Labour Hire Workplace Health and Safety

Youngbrook Recruitment are passionate and proactive about workplace health and safety (WHS) to deliver safe and skilled labour hire and temporary staffing solutions to your company. Our transition to ISO 9001:2015 for Quality Management Systems ensures we manage workers’ safety, regulatory requirements, risk management, continuous improvement opportunities and meet customer expectations. Our commitment to safety has seen no WorkCover claims in over two years.

This October is National Safe Work Month in Australia, so in line with this year’s theme, “a moment is all it takes” Youngbrook Recruitment have taken a moment to review our work health and safety policy.

certified recruitment company

Our Workplace Health and Safety

At Youngbrook Recruitment, our labour hire workers’ safety is a high priority. With safety initiatives pre-engagement and during the short-term or long-term labour hire engagement to protect your company’s productivity.

  • WHS Pre-placement Risk Assessment – Before we place temporary and labour hire employees at our client’s premises an on-site WHS risk assessment is completed along with observation of work practices and operations where the temporary employee will be working. This identifies any hazards associated with the work and workplace environment to ensure compliance.
  • Talent Acquisition Safety – Our talent acquisition and recruitment process ensure all employees possess the required tickets or certifications and any required skills assessments.
  • Safety Inductions – We ensure workers know about manual handling safety, the use of specialised equipment, first aid responders and facilities, emergency situation procedures, and risks involved in tasks along with preventative and protective control measures.
  • Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) – We ensure our temporary and labour hire staff have the correct PPE for the host employer’s workshop, warehouse or site work project. Additionally, PPE requirements are communicated clearly before commencement to ensure compliance with the client or site-specific WHS.
  • Hazard and Incident Reporting – If a workplace health and safety hazard is identified we facilitate negotiations with the host employer to develop a Safety Action Plan to manage hazards, control the risks and ensure our employees are safe at work.

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Safety at Work

At Youngbrook Recruitment we actively promote the forethought of safety at work and how that can change the life of employees, their families, the employer and the workplace. This October for Work Safe Month, join us in taking a moment to review your workplace health and safety hazards, risks and WHS areas for improvement. Protect your company by protecting your workers’ safety.

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Youngbrook Recruitment AddressLevel 1 / 122 Lytton Road, Bulimba QLD 4171

Youngbrook Recruitment phone numberPhone: (07) 3399 6899

Youngbrook Recruitment email addressEmail: simone@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au, ybr@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au

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11 Tips on Business Success

What 11 Years of Business Success has Taught Us

This year Youngbrook Recruitment are celebrating our 11th anniversary and have been reflecting on our business success as an industry leader in the Australian recruitment industry across labour hire, temporary staffing solutions and permanent recruitment.

Reflecting on our business success stories we will share with you how to build your brand equity to increase customer retention and drive new business. The eleven areas we have found most important for our business success are:

1. Quality Service Delivery

Although a focus on the number of sales and ROI will prevent you from sinking in the market, when employees are pushed to focus more heavily on sales over quality service delivery it can affect customer satisfaction and ultimately business success.

As a result, we go above and beyond for candidates and clients, with the aim to communicate well and return all phone calls by the end of the day. We genuinely care about our clients and candidates, working to benefit all parties.

The quality of your employees’ customer service delivery can be measured through KPIs, such as customers’ overall satisfaction, customer retention, employee productivity, customer conversion rate, number of complaints and the complaint escalation rate.

2. Employee Engagement

The satisfaction of your employees is important for not just employee retention but customer satisfaction.

The cycle of success and the cycle of failure coined by Schlesinger and Heskett in 1991, reveals that employee satisfaction produces a positive service attitude. As a result, your business will receive higher customer satisfaction, higher customer retention rates, customer loyalty and repeat purchases.

The key requirements identified in the cycle of success you need to apply to produce employee job satisfaction are a broad job design, above average wages, extensive training, and the feeling of employee empowerment to control quality and customer complaints.

Does your business follow the cycle of success or the cycle of failure or are you somewhere in between?

cycle of business success diagram                  cycle of business failure diagram

 

3. Building a Solid Reputation

The value of a well-known brand name is in its effect on brand awareness, brand loyalty and brand associations. Your business’ brand equity is created through a product or service that is superior in quality, recognisable and has a memorable brand image.

Reflecting on Youngbrook Recruitment’s reputation, Simone Young the Managing Director said, “Our client base, as well as our talent pool of skilled and available workers, has been primarily built on positive word of mouth referrals. We are regularly praised for our quality service and excellent candidates that meet the recruitment brief.”

