Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 24
James Reed Offers Job-Hunting Tips as Graduate Vacancies Drop to 50,000
Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 24

James Reed Offers Job-Hunting Tips as Graduate Vacancies Drop to 50,000

1 articles · Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 24

Summary

  • Graduate vacancies on Reed’s website have fallen to 50,000 from about 180,000 three or four years ago, prompting founder James Reed to publish advice for candidates facing a tougher entry-level market.
  • AI screening is now a key hurdle, and Reed says applicants should mirror job descriptions with truthful examples of their skills rather than let generic AI-written CVs do all the work.
  • One-page CVs, a strong personal opening statement and solid interview preparation—especially for “tell me about yourself”—are among his main tactics for standing out.
  • Communication, collaboration and resilience are the skills Reed says matter most, while experience can be built through temporary work, volunteering, community projects or free online training.
  • Reed also argues university is not the right path for everyone, saying more young people should consider apprenticeships, trades or going straight into work.

Insights

With entry-level hiring frozen, are universities failing graduates by not prioritizing apprenticeships and direct work experience over traditional degrees?
If AI can fake a perfect resume, what is the one thing a job seeker can do to genuinely prove their unique value?
As AI automates junior roles and companies hire internally, are traditional career ladders for graduates becoming a thing of the past?