Home › Forums › Chat Forum › STW Junior Designer job £15.6k- did I read that right?
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STW Junior Designer job £15.6k- did I read that right?
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binnersFull Member
I’m not arguing with you Rewski. I’m just saying: what percentage of graduate designers end up working at senior creative level at a major global agency? 1% tops, maybe?
That like saying all all footballers earn a fortune because Wayne Rooney does. I’m sure the reserve goalkeeper at Charlton Athletic would take issue with you.
randomjeremyFree MemberAs an aside could one of the web experts tell me how to present a grid of information on a webpage without using html tables?
aracerFree MemberMedian does not equal the average
If you’re doing proof by link to wiki, how about this one (I had to search very, very hard to find it 🙄 )
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AverageThere are many different descriptive statistics that can be chosen as a measurement of the central tendency of the data items. These include arithmetic mean, the median and the mode.
prezetFree MemberAs an aside could one of the web experts tell me how to present a grid of information on a webpage without using html tables?
If it’s tabular data, then use a table – we’re not saying they’re bad to use. Just wrong to use to layout a page design.
miketuallyFree MemberAs an aside could one of the web experts tell me how to present a grid of information on a webpage without using html tables?
Why would you not use a table? Tables for presenting tabular information are fine.
Tiger6791Full MemberNot going to Uni hasn’t hampered me.
Me either, but I regret not going for a few reasons.
(experience, friends, etc.)
MrFartFree MemberAs an aside could one of the web experts tell me how to present a grid of information on a webpage without using html tables?
That would be the correct use of tables.
If your talking about grid systems see 960 grid, Bootstrap etc.
miketuallyFree MemberMedian does not equal the average
It’s an average.
Colloquially, when people say average it’s generally assumed that they mean the arithmetic mean.
But, there are lots of different averages and the misunderstanding of them was one of the reasons why people distrust statistics.
BoardinBobFull MemberMedian does not equal the average
It’s an average.
It is, but the layman doesn’t interpret it that way.
However, a degree in engineering, a post graduate degree in statistics and research methods and currently holding a role as the head of pricing for Europe, the Middle East and Asia for the 4th largest private health insurer in the world, means I’m fairly confident I can distinguish between mean and median…
amt27Free Membertook me 3 years to get a design job after graduating in 2008, nowhere near average salary, interest on my student loan accrues faster than anything i pay off it,
blame the uni’s for churning out low quality degrees (mine was certainly one of these), selling kids a dream that is fantasy (no different to cowell and x-factor, I am never going to design for Apple ffs)
employers are just not interested in training, watched an interview on newsnight a couple of weeks back about trying to boost manufacturing/engineering, boss of a big firm said i see engineering grads driving taxi’s and working in McDs, we need money to train the guys out of uni,
most job vacancies are 80% advertising and 20% actual requirement (i wonder how many recruitment and design sites are linking to the job advert on STW)
prezetFree MemberEssential Skills…
A graduate with good working knowledge of Adobe Design Suite software, specifically InDesign.
Web development skills particularly HTML and CSSDesirable Skills…
Video production using iMovie or Final Cut Pro
Experience of programming languages eg. Cocoa/Xcode, JavaScript, PHP
Interest in mountain biking (having a passion for the content drives innovation and creativity)The deal…
Full time
Starting Salary £15.6kGoing back to the OP – That’s quite alot of skills for £15.5k!!
Sometimes I think companies put all the technical language requirements down without realising quite how much time it takes to learn it. HTML is easy to pick up, as is CSS, to be proficient in takes a bit of time.
However, then going on to ask for cocoa, javascript and php! Are you serious? for £15.5k?!
aracerFree Membera degree in engineering, a post graduate degree in statistics and research methods and currently holding a role as the head of pricing for Europe, the Middle East and Asia for the 4th largest private health insurer in the world, means I’m fairly confident I can distinguish between mean and median…
But didn’t result in you learning that median is an average 😯
trail_ratFree Member“employers are just not interested in training, watched an interview on newsnight a couple of weeks back about trying to boost manufacturing/engineering, boss of a big firm said i see engineering grads driving taxi’s and working in McDs, we need money to train the guys out of uni”
agreed.
i got lucky when i left uni -when drunk on a plane my boss turned round and said – yep you had a degree but what got you the job was the fact your called terry (so is he) and the fact you got off your arse and self funded a trip cycling round new zealand (one of my interview questions was regarding what id done with the year missing on my employment record)
projectFree MemberIf i actually knew what the job of junior designer involved and i had the relevant experience, i would move to Toddy, and work there, earning a salary and working with people who are obviously into their subject, eg bikes and riding, would be a big draw,just from reading the mag and forum you see what a talented lot they are, and to get paid,even if its a lower wage than you want, think of the experience, and the buzz.
