DizzyChuggernaut said:Yeah, I'm aware of this. I'm probably just frustrated that I put so much hard work into my degree and was told over and over again by lecturers how much it'd prepare me for employment. There's the stereotype that many students go to university to get drunk a lot on the government's dime which isn't entirely untrue. But I got so used to working long days on projects that I actually cared about and now the prospect of doing things that don't require my skills bothers me.
I checked your profile and you have a degree in games design. You chose a degree in which supply out strips demand, so its going to be incredibly hard to get job that uses your degree. It also quite specialised and most of the skills don't cross over into other areas. I think you need to be a little realistic and either go for something like graduate entry into the civil service or add some other qualifications to your CV. Perhaps something like a Prince2 project management course. Game design and project management is more employable than just game design.
Odd that seeing for the last 26 months unemployment has been falling and the greatest number of people ever are currently working in the UK.sky14kemea said:[HEADING=2]Because the economy is in shambles[/HEADING]
Okay maybe I can't speak for other countries but in the UK there are far more unemployed people than jobs, and a lot of people are being laid off because of budget cuts everywhere, which means even more unemployed people.
Even entry level jobs are being taken up by people with experience because for companies it's expensive to train someone right from the basics so they decide to go with whoever's done it before, even when it's not fair.
I just did a 6 week "Job Based Work Program" to get a job at the Royal Mail, and guess what? I might not even get a job now. Though that's more the fault of someone working at RM than the Job Center. So I'll let it slide on that one.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-30913960