A LinkedIn contact and ex-colleague recently mentioned that
when it comes to work, it's now who you know but what you know.
He stated quite vociferously that these days it's all about experience and
qualifications. Well, this was a bit zany considering that when I worked as a
Technical Writer for Qatar Gas he, together with I think it was four or five
American colleagues from Kuwait, were taken on simply because they had worked
together. These guys were hired as Technical Authors but none had authoring
experience. I ended up editing all their work.
To be honest I found his assessment just a little biased. I
worked in the oil industry for 36 years,
eight of those years as an expat in Asia, Africa and North America, and
I must admit it was more WHO I knew that led to my constant employment. As a
Technical Writer, I was seen as a specialist in my field. I did not have any
technical writing qualifications but segued from a Training Instructor into
publications who wrote all his teaching materials and I must confess had (still
have) a passionate interest in the English language!
Therefore, my advice today is still it's who you
know. As an oil, gas and petrochemicals professional, it is widely known
throughout the energy industries that having worked with someone in the past
will always be a plus. You know them, they know you. For instance, I worked in
Azerbaijan for two years between 2010 - 2012 and contracted to BP Azerbaijan. I
was hired as the sole Technical Author in a small team of four where our remit
was to update all BP's offshore operating procedures. It was a great job with
excellent working conditions and extras (per diem, flights, health insurance,
etc). But I wanted to return to the UK to be home with my wife and daughter.
So, I informed my Azeri boss that I would be leaving. The first thing he said
was, 'Do you know someone who could carry on the writing work?' I said I'd get
back to him within 48 hours. I contacted a Technical Writer who I knew had just
finished a contract in the UAE. We both had worked in Oman. Yes, he was
available. He took the job and worked in Azerbaijan for three years. The Azeri
boss was pleased with his work - I know this for a fact.
So, it was WHO I knew without hesitation. By the way, I am
not decrying or belittling people who apply for jobs purely based on experience
and qualifications. At the end of the day, you've got to start somewhere!
Looking back, I suppose I was lucky. Before I left school I already had an
apprenticeship all sorted out that was organised by my uncle. So, I did a
4-year apprenticeship as a Mechanical Engineer. I mean, today, how many
youngsters leaving school already have a job waiting for them? You tell me.
Having said all the above, I am now in the recruitment
industry and will do my utmost to get people jobs. I shall also be contacting
LinkedIn contacts and other resources to fill our positions.