Found a linkyhttp://singletrackworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/come-work-with-us-junior-designer-wanted/
Does making a decent cup of tea feature on the application form.BoardinBobFull MemberBut didn’t result in you learning that median is an average
Sigh.
I’m not disputing that, but people are under the impression that the average salary per person is £29k but the report doesn’t say that.
clubberFree Membera degree in engineering, a post graduate degree in statistics and research methods and currently holding a role as the head of pricing for Europe, the Middle East and Asia for the 4th largest private health insurer in the world
Does that mean you’re business core? 🙂
BoardinBobFull MemberDoes that mean you’re business core?
more like business c0ck
binnersFull MemberThat’s quite alot of skills for £15.5k!!
Welcome to he modern jobs market. Graphics especially. It used to specialist areas. Now every employer wants the lot.
A really high conceptual level of Design for print – typography, magazine layout – (with all associated repro knowledge of course), and knowledge of EVERY software package to a very high degree. Then web design too, including basic level programming, Flash animation, video production, etc etc
If you don’t tick all these boxes, you’re ****ed!
IanMunroFree MemberHowever, then going on to ask for cocoa, javascript and php! Are you serious? for £15.5k?!
Yes, Imagine they are serious. Sounds fine to me. They are listing desirable skills there so that a potential applicant can decide whether it’s the sort of post that would suite them.
Plus they are asking for ‘experience of javascript’ rather than ‘an experienced javascript programmer’ which are somewhat different things!corrodedFree Member£15k sounds like a fair sum for a junior role in a tiny company in the North. Especially one where the subject is vaguely interesting and there’ll be lots of opportunities to expand your experience. Small firms offer steep learning curves.
Fact is, anybody in the creative professions in the UK has to accept that there are thousands of equally skilled, hungry young grads out there who’ll do your job for less. If you can’t handle that competition, you should probably go and become a tube driver or binman. It’s supply and demand. You get better pay by building your contacts and your skills, going beyond the call of duty etc. if this job is like my first job (19k in London), you’ll do exactly that. And I’m sure junior doctors have a tougher time.
mastiles_fanylionFree Member£25K for cutting hair 3 days a week.
I’m in the wrong job
She does extras 😉tazzymtbFull Memberlets turn it round a minute, would you spend 1.5k on bike that’ll do a bit of everything from a unknown manufacturer, in a marketplace awash with similar or better spec’d kit from companies with a longer trading history for less money?
Any item or person is only worth what the market place will pay at at that time, if it doesn’t sell or you can’t get a job because of unrealistic wage expectations that your problem not the industries
rewskiFree Memberbinners – yeh I know, I just think that any opportunity should be encouraged, you never know what it leads too. I’m not driven by money, I would say most designers aren’t, I was just pointing out that salaries have the potential to be pretty high.
prezetFree MemberPlus they are asking for ‘experience of javascript’ rather than ‘an experienced javascript programmer’ which are somewhat different things!
True, however this comes across as a ‘jack of all trades, master of none’ approach… I see plenty of job ads were they list dozens of required languages, applications and skills required because normally the employer has no idea what that job really entails, so they list them all as a ‘catch all’.
In this instance how is someone who’s into design (and probably going to have just spent 3 years at uni) going to have experience to a usable level in cocoa/Xcode? And why request it? Are they going to be getting this junior to knock up a couple of iPhone apps, while maintaining their server side code, designing and building a new front end to the site 😀
binnersFull MemberRewski – I agree with you. I said in one of my first posts that Junior Designer can be Art Director in a relatively short timescale indeed. It did for me. Though without the huge salery 🙁 There’s certainly potential. But like you said, if you were after money, you wouldn’t become a designer. Its a bloody great job though. I love it! Still! 😀
GribsFull MemberSeems entirely fair to me. One of my friends took on a recent design grad for less money and what’s likely to be less interesting work. He himself wasn’t paid all that much for his first job (working for the original Singletrack designers) but got experience (and biking freebies) out of it so he now runs his own company and seems to be doing ok.
rewskiFree MemberIts a bloody great job though. I love it! Still!
I’ll drink to that 😉
ElfinsafetyFree MemberCBA reading all that, spesct I’ve probbly read it all in some form or another, but why is it that people seem to automatically expect graduates to earn loads more than everyone else, instantly after leaving uni?
S’all that Class thing, in’t it; a degree once marked you out as a member of an elite. Now, there’s so many other people out there as equally qualified as yourself, that competition for jobs is far higher, and wages subsequently significantly lower.
Graphic design is one of those industries which are little more than a self-perpetuating bullshit machine. Their ‘importance’ in society is overshadowed by the greed of many of those who work in it. Oh look, the bubble has burst, suddenly Graphic designers aren’t as ‘important’ any more, and people don’t want to spend as much money on stuff. Maybe they’ve just woken up and seen the Emperor is in fact naked.
