![]() | Those who can….. |
OK,
Your starter for 10.
How many of you have somewhere your school reports? Maybe the piece of paper you wrote when you were 10 years old that starts with something along the lines of…
“When I grow up I want to be…”
I’ll take odds that 90% of you remember doing this at some point.
So what was top of the list? Train Driver, Pilot, Astronaut, Soldier, Income Tax Inspector, Mergers and Acquisitions Lawyer? I’ll also take the bet that no-one has:
1) Resource Analyst
2) Customer Care Trainer.
3) CSR / CSP / Agent / TBR (Delete as appropriate)
4) Dialler Controller
On their list.
I was right wasn’t I.
I know we have a reputation in this trade for having a very ephemeral workforce and that high churn rates are considered the norm (regardless of what we all say). I also appreciate the ‘Job for life’ culture that prevailed up until about 10 years ago has now gone and the idea of having (gasp) two careers in your life is no longer thought of as ‘shiftless’ rather the norm, we no longer do collage course / apprentice to a trade / degree in the subject we *will * work in for the rest of our lives.
When I was eighteen Degree courses tended to be either a pure subject (English, Math, Physics, French etc…) or you could do Law, Business Studies, Medical (Vet / Doctor / Dentist). There was very little scope for other choices. This year a friend of mine is going back as a mature student and is interested in property, she has a choice of six (Count em!) courses and only has to decide the final degree choice in her last year. Humm if I’d had that amount of choice I might have stayed on.
Which leads me back top the original question above. From observation we (in the UK I know offshore is VERY different) have two sorts of staff. Type A are the short term student, need a job in a hurry whilst looking for something in their field, people who seem to stay between 0 and 18 months. These probably represent 85% of the current staffing levels. Type B are the people like me who come from diverse sources (in my case being a chef) and for want of a better word, find a home.
So why do we stay? What have we found that makes this different to other trades?
Well in my case I get to be a geek {GRIN} and get paid for it.
That’s obviously not the case for most people, the trade is still ‘something new’ still
something fresh and still working out HOW to do the job properly.
We have best practices, accepted methods and ‘Industry Standard’ KPI’s SLA’s etc..
We also still have the opportunity for innovation, personal opinion (Well you WILL listen to my opinion), weird ideas and experimentation.
This is what I think attracts the ‘outsiders’. As far as I’m aware there is only the one
associate course and several “Certificate in…” NVQ’s along with the planning courses the Professional Planning Forum run. These have only been available for the last couple of years anyway.
The nice side of this is we have had chance to come in and do well in an industry because we CAN’T be judged on prior qualifications. There aren’t any! Whoopee for us.
The drawback is we’ve just about hit the time that we’ll need to grow up, the industry will need to formalise the qualifications and requirements for a post meaning we’re probably the last to have all the fun. At some point we’ll need a BSc (BA?) in Contact Centre Operations, a BSc in Statistics with Planning. A rationalisation of the myriad of NVQ’s available and possibly the establishment of a BTEC track as well
I just hope when they get round to it the industry is consulted. The Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors have tied in with the property and planning courses at universities
so much that they no longer run their own internal qualification exams.
I just hope at the time I can get a Dip(Ed), can you imagine me in a lecture hall?
This could be fun.
DaveA
