 with a Masters”Niche - “Your Postgraduate qualification will only offer you additional benefits in these roles”Opaque - “We look for a strong technical qualification”
Not often in the graduate recruiter lexicon
City Graduate Scheme perspectives
The award-winning City Graduate Scheme model delivers all aspects of a corporate graduate scheme, but for SMEs in a geographical area. First city we have delivered it in is Sheffield:• 4 cohorts since 2013• 100+ graduate jobs in SMES• 2000 applicants from across the UK• Sponsored, and in partnership with, both
universities and the council
City Graduate Scheme and Postgraduates
Initial findings:• Postgraduate qualifications desirable in 10% of the
vacancies, predominantly technical/engineering roles• Postgraduate qualifications essential in 2% of roles• Current (July 2014) 4th cohort – 1role requiring
essential postgraduate qualification in translation• Some benefit to postgraduates through scorecard
approach• Still fixing the broader disconnect between SMEs and
graduates
Other Gradcore employer sources
Yorkshire Graduates job board – tens of thousands of vacancies over the last 15
years of which 3% are specifically marked as ‘postgraduate jobs’
Gradcore Employability Healthchecks – hundreds of employers interviewed over
the last 2 years to understand their perspectives on different universities, of
which 12% cite postgraduate qualifications as essential or desirable
WHAT DO EMPLOYERS SAY THAT THEY VALUE?
What do large employers value and rate in graduates?
What global employers value
What do SMEs value?
University attended
Degree result
Work experience
Other
Degree subject
Positive attitude
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60%
SME employers prioritise attitudes and skills for the role over degree grade and institution.
Which of these things do you think is most important when recruiting a graduate?
Source: SME survey 2012: 200+ SMEs from across the UK surveyed across 6 different regional graduate job boards
The value of graduates are well articulated
• Graduates create productivity increases in businesses – 30% higher where all staff are graduates
• Graduates create productivity increases in places – Every 1% growth in grads creates 0.5% growth in GDP
• Graduates bring innovation – Innovative businesses have twice as many graduates
• Source: BIS and community Innovation survey
Emerging themes
• Postgraduates undervalued by employers, and not very prominent in the graduate recruitment lexicon
• Between 5 and 10% of graduate employers placing a focus on postgraduates
• Similar proportions in small and large organisations• Postgraduate qualifications strongly valued for niche skills by
employers• Small employers more questioning of choice of postgraduate
course than with undergraduates• Lack of understanding rather than hostility• Need for more evidence and effective employer comms
•Accidental recruitment
•Experimental/Awakening
•Sub for intermediate skills gaps
•Technology transfer
•Established capacity building
•External requirement
Employers are at different stages, which ones best fit
postgraduates?
Employability challenges for postgraduates
Passing the ‘so what?‘ and ‘why that course?’ tests
Avoiding actual and perceived institutionalisaton
Staying in touch with industryBuilding on undergraduate employability skills Articulating distinctiveness
Being employable globally
Leveraging their added value skills and competencies
Some questions and ideas for universities• How do you build employability into your postgraduate provision as an integral
element of design and delivery?• How can you help your postgraduates pass the ‘so what’ and ‘why that course’ tests?• How can you better segment the employers you work with to maximise opportunities
for postgraduates?• What more could you do to raise the awareness of the value of postgraduates to
employers?• How might you integrate Postgraduate work experience and network building into your
broader university employer engagement offer? • What do you deliver in your postgraduate provision which helps postgraduates to
navigate the rest of the recruitment scorecard?• How might you make use of the flexibility of postgraduate provision to be more
responsive to skills shortages? • What principles should you bring across from your undergraduate employability
provision?• How do you plug your postgraduates into a global labour market?
@martinedmondson
http://uk.linkedin.com/in/martinedmondson
Thanks for listening
APPENDICES
Large graduate recruiter audit• PWC – 2:1 Any degree, no mention of PG• Barclays - If you have an MBA, Masters or PhD degree, you are still eligible to apply for the graduate
scheme. Your post graduate qualifications will not qualify you for any additional benefits or responsibilities should you be offered a place on the scheme, unless you apply for one of the Associate or Quantitative Associate level vacancies.
• Enterprise - A Bachelor’s degree is preferred; however, professional experience can be substituted if applicable.
• P&G – entirely done through student placements and internships• Deloitte – 14 different market channels, 2 of which mention Master degrees (IT/Planning) as a
requirement if you haven’t got the appropriate undergraduate degree• Grant Thornton – Strong academic performance is essential, but not the only part of you we look at. If
you do sit below our old requirements you're going to have to show us how you've excelled in the other areas. It's up to you to demonstrate why you'd be a great addition to the culture here at Grant Thornton. In previous years we have had strict academic entry requirements of a 2.1, 300 UCAS points and Bs at GCSE English and Maths (or equivalents). We realise that if you've been busy doing amazing things in your personal or professional life you may have slightly missed out on our old criteria.
• Civil Service Fast stream – 2:2 accepted and any degree except in some engineering and science roles, no mention of PG
• NHS – At least a 2:2 or a postgraduate degree• Unilever – No specific Postgrad reuirement, although uses terms like ‘strong technical qualification’
and does offer a one-off bonus payment if you join with a masters or PHD, so they are incentivising this
• Nestle – any degree subject and will take a 2:2 with a Masters
Useful Links and Reading
• http://www.universitiesuk.ac.uk/highereducation/Documents/2014/Full%20HECSU%20report%20FINAL%20130514.pdf
• http://www.edge.co.uk/media/63412/employability_skills_as_pdf_-_final_online_version.pdf
• http://viewer.zmags.com/publication/4d7623e6#/4d7623e6/14
• http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/assets/bmaf/documents/publications/ijme/Vol8no2/IJME8no2Paper1.pdf
• http://www.employment-studies.co.uk/pubs/summary.php?id=1417phys
• https://www.ukcge.ac.uk/pdf/2013%2012%20bis-13-1319-exploring-student-demand-for-postgraduate-study.pdf