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Graduate vs. experience: The true cost of recruitment

Recruitment is an important part of any business and getting the balance between a higher paid experienced starter or the cost of training a graduate is crucial. New research looks into which candidates would be more beneficial to your company, highlighting resources such as training, and job expectancy in the IT and Media industry.

Employing new staff can be costly for a company’s assets. Putting aside their salary, there are also other costs to consider, as such as advertising, the selection process and training amongst others.

SmallBusinessPrices.co.uk has recently researched which candidates would be more beneficial to your company, highlighting resources such as training, and job expectancy in the IT and Media industry.

Key highlights include:

When searching for new employees, business owners face the dilemma of investing in the future with a graduate, or playing it safe with an experienced candidate. In terms of salary, the difference is an obvious factor, but what other considerations should an employer take when upping their headcount.

SmallBusinessPrices.co.uk have researched 5 key job sectors including accountancy, technology, retail, advertising and legal to look at the often overlooked aspects of recruitment. The findings include the average pension contribution being £6,865 per employee for the typical amount of time they spend in a role.

The Pay-Gap

Salary is the largest financial difference between graduates and experienced employees, but which industries offer the biggest incentive for loyal employees.

Recruitment

Onboarding employees can be a long and tedious process on both ends, but what is the actual cost involved?

Pension Contribution

Employers contribute an average of 3.2% of salary as part of pension schemes, so how does this impact your business as you recruit more staff?

Ian Wright from SmallBusinessPrices.co.uk has stated that

‘Employees can offer so much to companies of any size, but it’s always important to consider the financial impact they have as well. Some business owners would rather train someone from scratch, almost like an investment, but the value of an experienced employee is that they can hit the ground running. While these are fairly obvious assumptions, it’s interesting to see the hard figures and how it varies across different industries.’

So whether you’re struggling to decide on  a suitable candidate for your business or possibly which career to go into next, you can view the  full breakdown and see how different key industries contrast here

Methodology

To find average pay for both experienced employees and graduates, Payscale.com and SaveTheStudent.org. Recruitment spends were taken from GRB.uk.com and elevationnetworks.org. Productivity statistics and job expectancy were taken from open source research studies. Pension contributions were formulated using the average contribution weighted against each average salary.  

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