Tim G.

Archaeologist
Happy to mentor
Happy to be contacted

About me

Tim G.
Archaeology
Archaeological Heritage Management
Taught Postgraduate
1996
United Kingdom

My employment

Archaeologist
Gloucestershire County Council
United Kingdom
Government and civil service
Large business (250+ employees)
1997

Like this profile?

Add this profile to your favourites so you can return to it later from your account.

A day in the life of a Archaeologist in the United Kingdom

Historic Environment Record Officer for Gloucestershire

How I looked for work

CIFA jobs bulletin, email lists (HERforum) and (back then anyway!) the Guardian

How I found out about the job

National press

The recruitment process

I applied in 1997 for a temporary maternity cover post and at the end of the cover my boss left. I got her job.

My career goals when I graduated

Its archaeology so the only goal is to get a job!

My career history

I have worked in this role since 1997 - after 6 months of unemployment following graduation from York

What has helped my career to progress

My boss leaving so I could apply for her job.

Courses taken since graduation

Various in-house software courses help with the day job and the HER Forum and Historic England run courses and workshops on other aspects of the profession.

How my studies have helped my career

The AHM course enabled me to get a broad understanding of the profession at the time and offered the important opportunity, which I would recommend to anyone else, to volunteer in the job I was aiming to get after graduation

What surprised me about my career so far

The fact that I have been doing the same job for 19 years!

Where I hope to be in 5 years

I do not want to spend my life doing personnel and finance paperwork as a county archaeologist, so I have risen as far as I want to go in local authority archaeology provision. I'd rather be doing than managing.

My advice to students considering work

Try and identify what you want to do early on and get some voluntary experience of it - anyone who has done the job even for a few months is a more attractive proposition for an employer than someone they have to train up. Also, write a good application form - see what they want and address those things. As an employer it makes it much easier if someone clearly states how they meet the job requirements especially when you have to shortlist from 100 applicants to 5!

My advice about working in my industry

As above - there are a lot of people going for the same jobs so you need to make yourself stand out.

Other advice

Persevere

Contacting me

I am happy to discuss any aspect of local government archaeology especially working on HERs

What I do

Manage the HER for Gloucestershire

Skills I use and how I developed them

The job is based around a large Oracle database attached to an Arcmap GIS and skills in both of these were developed 'in house.' Good communication and people skills are required to deal with a host of different enquirers.

What I like most

The variety of the work and the ability to fiddle around with technology and maps!

What I like least

Data entry....

What surprised me most

I wasn't particularly surprised by the job as I had volunteered at Yorkshire CC and knew what I was getting into!

Next steps...

If you like the look of Tim’s profile, the next steps are down to you! You can send Tim a message to find out more about their career journey. If you feel you would benefit from more in-depth conversations, ask Tim to be your mentor.

Related profiles

Stefanie P.
Civil Service Fast Streamer
Civil Service
Archaeology
2012
Lucy D.
Civil Service Fast Streamer
Civil Service
Politics, Economics and Philosophy
2015
Daniel W.
Commercial Manager - Graduate Scheme
Department for Work and Pensions
Politics, Economics and Philosophy
2009