What CAD program mate? We use Solid Works...
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
What CAD program mate? We use Solid Works...
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Dan M
The range of what we think and do is limited by what we fail to notice. And because we fail to notice that we fail to notice, there is little we can do to change; until we notice how failing to notice shapes our thoughts and deeds
60 replies to a Trademe advert. 9 of them could have started yesterday and I doubt we would have had any problems at all. Obviously an apprentice will be an easier position to fill than a tradesman but they don't just come out of the Weetbix box. We have to train them first and engineering as a whole (actually all trades) forgot to do that for probably for the last 10 years.
The range of what we think and do is limited by what we fail to notice. And because we fail to notice that we fail to notice, there is little we can do to change; until we notice how failing to notice shapes our thoughts and deeds
This position is still open
New link to advert http://www.trademe.co.nz/Browse/List...?id=1013397449
I am happy to wait for the right person to come along, we are not willing to risk our reputation or risk our machines on someone that is not up to the job at hand. All it would take is one simple mistake to put one of our production machines out of operation that would really damage the company. And the simple fact of the matter is I just don't have the time nor experience to train someone to what we want.
Last edited by DPT; 19-01-2016 at 05:17 PM.
Yep you are right but to be fair, DPT are looking for expertise that they haven't got already... that is not the case for established expertise and companies that only hire qualified staff. Its biting everywhere already because of that....
Sounds like you need to contract one from a company rather than find an employee to do so.
Last edited by Jexla; 19-01-2016 at 06:30 PM.
I can see both sides of this experienced/take on a appy argument.
When you need someone with certain skills thats who you need not an apprentice.
We need both at my work and I think we have just taken on a keen young fella as an appy.
Experienced Tradesmen with the right experience are hard to find and that is not helped by pay rates largely and not enough apprentices being taken on and the potential apprentices themselves being next to useless.
We have had 7 or 8 young fellas who just are not upto the task or are just shit employees before finding one worth offering a apprenticeship.
"Hunting and fishing" fucking over licenced firearms owners since ages ago.
308Win One chambering to rule them all.
Just getting someone who
1) Shows up every day
2) Doesn't believe that dodgy windscreen wipers are a reason to call in sick
3) Doesn't spell 'faggot' as 'faget'
4) Work starts at 8am (for instance), that means being ready to rock and roll at 8am, boots on, not rocking up at 8:09 (traffic was shit aaaaaaye)
5) Doesn't have his mum call up with uniform laundry concerns (no shit, she wanted me to wash his gear)
6) one thousand more examples
...is a fucking struggle. Maybe it's the industry I'm in, but I've had it with the auto trade anyway, it's a magnet for douchebaggery. I want to retrain as a fridgie, get the fuck out of Auckland, and kill and eat shit on the weekends (Yes you can do this in Auckland, but the police eventually come looking for the rowdy neighbours, who of course you ate first)
As a young guy trying to break through into the engineering industry it is incredibly hard. I find myself applying for jobs even where it specifies that they are after a tradesman with 10+ years experience because I hope that they might call or email to say "Your application has been unsuccessful on this occasion", so I can explain I'm after an apprenticeship,
With no word of a lie, I would have applied for at least 40+ engineering jobs in the past two months alone, all of them not even getting past the first stage due to lack of experience, but how am I to get more without being offered an opportunity?
Luckily, I'm 19 and have age/time on my side. I also work in workshop (we produce exhausts for trucks, diggers etc) where I'm welding, operating lathes, mills, drills, presses, rollers, benders and other assortments of machines.
I back myself on my welding ability using MIG and Arc, working on my TIG. Also pretty happy with my machining capabilities, although our lathe is from the 50's I'm getting a really good grounding on my basic skills.
All this, and I still get turned down because they want Tradies and not keen young bucks who always show up early and are keen to learn and take everything on board.
Rant over
@nz_hunter. You'll be fine. Good things take time.
Dan M
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