Posted By Alexander Falconer
To be honest I am surprised at the variation in the responses, especially those who are claiming that employers are looking at those who have Nebosh Diploma/CMIOSH rather than those at NGC/Tech IOSH level.
I will have to disagree, the NGC whilst is a very good qualification in its own right and as someone kindly pointed out is a qualification aimed at Supervisors/Managers, please do not let this hinder you in applying for HSE positions.
What I have found to help, when job hunting, even in these difficult times, is to look at what is going to make you stand out from the rest. Its all very well and fine, highlighting what you can do on your cv, the majority of HSE roles are of similar nature, and any prospective employer wants to know what else you can bring to the table. What achievements/benefits have your previous employers gained as a result of you being in your previous posts? Look at those that have tangiable/cost benefits, ie reduced accidents & incidents by x% year on, reduced energy savings by x% or ££ over x years, received RoSPA Safety Awards, implemented ISO 14001, etc, etc
Make yourself stand out as being the best of the bunch, and this will go a long way to helping you get your foot in the door, be prepared at interviews to back yourself up what you claim. No use in saying you implemented ISO 14001 when you only audited the system, or even wrote one procedure, or claim you achieved a RoSPA safety award when it was your H&S Manager who compiled the data.
Speaking from my own experiences, it is possible to apply and obtain Diploma required posts, with only a NGC, but have other qualities that befit such a post ie in my case 15+ years in QHSE, backed up with additional qualifications (ie Eng Degree, Env Diploma, Management Quals, etc)Sometimes employers will offer to provide the Diploma training as part of the package.
Franky
You queried NVQ Level 4 and the Nebosh Diploma Level 6, they are recognised at the same level
see
http://www.qca.org.uk/li.../qca-06-2298-nqf-web.pdfThe national qualifications framework previously was 5 levels, the revised one (2006) is now 8, and the pdf link will show exactly where they sit. It is even more confusing up here as the Scottish Qualifications Framework is 12 levels and SVQ level 4 sits at level 8 and not at level 6.
Have a nice day