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Eight ways to improve your employability

Last updated on: January 28, 2014 21:25 IST

With a college degree barely being able to help you land a job, we ask the pros what it really takes for students to improve their employability while still in college.

These are just some highlights from the National Employability Report released by Aspiring Minds, one of India's leading employability solutions companies.

According to the report, of the five million, six lakh are engineers, the one field that most parents want their children to be in.

Even so, these graduates need anywhere between six to 12 months of training before they are made 'billable' to the client depending on what sector they are a part of, says Amit Bansal of PurpleLeap, an organisation that works with colleges to make students employment-ready

"Companies have no option but to invest in training their staff in skills they should have picked up at the university in the first place."

So if a degree doesn't necessarily land you a good job, how can students can improve their employability while still in college?

Sarvesh Agarwal of Internshala.com, a prominent portal for internships across the country, Amit Bansal and Varun Aggarwal tell you just that.

Polish your English language skills

Varun Aggarwal:

English is one of the key parameters in any role in the knowledge economy and ass many as 47 per cent graduates lack even basic functional knowledge of the language.

In our research, we have discovered that candidates with English skills garner 30 to 50 per cent higher salaries than similarly-qualified candidates without English language skills.

You cannot write-off the importance of English and you certainly cannot wake up in your final year of graduation to its importance.

The sooner you start learning the language, the better it will be for you.

Sarvesh Agarwal agrees. He points out:

Take up projects

Last updated on: January 28, 2014 21:25 IST
IIT Techfest is one of the most prominent festivals in the tech fests circuit.

The closest you can come to applying what you've learnt in to what the industry wants is through project work," Amit Bansal says:

Most students from tier two and tier three towns are at a disadvantage because unlike their counterparts from larger cities, their horizontal skills sets are weak.
Usually, students from larger cities are intrinsically sharp and their learning ability is pretty high and therefore their time to deployment is low.
The only way you can better prepare yourself is by taking up college projects and seeing them to their logical conclusion.

Sarvesh Agarwal says:

Don't write off your college degree

Last updated on: January 28, 2014 21:25 IST
You are first and foremost a student. Write off your course at your own risk.

There is a popular notion that courses are outdated," Varun Aggarwal says. Students are often told that it is not important to study to end up with good jobs. This is the biggest myth."

He advises:

Work on your critical reasoning skills

Last updated on: January 28, 2014 21:25 IST
Participate in debates; engage in discussions.

Critical thinking means being able to reason and analyse before reaching a conclusion," Varun Aggarwal explains.

"We have found this lacking in many young graduates.

Whatever field you are from, if a person can reason critically s/he can do well in any job."

The key to it he says is pretty basic:

Develop your soft skills

Last updated on: January 28, 2014 21:25 IST
Participate in college festivals. It can be educational AND fun!

Varun Aggarwal cannot emphasise enough on the importance of learning soft skills.

He says:

Take up internships

Last updated on: January 28, 2014 21:25 IST
Internships prepare you for the real world jobs. They also offer great opportunities to put into practice what you've learnt in college.

Nothing prepares you for the real world like a job in the real world, says Sarvesh Agarwal:

ALSO READ 10 things we wished interns knew

ALSO READ What to expect when you're interning

Take up online courses

Last updated on: January 28, 2014 21:25 IST
Think your course isn't good enough? Take up online courses. Right away!

Admittedly, a college degree alone will not get you a job," Varun Aggarwal says.

"But that shouldn't stop you from taking up online courses, should it?


Sarvesh Agarwal adds:

Be prepared to do the unsexy work

Last updated on: January 28, 2014 21:25 IST
Be prepared to do the least sexy of the jobs.

We often find that students have unrealistic expectations," Sarvesh Agarwal says.