In a study cited by Forbes, 64% of marketers believe word of mouth is the most effective form of marketing. Therefore, utilising word of mouth marketing through earned media and reviews can build a solid reputation for your business.

4. Competitive Advantage

Just because a company is a market leader, does not mean it will maintain its position. Michael Porter identified four generic strategies to maintain a sustainable competitive advantage to differentiate your business from competitors.

  • A cost leadership advantage is when a business provides value at a lower price by improving operational efficiency.
  • A differentiation strategy is when a company delivers benefits better than competitors, such as a unique or high-quality product, faster delivery, innovation, or higher customer service.
  • A focus strategy is when a company services their target market better than competitors. A cost focus emphasises cost minimisation in a narrow target market. Whereas, a differentiation focus is when a company pursues strategic differentiation in a narrow market.

square diagram or Porter's generic strategies

5. Continuous Improvement on Technology and Methodology

To continually grow as an industry leader, we monitor advances in technology and methodologies to make tasks efficient. As a result, we have paired our quality service with an ISO 9001 Quality Management System. So, our recruitment methodology has a strong customer focus, continual improvement, relationship management, a process approach to achieve consistency, and a leadership direction and mission.

6. People as a Resource

One key resource is hiring the right people for the position and company culture. Youngbrook Recruitment focuses on selecting talent who have skills and experience in areas that existing employees do not. Consequently, this enables the business and existing employees to be challenged and grow.

7. Competitor Monitoring and Analysis

To ensure you are a leader in your industry, regular competitor and market analysis will help you keep ahead of industry changes. We stay ahead of market changes by monitoring competitors’ strategies, website content, social media presence, and job advertisements.

Regular competitor analysis and reports will empower you to differentiate yourself from competitors, understand the talent competitors are employing, and catch new industry developments.

8. Manage your Team Effectively

It is important for your management edge to not be sharp, as you do not want to blow the roof of the office like a volcano. So, do not sweat the small stuff.

Managing Director of Youngbrook Recruitment, Simone Young said, “People come to work wanting to do the right thing. So, appreciate that things get done, even if it is not the way you would complete the task yourself. Work only gets done when people are doing something. So, when mistakes happen it is a good opportunity to grow and develop.”

9. Follow a Business Plan

Following the Australian Government’s Business plan template and guide, you can gain an understanding of the market and plan the business’ goals and objectives, finances, as well as plan for the future.

Therefore, you can set your business’ priorities and track your progress. Furthermore, it will ensure you allocate your time and resources strategically to obtain the business’s goals and objectives.

10. Diversification

The saying “do not put all your eggs in the same basket” is important to ensure your business succeeds now and in the future. Before the Global Financial Crisis, we specialised primarily in permanent recruitment and had more positions than people to fill them. However, with the GFC we expanded our horizons to provide temporary, labour hire and contract recruitment services. For the past nine years, this has been our core business.

By continually diversifying your business goods and services, or by having a marketing strategy that targets multiple market segments you can create a safety net against changes in your industry and the economy.

11. Success Does Not Come Easy

Lastly, success does not happen on its own—it goes hand in hand with hard work.

From the new kid on the block in 2007, being told to “come back when you have more skin in the game” to a recruitment agency that is regularly cited as the best in Brisbane, the business has come a long way in eleven years.

“I was told to come back in five years when the recruitment agency had more experience. But I knew that in five years I would be far too busy with too many jobs and clients on the books that they would have to call me instead,” Simone Young said.

Simone Young’s determination and persistence got Youngbrook Recruitment off the ground and growing rapidly to the successful business it is today.

 

By applying these eleven pillars of business success that Youngbrook Recruitment have learnt over the past 11 years of success, we hope you can succeed at achieving your business goals.

 

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Youngbrook Recruitment AddressLevel 1 / 122 Lytton Road, Bulimba QLD 4171

Youngbrook Recruitment phone numberPhone: (07) 3399 6899

Youngbrook Recruitment email addressEmail: simone@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au, ybr@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au

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The Story of Youngbrook Recruitment (2007-2018)

11 Years of Delivering Quality Candidates and Exceptional Service that Saves Client’s Time and Resources.

Youngbrook Recruitment’s focus on professional value adding in the areas of cost-effective pricing and quality service has seen the company grow from a start-up to an industry leader over the past 11 years. We have secured exclusive contracts with market leaders on major projects and have expanded in Queensland throughout Brisbane, West to the Surat Basin, North to Mackay, and South to Victoria.

