Someone said to me the other day that to an employer, a degree is a display of an individual's ability to display attributes of your own work ethic and abilities, and as soon as you get out of uni - employment is based on the strength of your personality. Obviously you'd be qualified, but the fine print of these qualifications is what draws subtle lines that put some people above others.
The example in question are the times where one job applicant is sometimes 'better qualified' by things such as attending a more prestigious university, or completing (for example) a B Science (Biotechnology), in opposition to a B Biotechnology.
Do you value personality over knowledge? Would employers? Is it unfair to assume that the two aren't mutually exclusive? Could an attractive personality overcome what is seemingly a 'lower' degree from a less reputable university?
Or are we that caught up in elitism that the nature of a 'people-based' industry is lost.
Or am I not making much sense.
The example in question are the times where one job applicant is sometimes 'better qualified' by things such as attending a more prestigious university, or completing (for example) a B Science (Biotechnology), in opposition to a B Biotechnology.
Do you value personality over knowledge? Would employers? Is it unfair to assume that the two aren't mutually exclusive? Could an attractive personality overcome what is seemingly a 'lower' degree from a less reputable university?
Or are we that caught up in elitism that the nature of a 'people-based' industry is lost.
Or am I not making much sense.