China Daily

Livestream­ing providing jobs to graduates in time of pandemic

- By CHENG SI chengsi@chinadaily.com.cn

Livestream­ing has emerged as a new source of jobs for the record number of students graduating from Chinese higher education institutio­ns this year amid the economic slowdown caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Ministry of Education says 8.74 million people could graduate this year, 400,000 more than last year, and their employment is a pressing issue for both government and the students themselves.

But thanks to their livestream­ing expertise, more than 40 students who majored in the jewelry business at Tengchong No 1 Vocational School in Yunnan province already had firm job offers by the time they graduated.

Wang Hongbo, who heads the jewelry business program, said students had received numerous offers from different companies. The first group of more than 40 graduates trained in livestream­ing had nailed down jobs by February.

He said the students had been trained in conjunctio­n with e-commerce giant Taobao in a unique arrangemen­t that started in September 2018 and saw Taobao send experts to help the school build a training center.

“Students with livestream­ing skills are in short supply in the market and they are offered much higher salaries, even during their internship­s,” Wang said. “For example, they can earn 3,000 yuan to 4,000 yuan ($428 to $571) a month as an intern when the average salary in Tengchong is around 1,800 yuan a month.”

Yang Kang, a 20-year-old student at the school, is working as an intern with Jinri Meichuang in Beijing, selling daily necessitie­s and home furnishing­s.

“I’m quite interested in livestream­ing, and I opened my own account on Kuaishou, a short-video sharing platform, when I was at junior high school, aged 16,” Yang said.

“I signed up for the jewelry major with livestream­ing courses in 2018, dreaming of becoming an excellent anchor.

“I learned some theoretica­l knowledge about livestream­ing at school but found things were more complicate­d when I came to Beijing for the internship in early June.”

Schools and companies in Yiwu, Zhejiang province, Harbin, Heilongjia­ng province and Chongqing have also worked together to develop livestream­ing talent since last year.

In the past few months, livestream­ing has become a buzzword for companies seeking to sell products online, with demand for livestream­ing anchors booming since the COVID-19 pandemic dealt a blow to the economy.

A report by Zhaopin, an online recruitmen­t platform headquarte­red in Beijing, said the number of job vacancies for livestream­ers rose by more than 80 percent year-onyear in March, after companies resumed work, while the general job market slumped by almost 35 percent.

“The emergence and expansion of livestream­ing depends on ever-developing high-tech and optimized big data,” the report said. “It will see continuous developmen­t in the future as 5G is popularize­d.”

This month, the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security, the State Administra­tion of Market Regulation and the National Bureau of Statistics announced that internet marketers, which include livestream­ing sales personnel, had been added to the country’s official list of occupation­s as one of nine new profession­s. The move was recommende­d by the China Employment Training Technical Instructio­n Center in May.

Zhaopin said that while about 70 percent of livestream­ing positions require few skills, fresh graduates with specific knowledge about livestream­ing have an advantage when it comes to attracting employers.

Ye Xin, a junior at Hangzhou Technician Institute in Zhejiang province, is helping his parents run a livestream­ing booth in Huangshan, a city in Anhui province famous for its tea.

“It’s not that easy for me to find an internship due to the pandemic, so I started to help my parents sell tea through livestream­ing in early March,” he said.

“Things got better after my parents joined and encouraged workers to show how to make tea and choose quality tea.”

Zhaopin said that although the sector has quite a promising future, there are also problems hampering its growth.

“Because the social security system and regulation of the sector both need further improvemen­t, people who are not well-prepared will struggle to succeed,” it said.

Chen Jue, from Taobao’s livestream­ing department, said profession­alism and knowledge are required to become a top quality anchor. “The livestream­ing courses are usually set up for students majoring in e-commerce who are able to both learn theoretica­l knowledge and find opportunit­ies to practice,” she said.

Chen said that livestream­ing can offer more jobs to graduates as a livestream­ing show requires a team of about 10 people, apart from the anchor.

She said more than 200 agencies are now offering livestream­ing services, up from just one a year ago.

“Some local government­s, including those of Guangzhou, Guangdong province, and Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, have released preferenti­al policies to nurture livestream­ing talent,” she said.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Students majoring in e-commerce participat­e in a livestream­ing class at Chongqing Business Vocational College in May.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Students majoring in e-commerce participat­e in a livestream­ing class at Chongqing Business Vocational College in May.

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