The Managing Director, Simone Young, reflected on the company’s success by saying, “Eleven years ago, it all started, wondering what my next career move would be, what agency I would join next having tried them all from start-ups to boutiques to global PLC’s. Three interviews later with large firms and three offers in front of me and totally uninspired to accept any of them—I was definitely at a crossroad.

I think it is this job seeking experience that sees me connect with the talent I represent, I have been in their position and that feeling never really leaves you. I aim to deliver the best opportunities for candidates that offer them career advancement, stability and security.

The best advice that I received at this time was from my parents, which was, “It does not matter if you make mistakes, it means you are doing something and are having a crack at your own thing, if it all goes South you are young enough to get back up.” So, I crafted my game plan and Youngbrook Recruitment was born.

It was not always easy, it was a fast start, I was excited, blasting through knocking on doors and being told to come back once I had more “skin in the game”. I remember thinking after my last job I have no skin left that is why I am here. I thought if my name and experience was not enough I needed to build a robust structure around the brand. So, I got Quality Endorsed to ISO 9001 standard, met some good people along the way and most of them are still with us today working in the Management Team or as key service providers.

Everything was going great, I was envious of my previous colleagues who had a two to three years head start on me, regretting that I had left this run so late, I employed some Consultants and there were more positions than people to fill them until it came, the GFC. I remember everything stopped overnight, at the time Youngbrook Recruitment only recruited permanent positions and then I heard words like recruitment freeze, moratorium, and rationalisation of headcount. It was time to re-engineer Youngbrook Recruitment, but to what?

Then the call came, “I need someone for a day” and I had my lightbulb moment—Youngbrook Recruitment will provide temporary, labour hire and contract recruitment services. For the past nine years, this has been our core business.

Today, Simone Young possesses over 22 years’ experience in the recruitment industry and has secured major shareholding on major projects, due to Youngbrook Recruitment’s reputation for robust and tested methodologies that sees us leading from the front. We are consistently growing our talent pool through the persistent loyalty of our Field Team and their brand evangelism for our excellent service through our referral program.

We are committed to growing our agency further with the appointment of Recruitment Resourcers and Recruitment Managers, who follow our commitment to appointing exceptional people and delivering quality service.

I have to say that this journey and the company’s success could not have been possible if it was not for the support of Client’s each year who utilise our service exclusively, as well as the brilliant work the Field Team do across Trades, Technical, Construction, Supply Chain and Support—these individuals are the company’s heroes, it is their company, they represent the Youngbrook Recruitment brand each day and through their effort the company continues to build. So, a personal thank you for believing, educating and doing the best you can do—it is appreciated.

 

To celebrate our 11 years of success we are giving you the chance to WIN a $200 gift voucher to thank you for your brilliant work in our Field Team.

 

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Youngbrook Recruitment

Youngbrook Recruitment AddressLevel 1 / 122 Lytton Road, Bulimba QLD 4171

Youngbrook Recruitment phone numberPhone: (07) 3399 6899

Youngbrook Recruitment email addressEmail: simone@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au, ybr@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au

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8 Job Interview Tips

You have passed the telephone screening for your dream job, so how do you prepare for the interview? Approaching the job interview with a well-prepared plan will alleviate stress and give you the best chance to land your dream job. Follow our top eight job interview tips to gain an advantage over other candidates, who may have more experience than you.

1. Presentation is Key

Always ensure that you are well presented—perhaps obtain one outfit that can be used for all interviews.

2. Research the Company

Research the company and what they do, as this gives you topics to discuss with the interviewer.

3. Arrive Early

Aim to arrive at least 10 minutes early to give yourself time to settle yourself before your interview begins. Research the location and the directions of how to get to your interview, this will ensure that you arrive calm and on time.

4. Know the Interviewer’s Name

Ensure that you know the names of the interviewers. If there is a panel, it may not always be possible to obtain all the names, ask your recruiter how many will be present at your interview.

5. Maintain Eye Contact

Always look at your interviewer directly. If there is a panel, when you answer start by looking at the person that has asked you the question and then continue your answer by looking at all other members of the panel to include them.

6. Ask Questions

Remember you are also interviewing the company to see if this is the position for you. Ask questions about the role that is on offer, such as what are the KPIs and what other requirements the position has. This shows that you are interested in the position and the prospect of working with their company.

7. First Impressions Count

A great hint when entering your interview is to keep your portfolio in your left hand, as this leaves your right hand free to greet your interviewer.

8. Last Impressions are also Important

Always shake the hand of the interviewer at the end of the meeting and thank them for their time. This is your last chance to make a lasting impression on the interviewer.

