Philip Peters, who heads up an organisation specialising in prepping students for workplace training, has some strong views on what's going wrong with our education system. Is he right?
According to a study by Nectar, the company most known for its points reward card, 16-30 year-olds in the UK favour entrepreneurship over working up the career ladder.
The telecoms giant has developed the programme as part of its Connected Society initiative, which looks to reduce the cost of getting online and provide training and support for individuals.
The Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) and KPMG Report on Jobs have shown there are a growing number of permanent and temporary placements in the UK - offering hope to workers in the country.
Research by recruitment firm Robert Walters has revealed that London CIOs in the IT, banking and financial sectors could see their average salary of £175,000 jump to £185,000 this year.
A recent report by the recruitment firm Hays UK has found that over half of IT employees are planning to change jobs - despite good pay rises.
Kevin Young, Vice President and General Manager, EMEA, at Skillsoft takes a view.
Nick Holmes, UK Managing Director of e-recruiters WCN, says UK Plc is missing a huge trick here.
Global engineering and technology services company Siemens has announced it has created 160 new apprenticeships this year, a 10% increase on last year.
Uber is under a lot of pressure worldwide, with a growing resentment for the way the San Francisco-based ride-sharing app pays workers.
More than half of UK companies have increased the number of female IT professionals they have employed over the past five years, a new study has shown.
IT recruitment firm Experis has published a new Tech Cities Job Watch report for the first quarter of 2015 in the UK, showing a welcome increase in permanent positions in the technology industry.
According to O2, the UK alone will need 2.3 million workers with IT skills in that time - with 766,000 new jobs needing to be created in the next five years alone, mostly in London and South-East.
1