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Dear J.,Usually, I don't reply to emails from job recruiters or just tell them, yes sure, and send them a link to the following video: //www.youtube.com/watch?v=ketlcIdeqfcBut for some reason, I felt like giving you a proper reply.I am an engineer and although I work as a webdesigner my dream job is working with LabVIEW with all the equipment that I want or require. I don't have that. I don't even have LabVIEW software, since it is not free, and I would possibly hate to work with LabVIEW in a laptop on my bed, as I do in most of my activities all day.Also, I could have a good job as a web developer and be very happy with it but from my experience, living in London since 2004, the job recruitment process is so unfair and sucks so much that I don't give a sh1t about it.The first thing is that I think it should be illegal to have more than one CV and should be illegal to send it to anyone by post or by email. The law should be clear: you are not allowed to send your CV to anyone and cannot have multiple CVs. The only CV you have must be the CV you have at the Job Centre in the UK. If you need to make changes to it you need the Job Centre to make those changes.Job recruiters and job matching websites could still operate and make business but they could only rely on your Job Centre CV and profile. This would mean that if you were not looking for job, not available in the job market, they would promptly and automatically know that and be binded by that information. Also having just one CV instead of having different CVs for different job applications would make the CV more reliable and would avoid annoying people with CVs piling as soon as someone opens a vacancy and avoid the problem of having no way of stop receiving them when the vacancy is no longer available.On the other hand. I think it is ultra unfair that qualified people, with all the required skills, qualifications and even with a degree, may spend one or more than one day, preparing for the interview, dressing up, etc. without having to be paid. As you know, one day of work as a Software Engineer in London is at least £350/day. But Google Engineers earn easily 6 figures a year, so, I would probably ask at least £500 for a one day interview and if they wanted the old-fashioned business of going to a second interview they would have to pay me £1000 in advance for me to consider even talking with them for 5 minutes on the phone or send them my CV, that as I said, should be made by the Job Centre and should be just one. Updated when required, if new informations or changes where proved necessary and true. On top of not being paid we have to answer million dollar questions, for free...Also, I think job interviews should be audited by independent authorities so that discrimination of minorities and any kind of unfairness could be easily spotted. You should get a mark everytime you went to a job interview and that mark would be audited by the independent job interview auditing authorities, that would obviously be obliged to be report it all to the Job Centre so that it could better understand each case of the job seekers needs.On top of that, there should be a randomness factor in every job pick. I will not apply to a job if I think I will never be the best candidate for that position or if I think I will be told that I have too much skills for that position. As you know, every-time a company opens a job vacancy it gets dozens of applications, sometimes hundreds. The CEOs and CTOs know that very well. And they are so afraid of being flooded with emails with CVs and Covering Letters that they almost beg, or even pay, job recruiters for them not to say they need qualified professionals and have positions to fill. The result is that we have most companies afraid of opening job vacancies. Of course there are much more places to be filled than the vacancies that are open and listed on the job recruitment world. But the reality is that it is terrifying the idea of starting to get hundreds of emails asking for job interviews, when you barely have time to read a few of the hundreds of CVs you start receiving, much less going for face-to-face or phone interviews. The randomness factor should be as fair as possible. The best candidates for a job position should have much higher chances to get the position but still, the randomness factor would make sure that even if you had the bare minimum of eligibility for that position you would still have at least a tiny, but fair, chance of winning the position. And if you did you would get the job for the probation period being paid or be paid that probation period (usually 3 months) exempt of the need to work or attend at all if the employer didn't want you and did not have much luck.I am a scientist and have a bachelor's with honours in computer engineering, in the UK. I am affiliated with the "Institution of Engineering and Technology" (theiet_org) and with the Engineering Council (engc_org_uk).I have been advocating, namely writing to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, and to other Engineers of Universities where I did study, that all Engineers in the UK should be granted an annual Universal Basic Income for Engineers in the UK.Unfortunately, that would probably be as costly as the surveillance systems we have and would unlikely be funded by the unfair and corrupt money of the Oil Industry. Or by the Industry of Plastics, of Natural Gas, Nuclear Power, Cold Fusion, National Ignition... you name it. The money of cow's beef and milk maybe would sponsor it, if we used as much marketing and advertisement as they do. Or if we all used our heads.Kind regards,Daniel AlexandreLondon, UKPS: I reserve the right to use this message or send it, anywhere and to whomever I want.
I would possibly hate to work with LabVIEW in a laptop on my bed, as I do in most of my activities all day.
I think job interviews should be audited by independent authorities so that discrimination of minorities and any kind of unfairness could be easily spotted.
The law should be clear: you are not allowed to send your CV to anyone and cannot have multiple CVs.
they are so afraid of being flooded with emails with CVs and Covering Letters that they almost beg, or even pay, job recruiters for them not to say they need qualified professionals and have positions to fill.
Why does a pub entertainer get £50 for a night's work, and a successful pop star or orchestral conductor get £5000?
Quote from: alancalverd on 04/10/2021 11:28:17Why does a pub entertainer get £50 for a night's work, and a successful pop star or orchestral conductor get £5000?Economist Prof. Robert Frank would have it that it's the winner-take-all effect.His argument:Once upon a time each music hall had a resident singer, some were a little better than others but there were enough music halls and audiences to provide work for lots of singers. Then along comes recording technology, and now all of a sudden everybody can listen to recordings of the very best singers, so you quickly end up with a handful of singers being millionaires, whilst the rest are singing in pubs and clubs for beer money even though the difference in talent might be negligible.
I have been advocating, namely writing to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, and to other Engineers of Universities where I did study, that all Engineers in the UK should be granted an annual Universal Basic Income for Engineers in the UK.
Interestingly, the same is true of sports.The clever bit is to sell the same performance, not just to a room full of a paying audience, but to the whole world.