Specialism in a sentence as a noun

However, its good to have a specialism too, that is be a master of one or two things.

Depending on the specialism some labs still publish research using them.

They demand specialism in hiring, but refuse to respect specialties once they've pulled people in.

This might scream "somebody that hasn't yet settled on one specialism" but what it really means is that I am an integrator.

Their creativity isn't being unleashed, it's being forced into a narrow specialism.

Right now, if my specialism becomes obsolete I can at least pick up a non-specialist alternative job - will this be the case in the future?

- if you stop them working for a tech news site they can't get another job. It's not as if they can become sports journalists or war correspondents, a large part of their value is in their specialism and contacts in that specialism.

Yes, he's a doctor - of internal medicine with a specialism in endocrinology, but that hardly qualifies him to discuss the brain.

For how is this different from anything that anyone could've done already?That cynicism aside, I do think there's a big potential in being the gateway to such specialism as it can be hard to find the best agents for a given place.

In order to specialize with sufficient depth to compete in pretty much any non-local market, you necessarily must either work for someone else, or hire many other people to work for you - and thereby make your specialism planning, coordination and managing, rather than anything else.

Specialism definitions

noun

the concentration of your efforts on a particular field of study or occupation

noun

the special line of work you have adopted as your career; "his specialization is gastroenterology"

See also: specialization specialisation specialty speciality