Have you ever given a thought how that contributes to the "number of young people" who have no ambition?
I don't see how basic workplace rights and ambition are connected. From what I've seen of USA young people are exploited far too much.
Have you ever given a thought how that contributes to the "number of young people" who have no ambition?
I'm 26 and definitely better than all of you. Stop resisting, just accept my superior age.
You’re not better your just naive. Your time will come. I hope for your sake your not thinking about a career in prepress cause it won’t last long
I don't see how basic workplace rights and ambition are connected. From what I've seen of USA young people are exploited far too much.
I was thinking more about the "other entitlements". When the cost of working (taxes and how those entitlements are paid for) is more than the benefits of working, and one can somehow live without working what do you expect. The only place I know where rewards and success come before work is in the dictionary. But what do I know? I am an old-timer who has worked my azz off my whole life.
All of you being unemployed seems like such a waste of talent. I struggle to find skilled, hardworking employees all the time. I'm 33, have owned a print shop for several years, and my staff consists of both young and old. I don't know why someone would turn away people in their 50's who are skilled at their job. They way I see it is they will most likely work until retirement which is significantly longer than you can keep most young people in a job. Prepress people are some of the most knowledgeable people in the industry and some of the few people that understand every role in a print shop. One of our new expansion methods is launching multiple online brands where employees don't necessarily need to be in our production facilities. I'd be interested in hearing from some of you that are looking for work. We may have some opportunities or may be able to create some opportunities together. PM me if you want to talk more.
I’m at something of a crossroads myself. I’m 44, and started as a typesetter, then shifted into prepress and got qualified. I was made redundant and found a new job at a government in-plant, but at 20% less pay. I worked my backside off to prove I was worth more, and learned XMPie and Planetpress. On the XMPie side I didn’t just use the plugin: I got in pretty deep with the scripting side using uPlan, uProduce and now I’m also setting up the web 2 print side of things with uStore. I also learned most of the machinery and the wide format, so I can pretty much see a job through from start to finish without it touching another pair of hands. My bosses were certainly pleased with me, and entered me into a national ‘Employee of the Year’ competition, which I won.
The trouble is, every member of production has the same generic job description, written by people who know nothing about what we do. The JD covers everything: prepress, XMPie, small offset litho, making ID badges, running copiers, print finishing. Everything is at the same pay grade. My colleagues have no qualifications, no real understanding of print, yet they get paid the same as me, even if all they do is push buttons on a photocopier. Splitting us onto separate JDs would be a hassle, and would probably result in some people’s pay going down, so the unions won’t help either.
I stuck it out in the hope that someone would see sense, but we’ve just been through a review and the management, with union backing, decided that the pay grades will stay the same.
So I worked out how much I earn after tax, and compared that to how much someone on minimum wage gets, and was pretty shocked to discover the difference was only £3,500pa. That’s almost exactly what it costs to run my six-year old car to and from work (diesel, tax, insurance, maintenance & depreciation). So I could literally sell my car and get a job sweeping the floor at the factory near my house, and be no worse off. In fact I’d be better off, as I wouldn’t spend 8 hours a week sitting in traffic.
But then you would go stir-crazy inside a month or two.
True, and I'm not saying that would be my actual career choice - it was more to illustrate the point. But the realisation of how little I actually earn has helped me look at the jobs market in a different way. I can cast my net as wide as possible without suffering major financial consequences, and hopefully find something new that I enjoy and has better prospects.
For something related have you considered getting into packaging? I assume it would be difficult as they all require Artpro experience, but it's something I've often wondered about.
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