BUSINESS graduate Noor Lilana, 23, is no longer looking for a management trainee position and a quick rise to the top rungs of the hospitality sector.
Instead, she is now prepared to accept a $1,000-a-month job working at the reception desk of a small hotel.
She had been looking for a job in the hotel industry since graduating from the National University of Singapore (NUS) in June last year.
In December, after being turned down repeatedly by hotels, she enrolled in a course for a certificate in hotel services.
She did so in the hope that when she finishes the course next month, she will be able to get a job in the hotel industry.
'Right now, it is okay for me to start at the bottom and earn $1,500, $1,000 even.
Some grads may disagree but in the long run, I am sure this move will pay off as I move up the ladder,' she says.
Sauce: http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking+News/Singapore/Story/STIStory_324120.html
This give employers a good excuse to cut pay
and lower grads. wages.
More good years ahead.
Instead, she is now prepared to accept a $1,000-a-month job working at the reception desk of a small hotel.
She had been looking for a job in the hotel industry since graduating from the National University of Singapore (NUS) in June last year.
In December, after being turned down repeatedly by hotels, she enrolled in a course for a certificate in hotel services.
She did so in the hope that when she finishes the course next month, she will be able to get a job in the hotel industry.
'Right now, it is okay for me to start at the bottom and earn $1,500, $1,000 even.
Some grads may disagree but in the long run, I am sure this move will pay off as I move up the ladder,' she says.
Sauce: http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking+News/Singapore/Story/STIStory_324120.html
This give employers a good excuse to cut pay
and lower grads. wages.
More good years ahead.