The recruitment of recent graduates said
I want to set the last graduates and Ann person is a former KAS Placement Recruiter. Working with young graduates is fun and you can mold to think how the team. Now that they agree with your philosophy. I contacted State College in New York about a week before I am writing this only now, and I received an email from someone in the Career Services department. The e-mail as follows:
“What is important?”
I watched the E-Mail is incredulous. What is important? My answer was:
“I would like someone to explain why, what they studied – has a resume is not really important to me. I want people who are creative, passionate, respectful, intelligent, driven. We Do not have cabins, where I work, nor will we ever. We have no manager, we have teachers. We have no titles, we have goals. So to answer your question, It does not matter. I want students who can not afford the company and the money … “
I suspect that many companies are concerned about what students have learned. I can understand if an accountant or financial analysis of the condition, but I can not can not thrive by another career as a regular student believe in. Here is the problem of many colleges that I talk with to help one to teach a class . The universities books that are outdated and for most, (NYU, Columbia and DeVry have aside) students learn outdated and very impertinent issues. For example, most business programs teach a comprehensive course on the management of the supply chain. The last time I’ve checked, I have not seen a big factory in New York. In addition, the supply chain are taught in an hour. The principle is to be found on all Kinks’ (I forget the title of the formal industry) in a supply chain and reduce the problem. If you work in a factory and eventually received by a hired Soda huge undertaking, they have over the pack. My bet, and I’m going on one leg, such as Cisco is probably the log when a performance of their plants is not the demand. Oh, did I mention that most of these plants are in China? » Read more: The Fun Part of Hiring – Working With Recent College Graduates