February 21st, 2012
The FMCG industry covers an extensive variety of consumable goods like:
Grocery items like toiletries, sodas, pre-packed goods and cleaning items
Highly perishable items like fruits, vegetables, meat products and dairy products It also includes baked products like pastries and cakes.
Beauty items, cosmetics and toiletries
Pharmaceutical products
Paper products like notebooks and greeting cards
Plastic products
These retail products have short-lived shelf life compared to kitchen and other home appliances. The items are commonly replaced in a couple of days or in a few months time; this is because they are consumed by the consumers on a day to day basis.
The FMCG industry is a highly competitive due to branding and product advertising. The manufacturers continue to develop and enhance their products. Similarly, they search for strategies to keep up with the market and consumer trends. FMCG manufacturers and producers continuously set their sights for sales venues and outlets for their products in order to achieve their targeted sales goal. There are scores of FMCG vacancies worldwide owe to the industry’s growing participation in the market.
Here are some FMCG vacancies which are gaining popularity among fresh graduates as well as to those seeking that career change:
Managers for offices and factories which deals to either the administrative aspect and, the production and distribution of goods
Sales, marketing and finance
Advertising which relates to the product’s promotion through various media including the internet
Market researchers which cover consumer research, market segmentation as well as product positioning which focus on the retention strategy of the product in terms of its consumers.
Industry leaders offer competitive salaries and career prospects to its applicants and employees. This make FMCG vacancies one of the most sought after job opportunities worldwide.
You will be amazed to find out that the FMCG industry plays a pivotal role in the economies of many countries worldwide. Take a look at these figures:
In North America alone, the FMCG industry is worth more or less US$ 2 trillion, and the industry is still expanding.
In the United Kingdom, the FMCG industry employs 14% of its workforce and it is estimated to worth 14.5 billion and it is still growing.
New Zealand’s FMCG industry forms 5% of its Gross Domestic Product.
FMCG industry in India is approximately worth US$13.1 billion and it is the country’s fourth largest sector. The figure is expected to double up in the coming years.
Posted in general | Comments Closed
February 21st, 2012
We see trucks on the freeway everyday, but discount their importance to our way of life. Here is an overview of the history of the trucking industry and its importance.
The word truck comes from the Greek word “trochos” which means wheel. This is interesting because it reflects the idea that the earliest use of the invention that was to alter the world was the transportation of goods. It was always possible for humans to transport themselves rather easily by jumping on the back of a horse, but it was not possible to pack everything they owned on the animal’s back. It was carts and wagons that were the first wheeled vehicles.
This is the purpose of the modern trucking industry. It moves material goods from one place to another. In the United States, goods have been moved long distances over a variety of highways. The first highways were the rivers, and barges and steamboats were the carriers. Next came the railroads and goods were moved over the iron rails that eventually ran from coast to coast. Wagons and carts continued to doing the hauling, and the first freight companies took on the task of transporting the goods from the river ports and railheads and distributing them to the surrounding areas.
The invention of the combustion engine was the revolutionary development that brought the truck to the forefront. Highways of asphalt began to connect every part of the country, and development no longer depended on the rivers and railroads. Today it is estimated that 81% of the value of the nation’s freight moves by truck, and over 60% of its tonnage. This fact is evident to any traveler who is used to seeing the endless procession of tractor trailer haulers moving day and night over the Interstate highways, or lined up in rest areas and truck stops.
The importance of the trucking industry to the nation’s economy is best illustrated by the amount of government regulation that it endures. The thought of a trucking strike has haunted the nation’s leaders for many years. Trucks are truly the lifeline of the nation moving the food, fuel, and goods that are necessary to keep our world operating. There are large trucking companies with thousands of individual trucks, and small companies with only a hand full. There are independent haulers with only a single truck sometimes driven by a husband and wife team. They haul every thing that you could possibly imagine, and our world could not long survive without them. It has been a long way from that first two wheeled cart pulled by an ox to the eighteen wheel diesel driven giants that ply our highways today.
Posted in general | Comments Closed