If you are looking for your next career move contact Youngbrook Recruitment on (07) 3399 6899 or visit our available job openings. We are actively recruiting candidates in supply chain, trades, sales, marketing, and senior appointments.

 

Keep in Touch With Us

Our responsiveness continues to drive results.

Youngbrook Recruitment

Youngbrook Recruitment AddressLevel 1 / 122 Lytton Road, Bulimba QLD 4171

Youngbrook Recruitment phone numberPhone: (07) 3399 6899

Youngbrook Recruitment email addressEmail: simone@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au, ybr@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au

 

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Christmas Countdown: 10 days to your New Career

Are you on the job hunt this festive season? To help you on your merry way, Youngbrook Recruitment has compiled a 10-day Christmas countdown to get you ready for a new career in 2018.

If you follow this Christmas countdown, you can remove the stress from your new year job hunt by getting prepared now. Let the countdown begin.

10. Are you as Jolly as Santa in your Position?

Do you have Sunday night blues at the thought of Monday morning? If you are unhappy in your position due to a lack of accomplishment or appreciation for your work, what are you doing about it? It might be time to reevaluate your position and your career direction. Searching for your next position and being able to start achieving your dreams will surely bring a smile to your face.

94% of Youngbrook Recruitment’s permanent placements remain engaged or promote within the company they are placed. Let us help you find a position you love by calling us on (07) 3399 6899. After all, ‘tis the season to be jolly.

9. Write your Career Wish List

Do you feel like autopilot has been engaged and you are stale in your career? Why not write down a list of dream positions and companies that you aspire to work for. Do you dream of owning your own company or advancing up the career ladder? To achieve your career aspirations, create a visual career map that goes beyond position titles to assess the knowledge and skills you will need to master the professions.

8. Build your Gingerbread House

Compile a list of all the relevant skills, experience and achievements you have for the position you are applying for.

7. Are You on the Naughty or Nice List?

Did you leave your previous employers on good terms? CareerBuilder’s survey found that an applicant’s resume was memorable for the wrong reasons when their resume listed a former employer as a reference whom they embezzled money from. I’m sure your reasons for leaving or wanting to leave are not as severe. References are a fundamental part of job applications, but the point is to only include people as references if they will have something nice to say about you.

6. Avoid Social Media Ghosts of Christmas Past

Social recruiting is used as a personality and cultural-based assessment tool. In fact, 93% of recruiters conduct social searches, to support their recruitment process. The same study also found that a shocking 55% of recruiters have reconsidered a candidate based on their social profiles. The main reasons recruiters reconsidered a candidate were references to illegal drugs (83%), sexual posts (70%), and spelling and grammar mistakes (66%). If these three Ghosts of Christmas Past are present on your social media profiles, you need to edit what is available to the public. So, you can present yourself in the best light for potential employers.

5. Send your Elves to Work

Send your happy little helpers to work to make your resume and cover letter a present worth giving to prospective employers. Ask your friends and family to edit and proofread your documents for spelling and grammar mistakes. Harris Interactive’s study found that 58% of employers will dismiss candidates with poor spelling and grammar mistakes. Exhibit your professionalism with content formatted to be easy to read.

4. Stand out like Rudolph and His Red Nose

Stand out from the herd of reindeer by personalising the cover letter to the organisation. Forbes states, 79% of hiring managers pay more attention to resumes customised for the position. It is important to consider how your skills differ from everyone else applying for the position and how these skills meet the position criteria. If your skills can be written in quantifiable achievements, you can demonstrate how your experience will indicate future performance.

3. Do Not Overdo the Tinsel and Baubles

Although tinsel and baubles can make your Christmas tree look spectacular. The phrase “less is more” coined by Robert Browning in his 1855 poem “Andrea del Sarto” should be applied to your resume format. There are exceptions to this rule though. Colour and typography is acceptable for marketing and graphic design positions, but conservative designs should be used for most other industries.

2. Remember Stocking Fillers

Remember to fill your stocking… I mean resume, with industry keywords that relate to your specific profession or industry. Weave keywords strategically into your resume that portray your professional brand. But make sure you avoid LinkedIn’s list of overused keywords unless they can add value to your skills and achievements.

1. Celebrate Christmas Eve

Put your feet up and celebrate the completion of your resume and cover letter. You are set to apply for position after Christmas when businesses restart for 2018.

Merry Christmas

The Team at Youngbrook Recruitment wish you and your family a very Merry Christmas and hope that 2018 is a year filled with success.

We look forward to working alongside you again in 2018. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

 

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Our responsiveness continues to drive results.

