Endorsed Employer Feature

Organisations that are a great place to start your career

May 14, 2026

There’s a version of an early career role where you’re in the room but not really part of it. Watching, shadowing, waiting for permission to contribute.  And there’s a version where the work is real from day one, the support is genuine, and someone is paying attention to where you’re headed.

The difference matters more than most people admit, so we asked seven endorsed employers which side they’re on.

Featured in this story
Honeywell Australia
Pitcher Partners Melbourne
Powerlink
Rheinmetall Defence Australia
Softcat
Toyota Australia
Unitywater

Honeywell Australia: Nobody watches from the sidelines

Once a month at Honeywell, the entire organisation blocks its calendar for My Development Day. No meetings, no deliverables. Just protected time to learn and reflect. It applies to everyone, including the graduate who started last week. Early Careers & Leadership Programs Leader Robbie Verrall says:

“There’s a lot of support, shared wins, and a genuine sense of community, which makes those early steps in your career feel a lot less daunting.”

The structure behind the culture is equally deliberate. At Honeywell, graduates join one area and stay for two years, building genuine depth in their field alongside a cohort, a mentor, and graduate-specific development workshops.

Honeywell learning day

“You’re not stuck on the sidelines. You’re contributing to projects that improve safety, security, sustainability in critical infrastructure and buildings that impact the way people live and work for the better.”

This level of support pays off. Honeywell sees strong retention from their graduates, many of whom stay and move through the organisation into specialist, technical, or leadership roles. 

honeywell team

Pitcher Partners Melbourne: The women’s network built by graduates

The Pitcher Partners’ Women’s Network was created by Ignite Program graduates who saw what was missing and built it themselves, creating opportunities for women and gender-diverse employees to connect, hear career stories, engage with external speakers and build leadership capability across the firm. Employee Experience Advisor Alex Sertic says:

“Starting your career at Pitcher Partners means joining a firm that is deeply
invested in learning, connection and long-term career success.”

Pitcher Partners

The Ignite Program gives Analysts, as they refer to them, benefit from structured learning and development through practice area rotations, building both breadth and depth in their technical capability and the confidence to shape their own career direction over time. The firm has been awarded Best Culture in the Accounting and Advisory industry by GradAustralia.

Breeana Clements is one example of where that leads. She joined as an intern in 2019, returned as a graduate in 2020, and has since progressed through multiple promotions to Assistant Manager, Business Advisory and Assurance. 

Pitcher Partners

“Through strong mentoring, early exposure to meaningful client work, and trust from leaders, I’ve been given valuable opportunities to progress. The firm’s investment in training has developed both my technical and interpersonal skills throughout.”

“Analysts early in their careers feel supported not just in their role, but throughout their career journey with us,” Alex adds.

Pitcher Partners also actively supports professional qualifications, including CA, CPA and CTA, and considers other relevant postgraduate pathways depending on career stream. 

Powerlink

Dani’s path from Apprentice to Advanced Diploma to Test Technician to Specialist is the kind of story Powerlink builds by design. The organisation offers apprenticeships, traineeships, graduate programs, and vacation work, all structured around intentional career development. For women entering technical fields, there’s also the Fast Five program, run with Trellis Collective. And flexible work arrangements mean early career employees don’t have to choose between doing the job well and doing life well.

“What I love most about my job is the technical side of things. It involves
real-world, real-time problem-solving, and it’s incredibly satisfyingto fix issues,
especially when things don’t go as planned.”

Powerlink
Pitcher Partners

Rheinmetall Defence Australia: Intern today, Engineer tomorrow

Shantelle Small joined Rheinmetall Defence Australia as an intern (Class of 2024) and is now a Design Engineer Mechanical. Her advice to anyone just starting out is direct: things can feel challenging at first, but keep going. She’d know. She says: 

“From my first day as an intern to my time as a Graduate Engineer, I felt supported every step of the way. Things can feel challenging at first, but keep going, you’ll grow quickly.”

Pitcher Partners

Engineering Intern DeeDee-Taylah Russell (Class of 2025) speaks to the belonging piece:

“I always felt supported and included as part of the team, which helped me grow both technically and professionally.”

Bianca Novelli (Class of 2026) points to the support structure that makes it possible:

“My buddy, mentor and supervisor have been just as eager to teach and answer all of my questions.”

For Engineering Student Meg Waldie (Class of 2026), it’s the scope of what’s on offer:

“There is so much opportunity to learn a wide range of disciplines if you take the initiative to throw yourself in.”

Engagement and Workforce Development Specialist, Karrie Bishop describes it as a program designed for real contribution from the start. Interns work on live defence technology projects, supported through mentoring, structured feedback, and team rotations.

Pitcher Partners

“Interns and graduates are given hands-on experience on real projects, not
just observational tasks, which allows them to contribute to cutting-edge defence
technologies and build practical skills early.”

Rheinmetall Defence Australia has been recognised as a top Australian intern employer and is highly rated for culture and work-life balance. Female participation in intern cohorts has grown from 26% to 58% across recent years.

