What's Good and Bad About Temp Work
What you need to know before signing up with an agency
Even in good times, job-hopping is normal in this country. But with a slumping economy and anxiety about job security, temporary employment agencies are seeing a rise in applicants.

After six straight months of private-sector job losses, if you're looking for a job, you're not alone. Temp agencies are often the place to jump-start your search. They provide an option for those who have growing gaps in their résumés and those who are looking for extra money without entering (or going back) into the workforce full time.
McKinsey Quarterly called hiring temps, or "tapping into the world of talent," the third top business technology trend to watch as companies increasingly parcel out "more work to specialists, free agents, and talent networks." The American Staffing Association reports that temporary and contract staffing agencies employed 2.96 million people each day and 11.4 million individuals over the course of 2007.
For workers, temping can be the difference between getting by and not. But before you walk into an agency office, there are some things you should know about when to temp and when it's better not to.
The Upside
Filling gaps: If you have a blank-slate résumé or a growing gap in employment dates, temp agencies provide a way to fill them. Elizabeth Freedman, who runs a Boston career development and communications firm, says temp agencies can "help newbies get a foot in the door to a wide range of companies."
Taking those positions can say more about you than you think. "Employers are experiencing the Y generation and millennials as having the attitude that tasks are 'below' them. By doing temp work, it indicates a good attitude and work ethic that is desperately sought by employers in their workforce," says Michelle Tillis Lederman, founder of Executive Essentials, a corporate training and coaching company.
Return from retirement: On the flip side of career experience, as the newly retired struggle to piece together their finances, they increasingly seek temp positions—a happy medium between full-time work and full-time retirement. Temp agencies say they are welcome. "The graying workforce," says Chuck Ray, the Washington, D.C., regional director of temp giant Manpower, is becoming "more attractive to employers as they bring acumen and judgment to jobs."
Moving moms and dads: When a couple moves for one to take a job, the other often temps while looking for permanent work in the new location. Sue Shellenbarger of the Wall Street Journal, who blogs about women in business, notes the increasing use of an alternative to the usual temp gig: the "returnship." This is a temporary eight-week position structured like an internship. Returnships, which started to gain popularity in 2004, are aimed at higher-level workers and directed to fix the "damaging 'brain drain' caused by talented mothers and others opting out of fast-track careers," Shellenbarger writes. Even if you're not manager material, though, temp jobs can ease relocation job woes.
"Talent crunch": Manpower's Ray says the hardest jobs to fill right now are in retail, accounting, and healthcare. Workers who are "unflappable," able to deal with customers with ease, and also have a bit of technical savvy are always in "huge demand," he says. It's a mix of "presentation" (i.e. looking put-together) and high-tech skills that get the better jobs, Ray says. Temping candidates with those skills are always needed and easy to place, he says.
The Downside
Probably not permanent: "In reality, no job is permanent or secure," says Michael Neece, chief strategy officer for PongoResume, an online site that helps people write résumés and cover letters. In a shaky job market, temp agencies can cut out the legwork and quickly connect you with the right job. But even as many temps hope to stay on as a permanent worker, most don't. "Often people will go to temp agencies believing it's the path to a full-time job," says Deborah Bailey, a career and life transition coach who writes for WomenforHire.com. "It's best to look at temp work as just that—temporary."
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Reader Comments
Most of the staffing agencies offer bogus ads on jobs!!
I have about 8 years of experience in total, and intensely for about 4 months communicating with staffing agencies, job hunters, headhunters, you name it. During that 4 months I sent my resume hundreds of times, registered and placed my profile tens of times at various agencies, like Monster, Robert Half Technology, Careerbuilder, many many others. Almost all job ads on those agencies websites will lead you to another agency website where you have to register to login and provide as much info about yourself, as humanly possible, then to another. All the same jobs are advertised on hundreds of these agencies websites. They just copy them from each other, but say it's "their" client that has the particular job opening. They are %99,999 fake scam bags. The jobs they advertised are non-existent. They fake these adds to attract the flow of resumes and other people's personal info which the sell in bulk to insurance companies, banks and others who are willing to pay for it, as well as sucking for more credit lines from banks for their "activity". These are the same kind of businesses that brought this financial crisis to this country. They saturated this job market, standing as a great wall between the employers and potential employees, drawing the wages down by placing the fake ads with imaginary low wages. These are the parasites on the body of the society. Most of them uneducated, rude, have absolutely no knowledge in the professions they supposed to be working with. About me: I am not a welfare recipient or permanently unemployed, smelly dude, as these proponents of the fake agencies are trying to portrait the people who complain on these outrageous fakers, I am IT professional with 11 years of continued employment, and highly valued at my job. As I said, I have about 8 years of the experience communicating with them, send them my resume few hundreds times, has been interviewed by them over the phone few hundred times, and only 3!! of all actually got back to me with some info. Most off these businesses and agents, or so called agents and head hunters deserve legal actions against them and forceful closing for bashing employment market in the US, stealing peoples personal information, lying, annihilating people's trust for business and for other people. These are not small petty crimes, they destroy the very fabric of the society. I am calling on the authorities and people to unite, pull the resources and investigate this evil, as there are just too many of these cockroaches.
Bologna
This is basically another trend to low ball workers. The workers in these temp jobs are paid far below market and given no benefits. Add to the fact they are fired for any reason with just one phone call and no recourse. As a chemist, I had staffing agencies calling left and right with their low ball offers.
The agencies also are typically very dubious. They are well known for such practices as placing fake job ads to get people to sign up and come to their offices. When the candidate gets there, they are offered a much less attractive position or none at all. Also, when the candidate provides references the agency hounds the references to come in. Finally, they persistently ask where you have been applying so they can hound these companies to give them the jobs. The temp to perm notion sometimes exists, but more often it is used as bait.
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