S
Sparklife
Hello all,
I'm Kev 39 and seriously considering investing in quality training to become an electrician after making a decision on a career change. Having done some googling it appears as though the c&g 2365 level 1 and 2 is the way to go for a complete nobody like me wanting to get into the trade. Then there is the 2357 NVQ element to complete. It doesn't bother me that I'm 39, as I'm a grafter learn relatively quickly and thankfully a fit lad. In addition to this, I have come across media reports that are conflicting but indicate there will be a need for sparks moving in to the years ahead, however the last link from the national careers website indicates there will be less vacancies as we move towards 2020
Demand for Electrician Courses Soars as Result of Population Boom | Options Skills Ltd
We need engineers and electricians, not more hairdressers and personal trainers, colleges are told | Society | The Observer
Electricians in the UK Market Research | IBISWorld
https://nationalcareersservice.direct.gov.uk/advice/planning/jobprofiles/Pages/Electrician.aspx
I take such reports as food for thought as opposed to being accurate but, for you pros out there do the reports ring right ? Can you corroborate what the reports indicate ? There are more reports but you get the idea.
I would love to hear from anyone who has gone down the 2365/2357 route and at some stage after that gone self employed and are now running your own business.
I understand these courses are attainable after around 3 years, however I think it would be more around 5 years or more before being comfortable to describe yourself as competent.
The reason I am enquiring is that I believe I would enjoy the work of an electrician and being in control of your own working day, something which is not an option in my job at the moment. Plus I think hard work for myself will be of more benefit than hard work for my current job.
Thanks in advance and hope this is a healthy thread.
Kev
I'm Kev 39 and seriously considering investing in quality training to become an electrician after making a decision on a career change. Having done some googling it appears as though the c&g 2365 level 1 and 2 is the way to go for a complete nobody like me wanting to get into the trade. Then there is the 2357 NVQ element to complete. It doesn't bother me that I'm 39, as I'm a grafter learn relatively quickly and thankfully a fit lad. In addition to this, I have come across media reports that are conflicting but indicate there will be a need for sparks moving in to the years ahead, however the last link from the national careers website indicates there will be less vacancies as we move towards 2020
Demand for Electrician Courses Soars as Result of Population Boom | Options Skills Ltd
We need engineers and electricians, not more hairdressers and personal trainers, colleges are told | Society | The Observer
Electricians in the UK Market Research | IBISWorld
https://nationalcareersservice.direct.gov.uk/advice/planning/jobprofiles/Pages/Electrician.aspx
I take such reports as food for thought as opposed to being accurate but, for you pros out there do the reports ring right ? Can you corroborate what the reports indicate ? There are more reports but you get the idea.
I would love to hear from anyone who has gone down the 2365/2357 route and at some stage after that gone self employed and are now running your own business.
I understand these courses are attainable after around 3 years, however I think it would be more around 5 years or more before being comfortable to describe yourself as competent.
The reason I am enquiring is that I believe I would enjoy the work of an electrician and being in control of your own working day, something which is not an option in my job at the moment. Plus I think hard work for myself will be of more benefit than hard work for my current job.
Thanks in advance and hope this is a healthy thread.
Kev