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Hey OP, have you ever taken a course in human resources management in the time that you have spent earning your business degree?
If so, you probably have learned about the fact that when employers are looking to hire someone for a position, they have a certain number of KSAOs(Knowledge, Skills, and Other attributes) that the employers are looking for. As long as someone fits those traits, they can apply with the organization that is hiring.
The employer can set parameters as to whom they advertise the position to, and what demographic to target. However, it's not really possible to just say "we'll only take 500 applications, and select from those 500", since limiting the talent pool that way will prove to be detrimental to any organization, not just the CF. I would say that the CF targets a pretty broad demographic from all the ads that I have seen everywhere (my university gym, on buses, on the internet, etc.). In no way they are limiting their talent pool by the way that they advertise, so your claims of CF purposely limiting the number of applicants are baseless.
As for young people not considering the CF as a viable option, yes, your argument for that may have some merit to it. However, you have to realize that as we move to a more global economy, someone with certain talents are not just confined within the borders of their own country. Companies around the world are all looking for the best and the brightest, and they might not get it from within their own countries. Take for example how Mark Carney got appointed as the Governor of the Bank of England.
If someone is really the ladder climbing type, they can probably go somewhere where there are less formal rules regarding advancement and promotion than the CF. As well, advancements in the civilian world will be more recognizable, people will probably know what a partner at a law firm is. They might not always know what a brigade commander is. All I'm saying is that a lot of people join the CF as a calling, not just a job. Just like how some people become doctors or lawyers as a calling, they are not in it for the money.
That's just the way it is sometimes, a lot of people nowadays are only going into certain professions for the financial compensation that they can provide, and they operate on extrinsic motivation rather than intrinsic motivation, and it'll take more than just you posting on a thread on some website to change that.
A lot of posters brought up the point of "unlimited liabilities", that is true that today's society is more focused on "covering one's rear" than accepting full liability, up to and including their lives. I'm sure you see a lot of companies with the letters LLC or LLP as their suffix, as they stand for Limited Liability Corporation/Partnership, which means the owners of that company are not legally liable for certain things. This is a societal problem, not just with the CF, so posting here is not going to help either.
I really hope that what I have typed here was taught to you in class at some point, because if not, then I have serious doubts about the quality of your school if they grant you a business degree without knowing all of this, or the fact that you can't construct an effective argument.
Good luck with whatever it is that you want to do in life.
If so, you probably have learned about the fact that when employers are looking to hire someone for a position, they have a certain number of KSAOs(Knowledge, Skills, and Other attributes) that the employers are looking for. As long as someone fits those traits, they can apply with the organization that is hiring.
The employer can set parameters as to whom they advertise the position to, and what demographic to target. However, it's not really possible to just say "we'll only take 500 applications, and select from those 500", since limiting the talent pool that way will prove to be detrimental to any organization, not just the CF. I would say that the CF targets a pretty broad demographic from all the ads that I have seen everywhere (my university gym, on buses, on the internet, etc.). In no way they are limiting their talent pool by the way that they advertise, so your claims of CF purposely limiting the number of applicants are baseless.
As for young people not considering the CF as a viable option, yes, your argument for that may have some merit to it. However, you have to realize that as we move to a more global economy, someone with certain talents are not just confined within the borders of their own country. Companies around the world are all looking for the best and the brightest, and they might not get it from within their own countries. Take for example how Mark Carney got appointed as the Governor of the Bank of England.
If someone is really the ladder climbing type, they can probably go somewhere where there are less formal rules regarding advancement and promotion than the CF. As well, advancements in the civilian world will be more recognizable, people will probably know what a partner at a law firm is. They might not always know what a brigade commander is. All I'm saying is that a lot of people join the CF as a calling, not just a job. Just like how some people become doctors or lawyers as a calling, they are not in it for the money.
That's just the way it is sometimes, a lot of people nowadays are only going into certain professions for the financial compensation that they can provide, and they operate on extrinsic motivation rather than intrinsic motivation, and it'll take more than just you posting on a thread on some website to change that.
A lot of posters brought up the point of "unlimited liabilities", that is true that today's society is more focused on "covering one's rear" than accepting full liability, up to and including their lives. I'm sure you see a lot of companies with the letters LLC or LLP as their suffix, as they stand for Limited Liability Corporation/Partnership, which means the owners of that company are not legally liable for certain things. This is a societal problem, not just with the CF, so posting here is not going to help either.
I really hope that what I have typed here was taught to you in class at some point, because if not, then I have serious doubts about the quality of your school if they grant you a business degree without knowing all of this, or the fact that you can't construct an effective argument.
Good luck with whatever it is that you want to do in life.