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Mind the gap: graduate recruitment in small businesses

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Mind the gap: graduate recruitment in small businesses. / Pittaway, Luke; Thedham, Jon.
In: International Small Business Journal, Vol. 23, No. 4, 08.2005, p. 403-426.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Pittaway, L & Thedham, J 2005, 'Mind the gap: graduate recruitment in small businesses', International Small Business Journal, vol. 23, no. 4, pp. 403-426. https://doi.org/10.1177/0266242605054053

APA

Pittaway, L., & Thedham, J. (2005). Mind the gap: graduate recruitment in small businesses. International Small Business Journal, 23(4), 403-426. https://doi.org/10.1177/0266242605054053

Vancouver

Pittaway L, Thedham J. Mind the gap: graduate recruitment in small businesses. International Small Business Journal. 2005 Aug;23(4):403-426. doi: 10.1177/0266242605054053

Author

Pittaway, Luke ; Thedham, Jon. / Mind the gap : graduate recruitment in small businesses. In: International Small Business Journal. 2005 ; Vol. 23, No. 4. pp. 403-426.

Bibtex

@article{00ba701693714929b2a07641dc74018f,
title = "Mind the gap: graduate recruitment in small businesses",
abstract = "The purpose of the study was to analyse the perceptions that small business owner-managers held of graduates and graduate skills. The research focused on the tourism, hospitality and leisure sectors and used two methods, focus groups and a survey of firms in Surrey, UK. Firms employing less than 10 people dominated the study. The research highlighted some interesting results and perception gaps and this article will present these results. Micro-business owners, for example, believed that their businesses were not appropriate for graduate employment and that they could not utilize graduate skills. As firms grew, however, their readiness to recruit graduates increased and owner-managers who had professional qualifications were also more likely to recruit graduates. The study indicated that smaller firms placed greater emphasis on the ability of the graduates to {\textquoteleft}fit{\textquoteright} within the business and findings suggested that SMEs expected graduates to be able to perform and contribute immediately. The results of the study are drawn out in this article because they impact on the way students are developed in Higher Education.",
keywords = "graduate recruitment, graduate skills, hospitality, small businesses, tourism, training",
author = "Luke Pittaway and Jon Thedham",
year = "2005",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1177/0266242605054053",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
pages = "403--426",
journal = "International Small Business Journal",
issn = "0266-2426",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Mind the gap

T2 - graduate recruitment in small businesses

AU - Pittaway, Luke

AU - Thedham, Jon

PY - 2005/8

Y1 - 2005/8

N2 - The purpose of the study was to analyse the perceptions that small business owner-managers held of graduates and graduate skills. The research focused on the tourism, hospitality and leisure sectors and used two methods, focus groups and a survey of firms in Surrey, UK. Firms employing less than 10 people dominated the study. The research highlighted some interesting results and perception gaps and this article will present these results. Micro-business owners, for example, believed that their businesses were not appropriate for graduate employment and that they could not utilize graduate skills. As firms grew, however, their readiness to recruit graduates increased and owner-managers who had professional qualifications were also more likely to recruit graduates. The study indicated that smaller firms placed greater emphasis on the ability of the graduates to ‘fit’ within the business and findings suggested that SMEs expected graduates to be able to perform and contribute immediately. The results of the study are drawn out in this article because they impact on the way students are developed in Higher Education.

AB - The purpose of the study was to analyse the perceptions that small business owner-managers held of graduates and graduate skills. The research focused on the tourism, hospitality and leisure sectors and used two methods, focus groups and a survey of firms in Surrey, UK. Firms employing less than 10 people dominated the study. The research highlighted some interesting results and perception gaps and this article will present these results. Micro-business owners, for example, believed that their businesses were not appropriate for graduate employment and that they could not utilize graduate skills. As firms grew, however, their readiness to recruit graduates increased and owner-managers who had professional qualifications were also more likely to recruit graduates. The study indicated that smaller firms placed greater emphasis on the ability of the graduates to ‘fit’ within the business and findings suggested that SMEs expected graduates to be able to perform and contribute immediately. The results of the study are drawn out in this article because they impact on the way students are developed in Higher Education.

KW - graduate recruitment

KW - graduate skills

KW - hospitality

KW - small businesses

KW - tourism

KW - training

U2 - 10.1177/0266242605054053

DO - 10.1177/0266242605054053

M3 - Journal article

VL - 23

SP - 403

EP - 426

JO - International Small Business Journal

JF - International Small Business Journal

SN - 0266-2426

IS - 4

ER -