Youngbrook Recruitment

Youngbrook Recruitment AddressLevel 1 / 122 Lytton Road, Bulimba QLD 4171

Youngbrook Recruitment phone numberPhone: (07) 3399 6899

Youngbrook Recruitment email addressEmail: simone@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au, ybr@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au

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The Dos and Don’ts of Social Media: What Your Employers Look for When Hiring

Bursting into relevance over the last decade, there is not yet a rulebook when it comes to social media use. The use of the platforms themselves has changed markedly over the last ten years; those photos that we so flippantly put up in 2007, when Facebook was still very much a novelty, would probably never see the light of day now.

The use of social media is in such a constant state of flux. Therefore, putting together a set of hard and fast rules about how you should use Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn when looking for work will always be fraught with danger. But, by taking cues from recruitment agencies, we can get an idea of some of the basic dos and don’ts as stipulated by these professional hirers.

So, what should and should not you be doing on social media if you would like to come across as the perfect prospective employee?

The Dos

The first cab off the rank is LinkedIn, which sells itself as the world’s largest professional network. This is no false bravado either—according to Career Glider, a massive 79% of recruiters use LinkedIn to hire. Additionally, 90% of those users trawl through profiles, searching for, screening and contacting prospects along the way. Essentially this means that by creating a well-rounded LinkedIn profile, you will be applying for jobs without even knowing it.

Invest time in your LinkedIn profile, including as much relevant information as possible. Be active on the site, trading endorsements for endorsements. If you have an inactive profile with just a few connections, it will become clear to recruiters that it was created out of obligation—a placeholder that allows you to say “yeah, I’m on LinkedIn”. Engagement on LinkedIn shows motivation, enthusiasm and work ethic to potential employers.

Those aforementioned snaps from 2007 that are lurking in the depths of your Facebook timeline may be hilarious when they come up on your feed as a memory. But they could spell trouble for your professional ambitions. Therefore, if you are serious about landing your dream job, it is best to untag yourself from less savoury posts. While you may think photos from 10 years ago would be hard to find, a google image search of your name may prove otherwise.

Twitter is the most conversational of social platforms, and as such it is often used by recruiters to get a good sense of how a person operates. Use Twitter to put forward the best version of you. Make yourself eminently searchable, by talking with industry influencers and by using industry-specific hashtags. Heck, you could even talk directly to the recruiters or employers themselves.

The Don’ts

In keeping with the ‘best version of yourself’ philosophy, Twitter use for job seekers is as much about the don’ts as it is about the dos. Do not get into frivolous fights with keyboard warriors. Do not post ironic or sarcastic messages that could be misconstrued. According to Jobvite’s social recruiting survey, 93% of hiring managers will review a candidate’s social profiles before offering a job. So, make sure they do not get the wrong impression.

business woman in blazer multi-tasking on phone and computer. overlayed with job seeker advice text.

According to the same survey, amongst the worst things you can make reference to on your social profiles are illegal drugs (83% of recruiters class this as a negative), sexual activity (70%), the use of profanity (63%), guns (51%) and alcohol (44%). Interestingly, bad grammar is the third biggest creator of negative perceptions, with 66% of recruiters saying it was a turn-off. So be sure to spellcheck before you post.

Ideally, if you have got somewhat of a chequered history when it comes to social media, you do not want to leave your profile public for all to see. Now is the time to set your privacy preferences to Fort Knox.  Allow snooping recruiters to just see the most basic of information. Another alternative can be to go by a pseudonym (although names can be tricky to change on platforms like Facebook).

Many people use platforms like Twitter to vent about their current work situation. But it is incredibly important that you do not. If a prospective employer sees that you are using your social accounts to knock your current or previous employers, they will not see things from your side—they will see things from the point of view of your employer. That will result in an instant strike through your name.

In the end, social media use for job seekers is fairly basic. You want to treat it as somewhat of a cocktail party; dress well, shake hands confidently, and put the best version of yourself forward.

While the 2007 version of you is lurking in there somewhere, there is no need for them to show their face just yet.

 

Are you looking for a job in trades, supply chain, business support, sales, marketing and senior appointments? Contact Youngbrook Recruitment on (07) 3399 6899 or search available job openings.

 

Keep in Touch With Us

Our responsiveness continues to drive results.

Youngbrook Recruitment

Youngbrook Recruitment AddressLevel 1 / 122 Lytton Road, Bulimba QLD 4171

Youngbrook Recruitment phone numberPhone: (07) 3399 6899

Youngbrook Recruitment email addressEmail: simone@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au, ybr@youngbrookrecruitment.com.au

CONTACT US