| The most frequently classified position of 2010, the report says, is sales representative, as was the case in 2009. DAILY NEWS photo |
According to human resources website Yenibiris.com's employment report, Turkish companies searched for 50 percent more employees in 2010 compared to 2009.
The most frequently classified position of 2010, the report says, is sales representative, as was the case in 2009.
Unlike 2009, however, the second most frequently advertised position in 2010 was accounting clerk.
In terms of division per sector, the report said the most ad-receiving sector in 2010 was the service sector with 10 percent, followed by construction with 7 percent and health with 6 percent.
The job hunters had applied mostly for positions in the retail and wholesale sectors in 2009, but preferred the health sector in 2010.
The retail and wholesale sectors did not lose too much popularity; becoming the second most-preferred sector by job hunters in 2010. The public relations sector was third.
The top three positions that received the greatest rate of applicant interest were sales representative, accounting clerk and shop assistant.
On the provincial level, the highest number of classifieds was published in 2009 in Istanbul with 53 percent. Istanbul maintained its position atop the list although the rate receded to 35 percent in 2010, according to the report.
In 2009, Istanbul was followed by Ankara, İzmir, Antalya, Bursa, Kocaeli, Tekirdağ, Adana, Konya, and Muğla. In 2010, the list was the same except Edirne snuck in ahead of Muğla.
Speaking to Anatolia news agency, Yenibiris.com General Coordinator Burçak Pak Yılmaz, recalled that in the second half of 2008 the effects of the global economic recession began to be felt in Turkey and particularly after September 2008 there was a serious decline in the number of classifieds.
She said around September-October 2009, the first signals of recovery from the crisis were seen in the service sector. "What we mean by the service sector is not health or information technologies, but service providing companies to other companies like cleaning companies, security firms and rent-a-cars.”
She also said toward the end of 2009, the number of classifieds started to increase though slowly and in the first three months of 2010 the figures for the service sector were particularly striking in terms of growth and size.
The most frequently classified position of 2010, the report says, is sales representative, as was the case in 2009.
Unlike 2009, however, the second most frequently advertised position in 2010 was accounting clerk.
In terms of division per sector, the report said the most ad-receiving sector in 2010 was the service sector with 10 percent, followed by construction with 7 percent and health with 6 percent.
The job hunters had applied mostly for positions in the retail and wholesale sectors in 2009, but preferred the health sector in 2010.
The retail and wholesale sectors did not lose too much popularity; becoming the second most-preferred sector by job hunters in 2010. The public relations sector was third.
The top three positions that received the greatest rate of applicant interest were sales representative, accounting clerk and shop assistant.
On the provincial level, the highest number of classifieds was published in 2009 in Istanbul with 53 percent. Istanbul maintained its position atop the list although the rate receded to 35 percent in 2010, according to the report.
In 2009, Istanbul was followed by Ankara, İzmir, Antalya, Bursa, Kocaeli, Tekirdağ, Adana, Konya, and Muğla. In 2010, the list was the same except Edirne snuck in ahead of Muğla.
Speaking to Anatolia news agency, Yenibiris.com General Coordinator Burçak Pak Yılmaz, recalled that in the second half of 2008 the effects of the global economic recession began to be felt in Turkey and particularly after September 2008 there was a serious decline in the number of classifieds.
She said around September-October 2009, the first signals of recovery from the crisis were seen in the service sector. "What we mean by the service sector is not health or information technologies, but service providing companies to other companies like cleaning companies, security firms and rent-a-cars.”
She also said toward the end of 2009, the number of classifieds started to increase though slowly and in the first three months of 2010 the figures for the service sector were particularly striking in terms of growth and size.
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