There’s some incredible talent out there in the world of Design, and there’s an awful lot of ‘let’s follow the trends and just make up some crap we can fool people into thinking is cool’.
The Lympic Branding is a perfect example of this. It’s rubbish, and quite frankly cooduv bin thought up by an idiot with absolutely no talent for actual design whatsoever. Actually, it probably was, let’s be honest.
Graphic Design is one of those ultimately superfluous industries that will always be at the mercy of the market; recession equals less money to spend on colouring things in. ‘We’ll just stick with the current branding, if it ain’t broke…’
Don’t get me wrong, I’ve loved my time dabbling in the world of Graphic design, and I love being immersed in such a creative, fun world. But I’m bored with it now, and there’s no money in it for someone like me right now, so I’ve moved into product design and manufacture. 😀 It’s much easier to sell a tangible thing, than an idea.
But we need people to come up with ideas, or we end up stagnating.
Sounds like a reasonable starting salary to me. If I lived up that way, it’s something I’d certainly be inertested in, if I were a fresh young graduate. Considering ST is a relatively small circulation special inertest mayg, I think it’s pretty decent tbh. You could live ok up there on that, speshly if yer young and not settled down with mortgage etc. I doubt it would be anywhere near as demanding and hectic as woking for a London-based company, where you’d get paid barely anything more at that level, and have much higher living costs.
CrellFree MemberIt”s a job, with a salary which for many teens and grads is a rare thing. I doubt they’ll struggle to fill it.
randomjeremyFree MemberIf it’s tabular data, then use a table – we’re not saying they’re bad to use. Just wrong to use to layout a page design.
Great, thanks (and thanks to all the other posters too) – I have some tabular data I need to present as part of a webpage (14 rows x 12 columns) – it’s currently done using a HTML table but I can’t help feeling there is a more elegant solution out there 🙂
prezetFree Memberit’s currently done using a HTML table but I can’t help feeling there is a more elegant solution out there
Nope – it’s semantically correct.
ElfinsafetyFree MemberUnless things change considerably in the next 6-7 years I will be actively discouraging my daughter to go to Uni, unless of course she really wants to. Both me and Mrs STR have our own businesses, left school at 16 and seem to be doing ok.
I find this kind of attitude quite depressing. You have no idea of what a university education can actually give a person, so why be so opposed to the idea for someone else?
Why do so many people think that degree = money, or not, as the case may be? Why’s it always about money? Is that the one and only thing that matters in your life?
Education is about exercising and expaynding the mind, allowing the brain to develop, and the person to be able to have more choices in life than they otherwise wooduv done.
STR; what happens if you or your wife (or even both, God forbid), suddenly lose the ability to do your jobs, through injury or illness? What are your fall-back options?
A university education should never be seen as a route to wealth, but as the key to unlock many more doors than you may have been able to otherwise.
aracerFree Memberpeople are under the impression that the average salary per person is £29k but the report doesn’t say that.
Actually, yes it does.
The irony being that it appears you’re complaining about people not using the correct precise terms…
prezetFree MemberWhy do so many people think that degree = money, or not, as the case may be? Why’s it always about money? Is that the one and only thing that matters in your life?
Education is about exercising and expaynding the mind, allowing the brain to develop, and the person to be able to have more choices in life than they otherwise wooduv done.I think it’s about how much is costs to attend university and the quality you receive from it. Uni isn’t the only place for education, if a person wants to learn, they can do it anywhere – from a laptop, the other side of the world.
If I was at the stage again of deciding to go to uni or not – in the current climate, and how much it costs, I don’t think I’d bother. I think I’d look at getting involved in volunteer work – or trying to find a mentor, and being self taught.
prezetFree MemberHaving a degree will go back to the old days – originally a degree indicated some level of intelligence, as uni’s tended to only accept bright students. Now, they accept almost anyone.
So the difference is going to be, not if you’re smart enough to have a degree, but if you’re rich enough, or have sufficiently run up enough debt.
ElfinsafetyFree MemberUni isn’t the only place for education
True, but it’s a bloody good one though, and I find it quite sad that someone who has no personal experience of it would be actively opposed to their own child going.
Having bin myself, if I were faced with the financial impact of going to uni now, I’d still do it. In a flash. Cos you simply can’t put a price on that experience.
BoardinBobFull MemberThe irony being that it appears you’re complaining about people not using the correct precise terms…
I am a terrible pedant. From my engineering background, I get very annoyed when people talk about how much they weigh, though I stop short of telling them they are talking about mass rather than weight.
The report really is misleading. It refers to the median twice as being £29k, then the average as £29k.
I’d have whoever created the report publicly flogged.
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