Friday 28 March 2014

How Can You Cultivate a Career In Human Resources?

Considering the breadth and scope for opportunity in the modern HR sector, it is an industry that many wish to enter. Considering this, how can you cultivate a career in the modern HR industry?

The industry is on the rise; as a career option that appeals to those with people skills and proficiency for communication, it is attractive to a large swathe of the educated population. Furthermore the essential role HR holds for the cultivation of a success business venture means that any modern company needs a HR department.

These two key factors have ensured that the industry is projected to continue expanding further into the job market. Experts predict that by 2016 the industry will have grown 11% from its 2006 figures. However a wealth of opportunity does not a career make. The modern HR sector is like any industry; they only take the best of the best.

So this leads to the question that considering the high bar the sector places on entry into its ranks, how can you cultivate a career in the HR industry?

The first element to consider is education. It is not completely impossible to hold a position, even a managerial position, in HR without a degree. However increasingly the industry has placed a heavier emphasis on the need for academic credentials and in the post 2000 world, it’s almost essential.

Saying this Most HR departments require a minimum of a four year degree in a range of academic disciplines. However a bachelor’s degree in human resources, personnel or another related discipline is preferred due to the demands training for the position requires.

However in the modern day academic credentials are often no longer enough to differentiate you from the myriad of other degree level applicants vying for the same post. There are so many people who have attained degrees in the employment market that the HR industry is looking for people who stand head and shoulders above the rest.

This is why if you are serious about entering the industry, you must have experience. Experience indicates a familiarity with the industry. Furthermore it emphasises the fact that you have already handled the unique pressures the HR sector can bring and have proven yourself a match for them.

From there general vocational principles apply. Take every opportunity given to you. Cultivate contacts and working relationships. Act with integrity and efficiency. Prove that you are a valuable employee; this is the only way to move up into a higher, even a managerial, position in this diverse sector.

The opportunities are endless in the modern human resources industry; however you have to be willing to work for them. Don’t believe that doors will open for you, do everything you can to open them for yourself.

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Frank Kelly, Dublin City