Tuesday 17 May 2016

ARE YOU READY FOR LIFE ARE YOU READY FOR WORK

Pampered 20-somethings who can’t get a job should set their sights lower, says Tom Elliot. 
Are you aged in your 20s and armed with a degree yet can’t get a job? The chances are your expectations are set far too high.
Just because you’ve attended university doesn’t mean you instantly qualify to be a CEO. Entry-level positions in manual trades paying a decent wage are out there — so long as you’re prepared to get your hands dirty.
Unemployment statistics paint an allegedly grim picture for young Australians. Whereas the overall jobless rate currently sits well below 6 per cent, twice that proportion of people aged 15-24 can’t find work.
As a consequence the 2016 federal budget has created a new program entitled “PATH” (Prepare, Trial and Hire) designed to move young Australians off the dole. The initiative will subsidise employers who give young people a go at the employment coalface.
Nice idea, but it won’t succeed.
Recently I’ve spoken to several potential employers who all sing a similar tune.
Entry level jobs in sectors like roof tiling, painting and decorating, concreting and building are available — but potential applicants are thin on the ground.
And those young people who do respond to job ads have a bad habit of sabotaging their prospects.
According to many business proprietors, Gen Y employees demonstrate some terrible work habits.
These include failing to turn up to work at the agreed time; staring at their mobile phones for much of the day; calling in sick when hung-over after a big night; and feigning injury or fatigue when hard physical labour is required.
                                                    
Frankly it’s a wonder younger workers impact the paid-employment numbers at all.
So why are so many 20-somethings afraid of work? Three institutions are to blame.
First, the family home has become an unreal refuge from the outside world. Far too many parents overindulge their precious offspring.
These days it’s not uncommon to see children aged in their late 20s and early 30s still living with mum and dad.
Such “kidults” enjoy cooked meals each evening, have their clothes washed and folded and pay rent only when the entertainment budget allows.
Plenty of excuses are trotted out to justify this unnatural arrangement: house prices are too high, rents remain very expensive in nice areas, young Jack/Chloe has a crippling credit card debt to repay and we’re a loving family who want to remain close. Blah, blah, blah.
The end result is young men or women unable to fend for themselves beyond the white picket fence.
Second, modern schools hand out praise far too easily.
When children compete in a running race, no longer are they awarded medals solely for finishing in the top three. Rather, all participants are given “achievement” ribbons just for completing the course.
Such socialistic tokens imbue a false sense of worth among secondary students who’ve never known failure. Everyone’s a winner; therefore no one can lose.
The competitive post-school workplace where only a talented minority receive promotion must generate an enormous shock.
                            
Third, contrary to popular belief university isn’t for everyone.
Until the late 1980s possession of a degree virtually guaranteed its holder a comfortable and reasonably well-paid white collar job.
This was because tertiary places were then limited to just one in five high school graduates. Only the most academically able were awarded a place.
Thanks to well-meaning but misguided higher education reforms over the past three decades, however, more than 50 per cent of school leavers now enter the tertiary sector.
As a result, there now exist many more university graduates than there are appropriate jobs.
Such well-qualified applicants won’t settle for employment in a manual trade.
After all why should a 22-year-old graduate with a Bachelor in Business Communications (whatever that means) strain his-or-her back laying concrete on a building site?
Here are the harsh realities of the present-day employment market.
Living at home for an extended period will not assist the transition into independent adulthood; even if it causes a drop in short-term living standards, departing the family nest will do wonders for a 22-year-old’s eventual maturity.
Attendance at a good school or university no longer guarantees a well-paid career.
But a part-time teenage job delivering papers or flipping burgers suggests a willingness to work that’s highly sought-after by employers.
              
And when it comes to manual labour, be prepared to roll up the sleeves and get stuck in.
Yes, many once-local vocations like bookkeeping and car-making are now being outsourced to Asia. But basic and irreplaceable trades like painting, plastering and plumbing remain highly sought-after.
And the good news is that such professions don’t require a university degree accompanied by a $50,000-plus HECS debt.
Finally, the dole should always be regarded as a last resort for the desperate.
There’s nothing noble about taking money from fellow citizens while entry-level jobs remain unfilled.
Tom Elliott  Herald Sun
May 12, 2016

After some years of our company delivering team and leadership school programs the first people to educate were teaching staff. They were shocked that we “don’t compromise” don’t give second chances and we don’t build elite teams to achieve success. They soon realised this was the best grounding for real life and a great start for young students setting out in life.
If you would like to learn more about Canoe Image programs call Stan for information.
0409 596 840
wwwcanoeimages.com.au

Canoe Images are based at Mildura and Daylesford Victoria.

Sunday 10 April 2016

SILO ART A TALL ORDER FOR VICTORIAN TOWN OF BRIM

Was it a well planned strategy or accidental success?

Sometime you grab the opportunity when it presents and that looks like what happened with the small community of Brim in the Nth West of Victoria.


Brisbane based artist Guido van Helten said he had always had an interest in painting street art on silos. “They’re quite beautiful surfaces and perfect for something like this” he said. He approached street artist management company Juddy Roller to locate silos in Victoria. They settled on Brim when Grain Corp came up with the disused silo standing tall on the west side of the Brim township. Van Helten mapped the work onto a computer knowing the visual challenge was allowing for the curved surface of the silos.

Brim wheat silos located and ready for Guido. Silos like this became obsolete as farming operations grew bigger and were unable to handle the very large haulage trucks delivering grain to rail sidings. 


 Van Helten is no stranger to this type of project with works around the world in Belarus, Ukraine, Norway, Italy, Denmark, London and Iceland. He worked up to 10 hrs a day in heat frequently reaching 40 degrees.

President of the Brim Active Community Group Shane Wardle along with the towns 100 population quickly recognised the opportunity. They put $10,000 toward the project and were backed by grants from the Yarriambiack Shire and Regional Arts  Victoria. Paint was donated from Taubmans and Loop Paints with the local publican providing the artist with meals and the town caravan park providing accommodation.

The town has been abuzz. Shane Wardle a farmer in the area for 22 years reckons it’s the biggest thing to ever happen in the town with travelers coming from all around the world to see the 30 m artwork for themselves. A makeshift car park has been quickly put in to cater for traffic stopping to admire and take photos of local identities painted onto the silo.


The work complete and impressive as the sun sets over the local legends.

Congratulations to Brim for their efforts in seeing an opportunity and taking advantage of the imagination of a wonderful artist Guido van Helton. This is leadership on display by a small town of 100 people. Brim Victoria. 

Just a One Eyed View.