A
study has showed that 57% of interns were offered jobs on graduate schemes.
Meanwhile, the majority, or 87%, of interns who are offered jobs accept them,
and 94% of employers encourage interns to return as employees. Internships in
the UK saw an increase of 6% in 2018 when compared to last year, according to a
study from the Institute of Student Employers.
As well as increasing the volume of
internships, employers are broadening their offer. Employers have historically
offered opportunities to penultimate year university students on fixed
summer programmes. This year 62% did not restrict their internships to
penultimate year students, and 30% of employers hired first-year students as
interns, up from 22% in 2017.
Internships provide a viable route to a
graduate job with 74% of employers making a job offer straight away after the
internship has finished and one in ten offering a financial incentive.
Most employers (70%) said that interns
out-perform graduates in some way with 35% stating that interns perform better
on the job and 18% said that former interns stay longer.
The market for interns is
getting more competitive, so employers are investing more than ever
before. The reason for this is simple interns make better hires. Former
interns are more likely to accept job offers, stay longer and often
outperform their peers. So basically people who are planning for internship and
join the same company will have more opportunities than ever. Good luck for you
studies in opportunities.
For more details visit Global Knowledge Works
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