I don't read as much as I will, and I almost never recommend books, but one book that I believe ought to be standard reading for anyone who would like to enter to rope access is: "The World is Flat" by Thomas Friedman.

You don't have to trust with every point this books makes for it to alter your perspective on (your work) life. Maybe take it as a sizable bitter pill of contemporary reality if you could Rope Access Singapore, however the statistics and stories which can be presented by this book deliver a knockout punch to anybody who thinks they are immune to the pressures of the international job market. Rope access is at the epicenter of this job market by default as a result of ever emerging worldwide offshore rope access requirements. As rope access is becoming universally accepted as a better and more effective (not only financially - those bed spaces that large scaffold teams use up offshore have significantly more of an implication to the entire rig performance than we realize) option to complete work at height it can become a known and expected section of offshore installations worldwide. With which come the technicians of the world.

We all owe the North Sea credit for being in the same light that the world owes the Wright Brothers recognition for flight. Respect and reverence, but only in a historical sense. Sir Richard Branson isn't going to offer any USA airline any slack when he's establishing a fresh intercontinental route. Air travel is an extremely competitive industry that will require investment and innovation (Government handouts notwithstanding) to remain at the front. Rope access could be the same.

My opinion is that the only way forward is usually to be the best. Offering companies a specialization is a superb way forward. Another way is if you paint, be the best painter as you are able to be. Don't complain about items that the company can't control, they don't want daily emails about how precisely the foodstuff isn't edible on board. It has a great deal of effort to get ahead offshore, and it will not get any easier anytime soon.