What was in the classified documents? [OST Main Logo mobile]( [LOGO OST]( Editor's Note: Occasionally, an opportunity comes to our attention at Open Source Trades we believe readers like you will find valuable. The message below from one of our partners is one we believe you should take a close look at. [divider] Some employers look to hire and continually turn over junior employees â sometimes harming young workersâ careers before theyâve even begun. S Sarah had always dreamed of working in the fashion industry. Aged 21, she decided to follow her dream, move to London and find a career she loved. âLike many young people, my passion was fashion,â she says. âBut the reality wasnât quite so glamorous.â After working for less than a year in fashion retail, Sarah secured an e-commerce assistant role in the head office of a global luxury brand. In both jobs, she was surrounded by like-minded twenty-somethings, all of whom wanted to succeed in the fashion world. âItâs like any creative industry: young people always see it as cool to work in,â she says. âAnd the perks are great, even in sales: weâd get heavily discounted items all the time.â However, Sarah adds that there was always a high office turnover â particularly among low-level staff. âYoung employees would quit all the time: an 18-year-old intern only lasted a week after realising her job was essentially unpaid manual labour, and long hours just carrying and packing away clothing returned from shoots. The interns who lasted months would eventually quit from burnout. There was just a steady churn of young, impressionable workers and nothing was ever done about it â it just became a test of who had the thickest skin.â While Sarah lasted in her job for two years, the excitement of working in fashion soon gave way to frustration and tedium: âAdmin tasks with long hours and bad pay.â Without management offering her a clear career trajectory or a sense of progress, she says her job eventually ground her down â she quit. âBoth management and employees knew it was a competitive workplace to be at â that your job would always be in high demand. If you left, youâd be replaced with another young worker excited to be there.â Experts say there are many employers that specifically hire new graduates looking to pursue their passions â often in competitive, even âglamourousâ careers. In some cases, this can be great for these workers, who are looking for a way into an industry of their dreams. Sometimes, however, young employees can get ground down in low-paying, demanding roles, as employers know that vacancies will always be hotly desired. These situations can leave early-career workers, hoping to establish themselves, making them vulnerable to burnout or disillusionment right at the start of their careers. âUnclouded by experienceâ Many jobs are set up with the expectation that younger workers will grow into them. There are often clear paths for promotion and goals to reach; sometimes companies even offer mentorship and development programmes to guide entry-level employees up the ladder. Even if the climb can be a slog, many employers want to invest in workers to stay with an organisation. Yet experts say there are other companies that take a different tack â setting up infrastructures in which they hire young employees that have little, if any, opportunity for upward trajectory, and then load them up with demanding tasks. In these situations, employers often expect that these young workers will leave the organisation at some point â whether itâs because theyâre at a dead-end or theyâve burnt out from the position. Then, they are generally replaced by other young workers, destined for the same fate. There was just a steady churn of young, impressionable workers and nothing was ever done about it â it just became a test of who had the thickest skin â Sarah Of course, young employees are often expected to grind out the early years of their careers by showing ambition, persistence and resilience in the workplace â in some sense, âpaying their duesâ. Not every young worker without an explicit growth path is at a company that intentionally churns through entry-level talent, says Helen Hughes, associate professor at Leeds University Business School, UK. She points to public relations, for instance, where starting, lower-paid roles âfit into a personâs career trajectory: the expectation is that in the early stages, you have to take junior roles before you can progressâ. Yet some decide to establish what Hughes calls a âshort-sighted model". There are many reasons companies choose to churn through young workers, instead of investing in them. First, there are the financial implications. Fresh grads begin at the bottom of the ladder on starting salaries, and donât have the same compensation expectations of experienced employees. âEmployers often hire graduates because they can pay them less,â says Dominik RaÅ¡kaj, marketing manager at job listings site Posao.hr, based in Croatia. âItâs effectively a source of cheap, undervalued labour.â Additionally, entry-level workers may be more malleable and willing to accept certain working conditions. âThe less experienced the employee is, the more open-minded and generally accepting they are of a work environment,â says Hughes. âTheyâre unclouded by experience, which brings advantages to an employer â theyâre easier to mould.â What was in Bidenâs classified documents? Frankly, it doesnât matter. [This is the REAL scandal](. [Biden]( Porter Stansberry [devider] [Slogan]( You {EMAIL} received this email as a result of your consent to receive 3rd party offers at our another website. 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