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Too many graduates and a flat job market could mean a boom time for SMEs

A report from the Employment Department shows the proportion of new university graduates in full-time work is at its lowest level since the 1990s recession, according to The Australian. The newspaper reports the department has warned job prospects for graduates could get worse as more and more highly-educated job-seekers flood the market. It said the […]
Melinda Oliver
Melinda Oliver

A report from the Employment Department shows the proportion of new university graduates in full-time work is at its lowest level since the 1990s recession, according to The Australian.

The newspaper reports the department has warned job prospects for graduates could get worse as more and more highly-educated job-seekers flood the market.

It said the department had โ€œraised concernsโ€ about the former Labor Governmentโ€™s โ€œdemand drivenโ€ system of funding universities. This saw caps on enrolments lifted, and the number of taxpayer-subsidised places for local students rise from about 469,000 in 2009 to around 577,000 last year.

Monash University researcher Bob Birrell told the paper the additional graduates will be entering a labour market that has โ€œweakened sharplyโ€.

โ€œEveryoneโ€™s going to find it tough in the next few years because weโ€™re experiencing a dramatic slowdown in job creation,โ€ Birrell said.

The department has reportedly called for the removal of a number of occupations from the short-supply list, including accountants, solicitors, urban planners and occupational health and safety advisers, as the list is watched by job-seekers internationally.

However, for SMEs, a field of educated people keen to get a foothold in the workplace could present a โ€œwonderful opportunityโ€, according to Randstad strategic account director Mike Roddy.

โ€œIt is an opportunity to pick up talented people, even if it is not in their initial field of study,โ€ he says.

Roddy says graduates may have initially looked at SME employment as a short-term prospect, but a lot can be gained on both sides if handled well.

โ€œGraduates are looking for education, experience and mentoring, and this is where SMEs can capitalise,โ€ he says.

โ€œYou can offer them broad skills and experience in areas that the graduate may not have even thought of.โ€

He thinks SMEs typically โ€œundersell the opportunities they offerโ€.

โ€œSmall businesses are contributing to our countryโ€ฆthey may have small numbers of people but they have large scale contracts.

โ€œThey do diverse projectsโ€ฆthey do complex work and are drivers of important and significant projects.โ€

He says โ€œSMEs need to sell the messageโ€.

Roddy says when hiring a graduate to keep expectations realistic in terms of the time they may spend with a business, but expecting a two-year commitment is reasonable.

โ€œYou could sell opportunities to work on project-based work, or offer flexible work or working from home,โ€ he says.

Council of Small Business of Australia executive director Peter Strong agrees the situation presents possibilities for both employers and graduates.

He says SMEs have the chance to work with graduates who are โ€œbright and ambitiousโ€.

While it can be disappointing for graduates hoping to leap straight into full-time work in their profession, he says countless people start their careers in sectors unrelated to their education.

โ€œThey might start in retail, or cafes or driving taxis,โ€ he says. โ€œThe good thing is that they gain skills in communication, they get to see how the economy works, and they get more experience they can take into their career of choice.โ€