New Survey Results Detail What Top Employers Want Most
CollegeGrad.com Releases Top Hiring Criteria for College Grads
MILWAUKEE, WI--Apr. 21, 2004--CollegeGrad.com, the #1 Entry Level Job Site, today released the results of its survey on what employers want most in hiring new college grads. Which is more important to entry level employers the college you graduated from? Your GPA? Or what you majored in? According to the survey results, the answer may surprise you.
The criteria that the employers ranked as most important are as follows:
#1 The students major
#2 The students interviewing skills
#3 The students internship/experience
#4 Other miscellaneous qualifications
#5 The students GPA
#6 The college the student graduated from
#7 The students personal appearance
#8 The students computer skills
As the chart shows, employers ranked a students major as the top priority. So having the right major for your career field is much more important than attending Harvard or Stanford. Employers look first for alignment of the students major and classes with the intended career field.
Ranked second, the students interviewing skills are also seen as critical for success. No matter how strong the resume, no matter what your major, no matter where you went to school, no matter what your GPA, if you are not successful in effectively communicating your background and experience, you will fail in the interviewing process while others will find success, stated Brian Krueger, President of CollegeGrad.com. Krueger added, Its vitally important to do your homework in advance and be prepared for the interview, knowing both yourself and the employer before you walk into the interview.
Tom Tarantelli, Director of the Center Development Center of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute said, Great news not withstanding, students in the current market need to be flexible and seek out what makes them "unique." In other words it is more important than ever that students link their skills to employment opportunities and be able to answer the question: "Why am I the best person for the job?"
Internships and other experience are ranked third and are an important differentiator both at the entry level and in the job market in general. This is even more important now that college graduates are now competing with additional experienced individuals due to recent layoffs.
Lower on the list were miscellaneous other skills, GPA, what college the candidate graduated from, personal appearance and computer skills.
For students who are worrying that they didnt attend the right college or worrying that their GPA is not high enough, this survey shows that these are not what most employers are looking at first, stated Krueger. Its more important to have taken the right major and classes for your career at a local state school than to have majored in Philosophy at an Ivy League school.
More information on the survey results along with a list of over 500 of the Top Entry Level Employers are posted at www.CollegeGrad.com.
About CollegeGrad.com:
CollegeGrad.com is the #1 entry level job site on the Internet and is the leader in the field of entry level job search. Established in 1995, CollegeGrad.com has been conducting the Top Entry Level Employers Survey for the past six years. Brian Krueger is President and Founder of CollegeGrad.com and author of the best-selling book for entry level job search, College Grad Job Hunter.
Further information on this news story, including access to the original survey form, as well as additional quotes from employers and college career center directors, may be obtained from the Web site at: www.CollegeGrad.com/press.
NOTE: The information contained in this press release and associated information may be reprinted in whole or in part as long as full attribution is given to CollegeGrad.com as the source of the information. This is an exception of our standard copyright policy for the material on this page only.
Brian Krueger is available for interviews with national TV, radio, magazines and newspapers as an industry expert on college/entry level hiring, as well as Internet job search.
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