Rheinmetall team

Softcat: From Graduate to Regional Manager

Georgia Appleby came to Softcat as a Graduate. She’s now a Regional Manager. Her summary of the difference:

“From the beginning of my career, Softcat has provided an environment built on trust, support, and opportunity. I was encouraged to take on responsibility early, develop through experience, and progress based on capability. That foundation has been key to my growth and progression within the business”

Georgia Appleby

Behind that experience is a deliberate culture. Softcat builds its people-led approach around five values: Fun, Responsibility, Community, Intelligence, and Passion. Employees are encouraged to take their careers in the direction they choose, and early career women are supported through internal networks, mentorship, development opportunities, and inclusive policies.

Senior Recruiter Rupali Chadda says early career opportunities span Sales, Marketing, Customer Services, and Technical Support, with clear progression paths in every area from day one. There’s also the Women in Business network, which runs events, wellbeing activities, and community initiatives that help new starters feel connected early.

“Softcat prioritises progression and development for internal talent, with each
department offering clear progression paths, internal and external training sessions,
and a mentoring programme.”

Beyond graduate roles, Softcat also offers apprenticeships across multiple areas and 12-month internships for those on university placement years.

Rheinmetall team

Toyota Australia: Learning the art of problem solving

Toyota Australia offers an early-career talent environment where learning, innovation and purpose come together. As a global mobility company with deep local roots, the organisation provides stability, meaningful work, and opportunities to grow across a wide range of disciplines

Salome Fonseka joined as a Graduate Engineer. What she remembers most from her early years is the way people taught her.

Salome Fonseka

“In my early roles, I worked closely with experienced engineers who invested time in
teaching me how to think, not just what to do. I learned how to break down problems,
understand root causes, and communicate clearly with different stakeholders.”

Talent Acquisition Coordinator Antony Zenonos says the aim is to give early career professionals both genuine guidance and genuine autonomy through structured learning, rotational opportunities, and exposure to senior leaders. The result is people who grow in both the technical and human skills they need to lead.

“I didn’t just gain technical experience. I developed confidence, resilience, and a mindset focused on continuous improvement. It’s a foundation that has allowed me to grow steadily and feel confident about the direction of my career.”

Toyota team
Rheinmetall team

Unitywater: From vacation to vocation in two years

Annaleaze joined Unitywater as a vacation student in November 2022. In the two years that followed, she moved into the Graduate program, led a 12-month innovation project, presented to the Executive team and the Board, and was nominated for the 2026 Australian Water Association Young Water Professional of the Year award.

Her project: trialling seagrass as a way to offset nutrient discharge from wastewater treatment plants. She led stakeholder management, worked with Traditional Owners, coordinated site selection, and drove the research from start to finish. 

When asked, Talent Acquisition and Pathways Manager Jacki Weatherstone said:

“Throughout this time I have seen Annaleaze grow in confidence and develop as a
highly competent professional engineer.”

Unitywater’s Graduate Program comes with a permanent contract from day one, and the organisation commits to keeping graduates beyond the program. This year, 11 of 20 vacation students stayed on in ongoing roles.

Rheinmetall team

What you know now

You know more than the job description would tell you. You know what Powerlink built for Dani Saunders. What Unitywater trusted Annaleaze to lead. What Honeywell protects on the calendar every single month. The network Pitcher Partners’ graduates built themselves. Where Georgia Appleby is now. What Rheinmetall trusted Shantelle with from day one. How Toyota taught Salome to think.

That level of detail is worth looking out for when you’re deciding where to start.. The specifics, not the graduate brochure. Explore all seven employers on WORK180 and find the right fit.

Your next step

Want to work at one of these workplaces?

Follow any of the seven below to get alerts the moment they post new early-career roles, share workplace updates, or open their next graduate intake.

Honeywell Australia

Multiple locations · AU

Learning
My Development Day — full org pauses monthly for protected learning
Career growth
Strong graduate retention with internal progression
Real work
Day-one projects in safety, security and sustainability

Pitcher Partners Melbourne

Melbourne · AU

Program
Ignite Program — structured analyst learning and client work
Community
Women’s Network built by graduates, for graduates
Recognition
Best Culture in Accounting and Advisory — GradAustralia

Powerlink

Queensland · AU

Pathway
Apprentice-to-Engineer progression with study support
Development
Fast Five program for early-career women, run with Trellis Collective
Flexibility
Flexible work arrangements available from day one

Rheinmetall

Multiple locations · AU

Support
Buddy, mentor and supervisor structure for every intern
Recognition
Top-rated Australian intern employer for culture and balance
Real work
Hands-on engineering on real projects, not observational tasks

Softcat

United Kingdom 

Community
Women in Business network — events, wellbeing and connection
Pathways
Graduate, apprentice and 12-month internship routes
Progression
Clear progression paths mapped by every department

Toyota

Melbourne · AU

Mentoring

Worked side-by-side with experienced engineers from day one

Mindset

Focus on problem-solving thinking, not just technical execution

Purpose

Learning, innovation and meaningful work from day one

Unitywater

Sunshine Coast · AU

Security

Permanent contract from day one of the Graduate Program

Progression

11 of 20 vacation students moved into ongoing roles this year

Real impact

Vacation-student-to-award-winning-grad pathway proven

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About the Author

Fiona is an employer brand professional with experience in workplace storytelling and career-focused content. As the Global Strategy Lead, Employer Brand & Inclusion at WORK180, she works closely with organisations to share the initiatives and experiences that shape inclusive and supportive workplaces. Fiona is passionate about finding opportunities that allow her to combine her strengths in people experience design to cultivate and manage diverse workplace practices in a way that continues to seek and celebrate difference.

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