Blog » Reasons To Look For Work Experience

Reasons To Look For Work Experience

17th September 2013

Lots of students carry out work experience during their time at University as a compulsory part of their degree course, but even if it doesn’t add anything to your degree, it’s a great way to get ahead of the curve in a particularly tough industry. Most work experience placements will prove to be good learning opportunities, even if they don’t lead directly to employment.

Direct employment
There are some jobs in large companies that are just not publicly advertised – they are advertised internally or given to suitable people who are known by other employees. And equally, a large number of people in industries that are popular and ‘oversubscribed’ got their jobs by doing work experience in the right place at the right time. Sometimes your lucky break will be just that, if you do work experience at the right time.

Learn industry skills, software and tricks
If you work for a large company, you’re likely to have to use industry-standard software, and you’ll pick-up tricks and shortcuts of the trade. Both of these go down excellently on your CV and in job interviews – if you’re already familiar with software and tools that are widely used, then from an employer’s perspective, you won’t be difficult to train up.


Learn more about how your industry works

Sometimes being at the bottom you learn much more than if you’d started out at the top – you get to see how the company runs and how every person contributes. You might even learn that you don’t want to do the job you thought you wanted to – this is really useful for narrowing down your career path.

Tangible experience
For an employer looking for someone to hire, nothing looks more impressive than someone with hands-on experience in the field. You can use multiple work experience placements to demonstrate that you are dedicated and that you have had experience of a variety of different workplaces.

Make contacts
The value of work experience is not always obviously apparent. A lot of companies don’t pay their interns, and sometimes they leave interns without guidance.

It’s nerve-wracking but this is a great opportunity to make contacts and suggest ideas without any pressure. Contacts in most industries can come in handy, sometimes years later.

Once you’ve decided to do work experience, you now need to find and apply for a placement. As with anything, there are pitfalls and concerns that you should think about when looking at where to carry out work experience, but there are also ways of getting the most out of it.

If staying in the UK doing work experience doesn’t appeal to you, you can always head off and carry out work experience abroad, which will be just as valuable. However, there are a few things to bear in mind before under taking a work experience placement.

Read reviews before you go
UK-based website ratemyplacement.co.uk encourages people who have been on placement to review their placements and rate them out of ten. This is a great resource for checking out if that placement advert was too good to be true, and to get an idea of the environment you’ll be working in and what you’ll be doing.

Are you actually gaining anything?
Usually work experience placements are unpaid (though some do pay expenses and others will pay per day). No one would choose to work for free if they got nothing out of it, so while you are on placement, consider if you are really learning and gaining contacts, or if you are just making tea and doing the jobs nobody else wants to do. You are under no obligation to be there.

Know your rights
The guidelines at Direct.gov.uk for people carrying out work experience or interning state that some people on work experience may be eligible for National Minimum Wage. If interns who are classified as ‘workers’ are not paid, this is against the law and you can report the company you’re working for to HMRC.

It’s also worth noting that you can leave a placement whenever you want and have no obligation to complete the stated time. If you are asked to do really unpleasant jobs and not being paid, for example, then you have every right to refuse to do the work. You can choose to leave the placement early, though you are obviously unlikely to get a good reference from the company.

Expenses and payment
Some companies will pay you expenses for work experience, some will pay you per day, and others will not pay you at all. Read carefully what is expected of you and for what pay (if any) – then make a decision.

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