The Commercial Appeal

More summer jobs turning permanent

Employers convert posts as they struggle to find good workers

- Paul Davidson USA TODAY

With employers scrambling for workers, they’re increasing­ly viewing summer hires not as temporary laborers to meet a seasonal surge in demand but as a pool of potential employees.

As summer jobs season enters its final weeks, more businesses are making permanent job offers to their seasonal workers, many of whom are accepting them, staffing experts say.

The efforts are happening across age groups and industries, from high school graduates in restaurant and retail jobs to college interns in white-collar fields such as accounting, marketing and data analysis.

“Companies are looking at this type of labor to play a bigger role,” said JoAnne Estrada, global head of contingent workforce solutions for staffing firm Randstad Sourcerigh­t.

“You’re building a pipeline of talent for the future,” said Amy Glaser, senior vice president of Adecco Staffing.

That 4 percent unemployme­nt rate is making for a tight labor market in which available workers are scarce, the staffing officials note. In May, there were more job openings than unemployed people for just the second month in the past two decades, according to the Labor Department. And 2.4 percent of all workers quit jobs, typically to take another one, the largest share in 17 years.

As many as 15 percent of summer workers are being converted to permanent staffers across industries, Glaser estimates, up from 1 percent to 2 percent in past years. And up to half of college interns are accepting job offers, though many can’t start until they graduate next spring, said Tom Gimbel, CEO of LaSalle Network, a Chicago area staffing firm.

In late May, Jill Whitehead, 37, took a part-time temporary job at market research company Focus Insite, helping complete a rush of projects while other staffers took summer vacations. Whitehead’s task was to round up about half of the total 45 participan­ts in a focus group. Instead she quickly corralled all 45.

“She was obsessed,” said Jim Jacobs, president of the West Chester, Pennsylvan­ia-based company.

Within a few weeks, Jacobs offered her a long-term contractin­g job that will turn into a permanent project manager position as soon as she completes training.

Jacobs is struggling to find workers, with only 2 of every 10 applicants qualified for his openings, down from 4 or 5 in 10 previously.

“I said to myself, ‘Somebody’s going to hire (Whitehead), so I might as well be the one,’ ” he said.

For Whitehead, the job is a godsend. For seven years, she freelanced part time as a project manager, executive assistant and website developer. But the single mother couldn’t snag a full-time job because she needs to largely work from home to take care of her four children.

When she heard Jacob’s offer, “I was ecstatic,” she said. “I love getting people” for focus groups “and arranging the project. It makes me feel on top of the world ... I’m going to retire from the company.”

Many firms also “are branding” temporary jobs in new ways, Glaser said. In lower-wage industries – such as restaurant­s, retail and hotel – recent high school grads may be offered permanent jobs as cashiers or waitresses but provided training that places them on a track to be shift managers.

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