| |  | Get work experience when at school to see if it’s the career for you |
| |  | Go to college full-time to do an electronics servicing course (if there is one near you) |
| |  | Start as a trainee – or apprentice – and go to college as part of your job |
| |  | No particular GCSEs but passes in maths, English, science and practical subjects very useful |
| |  | NVQs in electronic servicing |
| |  | BTECs and NVQs in other engineering subjects may help |
| |  | Connexions centres |
| |  | Job centres |
| |  | Through applying for work apprenticeships |
| |  | School and college careers notice boards |
| |  | Speculative letters/visits/emails |
| |  | Newspaper and industry publications adverts |
| |  | Adverts displayed at premises and on industry/company websites |
| |  | Job offer after work experience |
| |  | Word of mouth |
| |  | A Guide to Job Hunting gives tips on CVs, interviews and job letters. To view click here |
| |  | Repair work needs to be good to meet guarantee standards |
| |  | It helps to have a mechanical mind and really know the things you are repairing |
| |  | You might concentrate on repairing things made by one company |
| |  | You could work for a repair company or the repairs department of a shop that sold the item |
| |  | You might repair all sorts of things (from fridges through to DVDs)- otherwise you might just repair one type (such as washing machines) |
| |  | Dealing with customers can be an important part of the job |
| |  | You need to keep up-to-date with new products |