Skilled Group Explained

Skilled Group
Type:Subsidiary
Location:Melbourne, Victoria
Foundation:1964
Industry:Human Resources, Labour hire
Revenue:A$1,873,893 (2013)
Num Employees:Approximately 50.000 full- and part-time employees[1]
Parent:Programmed Maintenance
Owner:Persol Holdings

Skilled Group is an Australian company headquartered in Melbourne, Victoria. Its core business is labour hire.[2] It is a subsidiary of Programmed Maintenance, which is itself a subsidiary of Japanese labour hire conglomerate Persol Holdings.

The company manages offices across multiple countries; including Australia, New Zealand, United Kingdom, Malta and the United Arab Emirates.

Corporate history

The company was founded in 1964 by Frank Hargrave AO.[3]

In October 2015, Programmed Maintenance (ASX:PRG) acquired Skilled Group.[4] [5]

In October 2017, Programmed Maintenance was acquired by Persol Holdings.

Legal controversies

In 2011, Telstra trainees took the company and its subsidiary Excelior to the industrial relations tribunal. The union said that trainees were not compensated enough for expenses during mandatory training.[6]

In 2015 in a landmark case, a couple was awarded damages of $720,000 against the company after being refused jobs for being non-union.[7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: SKILLED Number of Employees . Macroaxis . 21 March 2014.
  2. News: Skilled Group recovery 'will take time'. Cratchley. Drew. The Sydney Morning Herald. Australian Associated Press. 2010-02-24. 2014-07-15.
  3. News: Skilled turnaround digs up yields. Commins. Patrick. The Sydney Morning Herald. 2012-02-12. 2014-07-15.
  4. Web site: SKILLED was acquired by Programmed Maintenance Services Limited - SKILLED . skilled.com.au . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20151130094617/http://www.skilled.com.au/investor-centre/company-news/skilled-was-acquired-by-programmed-maintenance-services-limited/ . 2015-11-30.
  5. News: Evans. Simon. 2015-06-24. Skilled Group swallowed by rival Programmed Maintenance after 21 years on ASX. The Sydney Morning Herald. 2015-06-24.
  6. News: Trainees argue for more pay to learn. Bibby. Paul. The Sydney Morning Herald. 2011-01-05. 2014-07-15.
  7. Web site: Non-union Perth couple awarded $720,000 after being denied jobs. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 30 March 2015.