The Borneo Post

No, temp agencies do not exist to find you a job

- By Karla L. Miller

QUESTION: I recently went through a two-year period of temping after technology had made my existing job skills obsolete.

While I had no illusions that I was the best word processor in town, the agencies gave me the strong impression that my skills were more than passable. But I wound up working less than half-time, and having to draw down my savings. A few clients compliment­ed my work and asked for me, so presumably I was competent. Accepting data-entry and even light industrial assignment­s resulted in very little additional work.

Recently, I received an inheritanc­e and am planning to go back to school and make a career change. But I was so enraged by my temping experience that I sought informatio­nal interviews with a couple of new agencies and a former agency that hadn’t given me an assignment. Here are some of the comments:

“You are strictly word processing.” ( I had been led to believe word processing skills would be enough.)

“We had a data entry assignment, but it paid less than you want.” ( I shouldn’t have had to do data entry for chump change.)

“This region is a hotbed of software developmen­t, and the level of computer literacy is high.” ( This should have been factored in when telling me what to expect.)

The agencies either didn’t know the job market, had poor communicat­ion skills or lied. Giving people false hope about their prospects is just cruel.

Answer: You’ve been through a demoralisi­ng period, so I want to be kind - but I don’t know how else to say this: You seem to have the impression that the temp agencies’ priority was to find work for you. In reality, their priority was to meet clients’ need for on- demand staffing by keeping a full roster of temps - and the first- stringers on that roster either have all the skills the clients want, or have the humility and hustle to pick them up as they go.

Fortunatel­y, an 11th-hour windfall has given you a way out and a chance to improve your ranking on the supply- demand food chain. To make the most of it, stop fuming over what you think should have been given and instead focus on building a future based on what you’ve actually received: big clues about technologi­cal obsolescen­ce and “computer literacy,” as well as a hard lesson in proactive skepticism.

Education will help with the former; to hone the latter, start asking sooner, “Do their words align with my reality - and if not, how can I triangulat­e and excavate to get at the truth?”

And don’t rule out temping when you’re ready to road-test your newly acquired skills. Besides helping to pay the rent, temporary gigs in your chosen field are a good way to enter the market and make a name for yourself before you commit to an employer.

 ?? — WP-Bloomberg photo ?? Employees work on the Porsche Macan sports utility vehicle assembly line inside the Porsche factory in Leipzig, Germany, on Dec 1, 2016.
— WP-Bloomberg photo Employees work on the Porsche Macan sports utility vehicle assembly line inside the Porsche factory in Leipzig, Germany, on Dec 1, 2016.

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