The New Zealand Herald

A few areas for employment The top jobs to emerge from the Covid-19 pandemic

Last year was the biggest shake-up in the job market for decades, with some industries obliterate­d overnight and others booming. Kirsty Wynn spoke to the experts about where the top jobs will be in the pandemic-altered future

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Health

There’s a special nod to nursing as the top pick for MoneyHub founder Christophe­r Walsh.

“There is an absolute shortage of nurses, you get to help people and it’s a job where you can move around,” Walsh said.

“Quite often doctors get stuck at one practice or hospital but there are more opportunit­ies for nurses.”

The leap into healthcare can be made without the competitio­n of medical school and the six-year training commitment and associated costs.

It is a long-term career with other options later such as specialist care or even appearance medicine. “You can also retrain later and get into another area such as midwifery and with that there is the option to run your own business,”

Walsh said.

Dairy

Agricultur­e — and dairy in particular — has been recognised as pivotal to the country’s economic recovery in a world with Covid-19.

There are jobs available across New Zealand’s entire rural sector with more than 750 advertised in dairy alone.

Jane Muir from Dairy NZ said the demand was high because not enough people were looking to work in rural areas.

“Working on a farm may not be for everyone. It’s more remote, there are early starts and it’s outdoor work year-round.

“However, there are tremendous benefits in working on dairy farms including working with animals, great people, and technology.”

Muir said dairy farm wages were the best in agricultur­e with entrylevel positions at $48,000 per annum, rising to $60,000-$62,000 for herd and assistant manager positions, and $78,000 for farm managers.

“There are excellent opportunit­ies for career advancemen­t in the dairy sector including roles in research, science, policy and rural profession­al roles.”

Muir said there had been a large number of people pivoting towards dairy after Covid-19 job losses.

Dairy NZ went on a recruitmen­t drive after Covid hit and provided onthe-job training for a variety of roles — this is expected to continue this year.

“Many career changers have skills that are valued and useful on dairy farms such as a great attitude, reliabilit­y and a willingnes­s to learn,” Muir said.

E-commerce

This year will see further demand for web-designers, IT technician­s, digital marketing and workers with technical skills.

Sarah White from Tribe Recruitmen­t said Covid-19 and the move to digital had put a huge demand on the tech workforce.

White said companies had prioritise­d their digital transforma­tion and this increased demand for people skilled in product, developmen­t and engineerin­g.

Katherine Swan from Randstad said the tech sector was crying out for skilled workers. She added that short courses and on-job learning were better options than traditiona­l qualificat­ions.

“Employers should be looking to upskill the staff they have through mentoring, short, targeted courses and training,” she said.

MoneyHub founder Walsh said returning Kiwis had revived some of the demand in the tech industry but there would still be a skills shortage and plenty of roles to fill.

“Everything has gone digital this year and this will carry on indefinite­ly,” Walsh said.

“There is a real opportunit­y for those in the tech sector to upskill and grab opportunit­ies and for companies to upskill their workforce to meet the demand.”

Online learning and EdTech

With schools and educationa­l facilities thrown into lockdown, education technology became a global phenomenon.

Bob Drummond, from Kiwi digital classroom app Kami, said digital learning went through huge growth, creating demand for software engineers, digital marketers and data scientists.

Kami was continuing to hire, with millions of people worldwide now using the app.

“It’s a digital transforma­tion, so it’ll be the usual STEM careers — the software engineers, digital marketers, data scientists that we hire. As well as a need for digital native teachers, of course, there will also be new education jobs that don’t exist yet,” Drummond said.

Transport and Logistics

The flow-on effect from the growth in e-commerce, with everything from grocery shopping to gifts going online, meant more demand for transport and logistics.

Katherine Swan from Randstad said the pandemic, lockdown and working from home had changed people’s online behaviour. “People are more aware of what services are online and what can be delivered to them,” Swan said. “A lot of people who previously shopped traditiona­lly are now doing their shopping online which leads to growth in different areas such as transport.”

Creative tech

Gaming, creative tech and film have the potential to be New Zealand’s top industry, says Aliesha Staples from Staples VR.

“When 5G becomes more successful there is going to be huge growth in creative tech and the Government has started to realise this,” Staples said.

“Trying things out, developing systems and developing staff is easy in New Zealand.”

She says people from industries such as travel and agricultur­e that had been disrupted by Covid should be looking at creative technology.

“The skills they have can be pushed across,” she said.

“The film industry is crying out for production assistants, runners, and assistant directors — they have the same skills as executive assistants in other industries.”

Engineerin­g and Constructi­on

Jobs in engineerin­g would grow in 2021, Walsh said.

Fulton Hogan was booming and there were large and small-scale developmen­ts and infrastruc­ture planned.

“Fulton Hogan and its growth is the litmus test and then we have the second Harbour Crossing, the City Rail Link and in Wellington Transmissi­on Gully,” Walsh said.

“There are so many projects going on, and some of these are huge.

“These all create jobs right across the board.”

Trades

Builders, plumbers and electricia­ns are doing well and will be in demand in 2021, Walsh said.

House prices have continued to climb and are out of reach for many.

“This means a lot of people will renovate rather than sell,” Walsh said.

The biggest drawcard was the ability to own your own business.

“You have to be profession­al and know how to run your own business but if you do it right the opportunit­ies are endless.”

Call centre and Customer support

E-commerce growth and people working from home has added to the growth of contact centre roles. Lidya Paljk from Tribe Recruitmen­t said there was a marked growth in utilities and telecommun­ication roles. Paljk said there was a big lift in demand for callcentre staff as a result of growth in eCommerce. Swan said the growth of online services accounted for a lot of the demand.

AA Insurance (AAI) had employed 177 additional staff last year to cope with demand and were hiring more this year.

Small Business and the Side Hustle

Last year saw huge growth in the side hustle and it’s expected to keep going this year.

Walsh said people were buying locally so there was money to be made in selling products and services within New Zealand.

“People making money online is a big thing. They might be [doing] UberEats or discover a gap in the market for anything from baby products to homemade candles.”

Facebook meant that people could communicat­e with their market without spending too much on advertisin­g, and overheads could be kept down.

“My biggest advice to someone starting a side hustle is to keep it small, do your research, test the waters and go from there.”

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 ?? Photos / George Novak, Andrew Warner ?? Hira Hona-Kaiako and 9-year-old Te Awanui Yeager have embraced online learning tools at Te Kura o Matapihi in Tauranga, while Rotorua’s Kelly Talbot was the NZ Nurses Organisati­on’s young nurse of the year last year.
Photos / George Novak, Andrew Warner Hira Hona-Kaiako and 9-year-old Te Awanui Yeager have embraced online learning tools at Te Kura o Matapihi in Tauranga, while Rotorua’s Kelly Talbot was the NZ Nurses Organisati­on’s young nurse of the year last year.

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