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Educators and PR industry letting graduates down

Announcement posted by Mercer PR 17 Jan 2017

Graduates in the areas of communications and public relations (PR) can’t find jobs, are poorly trained and some are exploited by employers, according to the head of an Australian PR firm.

 

Managing Director of Mercer PR, Lyall Mercer, said he agreed with recent comments by the chief executive of Group of Eight, representing eight major universities, that the system is letting students down and pumping out graduates with “broken dreams and a large student debt”.

 

“Many graduates are forced into other industries, work in less qualified roles or move interstate or overseas because there are so few PR jobs available.

 

“Maybe it’s time for the universities to be honest with students about the chances of landing a job in this industry.”

 

He also believes universities are failing to properly train graduates.

 

“Students are graduating with very little knowledge about the world of PR and no interest in news and current affairs, which affects their employment chances particularly in the corporate PR field."

 

Mr Mercer said graduates he employs openly admit they learned very little about their industry at university.

 

“They are given a degree yet most can’t write a media release, many have poor grammar and communications skills, and they have no idea about even the basics of public relations.

 

“Several graduates I spoke to recently had never heard of organisations like Associated Press or other major news agencies which is unbelievable. You have to question what they are learning.”

 

He also said the negative experiences of graduates are made worse by some employers within the industry which can exploit them with unpaid internships that provide little or no value.

 

“I’m sure some internships are valid and worthwhile, but others are nothing more than illegal, unpaid work. I know of one person who worked as an unpaid intern over a nine month period doing the same work as paid staff.

 

“Other interns get put in a corner and told to file papers, which provides no benefit whatsoever.”

 

Mr Mercer said universities could consider working more closely with PR companies to provide better real world education, and those employers who offer unpaid internships should make them very short term and structured.

 

-End-

 

Link to referred article – comments by Group of Eight - http://www.news.com.au/finance/work/careers/easier-access-to-university-has-devalued-degrees-created-huge-debt-and-made-some-feel-like-failures/news-story/fab0ca689eb920620d9b047fb5d64cb4


Link to Mercer PR - http://www.mercerpr.com