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The Challenges of Recruitment in the Rail Industry

Graduates, hiring managers, and recruiting professionals alike can benefit from understanding the problems of filling rail industry jobs. Indeed, all three groups of professionals share in a common interest: creating the best work environment possible for the most professionals while serving the public. By understanding the problems of rail industry recruitment, the graduate can better understand what hiring managers expect out of their employees. Hiring graduates, in turn, can understand the pressures on graduates trying to compete for limited work opportunities. As the middle way between the two groups, recruiters can gain a better perspective on their job by looking objectively at the challenges of their daily professional lives.

One challenge in recruiting rail industry professionals is the number of certifications and benchmarks which professionals have to achieve for certain positions. Railway positions are demarcated by experience level, certification in certain aspects of the job, and job classification. As such, the railway industry is a highly compartmentalised job market to break into for new graduates. Hiring managers need to focus on every aspect of an applicant’s CV in order to determine their initial qualification for a job on the railway.
As well, recruiting agencies often have to add services in order to become a player in railway recruiting. The aforementioned accreditation and certification issues mean that a good recruiting agency has access to qualified resources for railway professionals in need of these benchmarks. Indeed, an agency that wants to act as a good provider of recruits to the railway industry needs to dedicate a good part of their service to professional development necessary to maintain qualifications on the job.

For all three groups mentioned above, a recruiting problem in the railway industry is the changing regulatory landscape. The government’s involvement in the UK railway means that politicians and bureaucrats can dictate specific regulations that influence the daily lives of railway professionals. Graduates need to stay up on changing regulations while hiring managers and recruiters need to assess and disseminate these regulations to their recruits.

There are many other challenges to recruitment in the rail industry, namely the problems of finding experienced professionals in an increasingly youthful pool of recruits and the need for an intimate knowledge of worker health in order to assess their job readiness. In all, these challenges in recruiting can make for a hectic job market for all parties involved. However, if all three parties understand the issues involved in job recruitment, they can find a good middle ground.

Wynnwith

Wynnwith Rail specialise in rail recruitment and rail jobs throughout the UK. Areas of particular specialisation include rail engineering jobs, electrical engineering jobs and Network Rail recruitment.

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