Careers fairs have long been key events for universities to provide direct employer contact for students and hopefully generate job outcomes for them. They have been a staple part of the annual calendar providing students and employers with the opportunity to communicate and impress one another.
But with the pandemic stopping the annual hamster wheel of activity, we wonder what the future of careers fairs will be and what alternatives may surface.
There are certainly some limitations of the traditional careers fair model including:
These will likely be issues graduate recruiters will be considering in 2022 as they consider how to allocate their diminished resources. They will no doubt be wanting to find the most efficient and effective ways to tell their stories to students that they want to target.
So how could careers fairs evolve to better meet the needs of employers and students? With mixed feedback from online careers fairs that were hastily put together in 2020 and 2021, it does not seem that they are the answer at this point.
From our vantage point, sitting between universities and employers, we see the opportunity for a fresh approach that is a win-win for all stakeholders. And, most significantly, also moves the needle on graduate employability.
How? If we rethink the careers fair as a career development forum for students delivered by employers. Instead of employers standing at booths for days, they deliver targeted sessions that advance the employability of attendees whilst also giving them insight into their employer proposition. Employers commit to one hour per university (not 1-2 days) and get to tell a deeper story once (rather than the same 5-10 minute pitch over and over again).
Students not only get a better insight into each organisation but they also walk away from a few days with valuable employability knowledge from the content delivered by the employers. Instead of organising booths, universities can work with employers to agree on the most relevant content for each employer to deliver.
If employers still want to make student connections on campus, they can pre-select those they want to target using a range of online technologies, and hold more focused group or individual discussion sessions.
For the university, it is a neat way to evolve traditional careers fairs into a more attractive proposition to employers and students, whilst also solving the challenge of delivering increased employability training with often diminishing budgets!
If you’d like help to reimagine your careers fairs and/or industry engagement models, we are ready to assist you.
Or if you have any comments on this article or other creative ideas, we’d love to hear them. You can submit your comments below or contact our Education Partnerships Manager: Katherine.underwood@readygrad.com.au.
Regards,
Owen Firth
Chief Employability Officer