January 2007 Issue | Browse Archives | Send to a Friend | More News | Alumni Relations | FIU
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  SCJ Products International, an online business owned by alumnus Steve Massena ’00, is offering to FIU Alumni Association members ... (read more)  
     
 Career Advice from Dana
 
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Now that you can Instant Message (IM) with Career Services you can get answers to your career-related questions in an instant every Friday, from 9 a.m. to noon. Just visit the FIU alumni web page and Ask... (read more)

 
     
   

Instant Message with Career Services!

Now that you can Instant Message with Career Services you can get answers to your career-related questions in an instant every Friday, from 9 a.m. to noon. Just visit the FIU alumni web page and Ask Dana, your Career Counselor.

For more information on any job postings or assistance with updating your résumé, visit the FIU Career Services Office in GC 230 at University Park or call 305-348-2423 to schedule an appointment to speak with a career consultant in your area of interest (cost is $55 a year, but Alumni Association members like you can receive the same attention and resources for only $45 a year).

Visit us today at http://career.fiu.edu or in person and register for our services. What are you waiting for? Head into Career Services today and start planning a future for success!

Ask Dana

Career Tip: Seven Major Hiring Trends for 2007

About 40 percent of some 2,600 hiring managers recently said they plan to increase their number of full-time employees in 2007, according to results in CareerBuilder.com's “2007 Job Forecast,” published last month.

Another 40 percent expect no change in their head counts and eight percent expect job eliminations, so keep an eye out for the following hiring trends in the new year.

In 2007, the U.S. workforce is likely to see employers become more competitive in recruitment and retention efforts, according to results from the survey. This will be evidenced in better career advancement opportunities and training, higher salaries and more flexible work cultures.

1) Bigger paychecks: Eighty-one percent of employers report their companies will increase salaries for existing employees and nearly half of employers (49 percent) expect to increase salaries on initial offers to new employees.

2) Diversity recruitment: Nine percent plan to step up diversity recruiting for African American job candidates, while eight percent will target female job candidates. Half of employers recruiting bilingual employees say English/Spanish-speaking candidates are most in demand in their organizations.

3) More flexible work arrangements: Work/life balance being a major buzzword among U.S. employers, 19 percent of employers say they are very or extremely willing to provide more flexible work arrangements for employees such as job sharing and alternate schedules. Thirty-one percent are "fairly willing."

4) Rehiring retirees: As some employers express concern over the loss of intellectual capital due to a large number of so-called Baby Boomers approaching retirement, one in five employers plan to rehire retirees from other companies or provide incentives for workers approaching retirement age to stay on with the company longer.

5) More promotions: As the perceived lack of upper mobility within an organization is a major driver for employee turnover, 35 percent of employers plan to provide more promotions and career advancement opportunities to their existing staff in 2007.

6) Hiring overseas: Companies continue to drive growth by entering or strengthening their presence in global markets. Thirteen percent of employers report they will expand operations and hire employees in other countries in 2007.

7) Better training: In light of a seeming shortage of skilled workers within their own industries, employers are looking for transferable skills from other industries. Seventy-eight percent report they are willing to recruit workers who do not have experience in their particular industry or field and provide training/certifications as needed.

The survey founds that of the jobs for which employers will be recruiting in 2007, while about nine percent will be recruiting in engineering and 13 percent in information technology.

"Of the tech recruiters surveyed, 48 percent said they would be adding positions in 2007, 10 percent said they would be decreasing posts and the remaining said they were unsure or expected no change," said CareerBuilder spokesperson Jennifer Sullivan.

However, while a modest recovery might be starting, proposes CNET, "when it comes to the technology sector, have claims of a rebound been exaggerated?”

“The tech sector, most notably, is suffering from the longest jobless recovery since World War II, having lost more than 400,000 jobs since the start of the March 2001 recession," Marcus Courtney, president of the WashTech/CWA union of high-tech workers, wrote in a July CNET News.com column, adding that the recession officially ended in November of that year.

But, Courtney wrote, "according to a recent study prepared by the University of Illinois at Chicago's Center for Urban Economic Development, only 76,300 new IT jobs were created nationwide during the last three years. That's less than one quarter of the number of tech jobs lost earlier in the decade.”

More recruiting is expected in the areas of health care (24 percent), administration and clerical work (19 percent), sales (17 percent) and accounting and finance (17 percent).

Further, in Fast Company's compilation of the Top 10 professions that will be in high demand in 2007, buyers and purchasing agents ranked high. The business publication's trend forecasters predict that this year could be a make-or-break year for the retail industry, specifically the department store. Much of the department store's fate lies in the hands of the buyers and purchasing agents, Trends Journal publisher Gerald Celente recently told Fast Company.

These individuals are in charge of store inventory and make decisions on item color, size, quantity and country of origin. With the recent vicissitudes of the retail industry, these jobs are often hard to come by and can be very lucrative if store profitability increases.

“Overall, recent U.S. Department of Labor reports support a sense in the market that the economy is slowing at a gradual, reasonable pace and inflation has steadied,” said CareerBuilder CEO Matt Ferguson said in a statement. “This bodes well for job creation as economists and employers alike predict a moderated, yet stable, hiring environment to carry over into the new year.”

— David R. Butcher, Thomas Net Industrial Newsroom


Job Postings

For more information on any of the following events, comments or questions, contact FIU Alumni Career Counselor Dana DellaCamera at 305-348-6753 or ddellac@fiu.edu.

Upcoming Career Fairs

Mon., Jan. 29 (Technical Day) & Tues., Jan. 30 (Non-technical Day), at 10 a.m.-3 p.m., in the GC Ballrooms at University Park.

Wed., Feb. 28, at 10 a.m.-3 p.m., in the WUC Ballrooms at Biscayne Bay Campus

Professional attire is required. Employers will be looking primarily for students who graduated in the last 12-24 months for entry level positions. For more information, visit www.fiu.edu/~career.

 

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