Skip to ContentSkip to Navigation
About us Latest news News News articles

University of Groningen graduates highly valued by labour market

02 November 2012

A degree certificate from the University of Groningen is of great value to graduates looking for a job with one of the major enterprises. That has been revealed by the 2012 Global Employability Survey published on 24 October by the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune.

The University of Groningen is in 81st place in the survey. That means the University is the second Dutch university on this ranking list of 150 universities in America, Asia and Europe, after the Erasmus University Rotterdam (69th place).

The research for the list was conducted by two firms specialized in HRM work, the French consultancy bureau Emerging and the German research institute Trendence. Both questioned several thousand staff and management of companies in twenty countries where they keep note of which universities supply them with the ideal young candidates.

American universities like Harvard, Yale and MIT have very high scores, as do Cambridge and Oxford in the UK. Chinese universities such as Peking University and Shanghai Jiao Tong University are referred to in the research as ‘emerging’. In recent years they have been making significant progress towards the upper regions.

The research reveals that major enterprises attach a lot of importance to soft skills, for example being able to deal with cultural differences, communication skills, the ability to work in teams and creativity. According to President of the Board of the University of Groningen Sibrand Poppema, studying at his university provides an excellent grounding: ‘And in the future the University of Groningen will concentrate even more on providing its students with a broad, international training, as well as pay more attention to entrepreneurship.’

See: 2012 Global Employability Survey and New York Times

Last modified:12 March 2020 9.53 p.m.
View this page in: Nederlands

More news

  • 13 May 2024

    ‘The colourful cells of petals never get boring!’

    Most people will enjoy colours in nature. However, the interest of evolutionary biologist Casper van der Kooi goes much further: he studies how flowers, birds, butterflies, and beetles get their colours. He also studies how these colours are used...

  • 13 May 2024

    Trapping molecules

    In his laboratory, physicist Steven Hoekstra is building an experimental set-up made of two parts: one that produces barium fluoride molecules, and a second part that traps the molecules and brings them to an almost complete standstill so they can...

  • 08 May 2024

    Juliette de Wit, Femke Cnossen and Maite Laméris receive YAG grant

    Juliette de Wit, Femke Cnossen and Maite Laméris have received a YAG Grant of € 6,000 for an interdisciplinary project on the long-lasting socio-economic consequences of the ‘Arbeitseinsatz’ in the Netherlands. The grant enables them to explore...