On the application forms, most employers will ask about your work experience and about the benefits you have gained from it. Anything that has given you life experience in what employers consider the "real world" outside of the university is helpful. sometimes out-of-the-ordinary jobs like a high-rise window washer or church organist canmake your application distinctive and help it to be remembered. This is extremely useful when you are competing with hundreds of other graduates for a job.
It is estimated that around 70 percent of students in some countries work at some countries work at some stage while they're studying. Most of these part-time jobs are simply to help students earn some money to help pay their way through college. However, temporary work can still bring useful experience and insights, and it can provide future employers with evidence of an individual's on-the-job skills such as teamwork, working under pressure, and dealing with people.