ANZSCO 561113

Telephone Betting Clerks

EMPLOYED

190

PART-TIME SHARE

35%

FEMALE SHARE

50%

MEDIAN WEEKLY EARNINGS

N/A

MEDIAN AGE

29

ANNUAL EMPLOYMENT GROWTH

N/A

Telephone Betting Clerks record and process customer bets and account details over the telephone for horse and dog racing, and other sports events. They may work in call centres.

  • Records and enters bets, debiting credit and bank accounts electronically
  • Records and enters bets electronically and in transaction ledgers
  • Issues electronic tickets and prepares summaries of transactions
  • Monitors amounts of money placed on race entrants
  • Checks details and numbers on winning betting tickets against those in electronic records, and pays out money on winning tickets
  • Verifies the identity and account balances of betting agency customers
  • Answers betting inquiries over the telephone, via email and in person
  • May work in a call centre
On this page

    Hours worked

    Source: ABS, 2021 Census of Population and Housing based on place of usual residence.
    Note: those who were classified as "Employed, away from work" at the time of the 2021 Census (accounting for approx. 8% of total employment), have been excluded from the "Average full-time hours worked per week" denominator.
    Hours worked Telephone Betting Clerks All Occupations
    Share of workers who work full-time hours 65% 64%
    Average full-time hours worked per week 42 hours 44 hours

    Industries

    Telephone Betting Clerks work in industries like:

    Source: ABS, 2021 Census of Population and Housing based on place of usual residence.
    Note: industries that comprise less than 5% of an occupation have been suppressed.

    States and territories

    New South Wales

    31.4%

    Victoria

    2.6%

    Queensland

    8.2%

    South Australia

    0.0%

    Tasmania

    0.0%

    Northern Territory

    46.9%

    Australian Capital Territory

    0.0%

    Source: ABS, 2021 Census of Population and Housing based on place of usual residence.

    Age and gender

    Age and Gender Profile
    Source: ABS, 2021 Census of Population and Housing based on place of usual residence.
    Age and Gender Telephone Betting Clerks All Occupations
    Median age 29 years 40 years
    Female share of employment 50% 49%
    Source: ABS, 2021 Census of Population and Housing based on place of usual residence.
    Age Profile (% Share) All Occupations Telephone Betting Clerks
    15–19 5.2 5.7
    20–24 9.1 20.1
    25–34 22.7 36.6
    35–44 22.3 11.3
    45–54 20.4 11.3
    55–59 8.8 1.5
    60–64 6.5 5.7
    65 and Over 4.9 7.2

    Education

    Visit

    • Your Career to compare Vocational Education and Training (VET) courses, providers and student outcomes.
    Source: ABS, 2021 Census of Population and Housing based on place of usual residence. Highest qualification completed by workers in this job (in any field of study).
    Qualifications needed by new workers might be different from the qualifications of workers already in the job.
    Note: the sum of the educational attainment categories may not add up to 100% due to the exclusion of non-descriptive categories such as not stated responses.
    Highest Level of Educational Attainment (% Share) All Occupations Telephone Betting Clerks
    Post Graduate/Graduate Diploma or Graduate Certificate 12.2 4.1
    Bachelor degree 23.2 11.3
    Advanced Diploma/Diploma 11.1 7.2
    Certificate III/IV 19.5 12.4
    Year 12 15.9 39.7
    Year 11 4.0 9.3
    Year 10 and below 9.7 13.4

    This file contains data displayed on the Occupation Profile pages.

    Use of data in this file must include the relevant attribution text provided.

    Occupation profiles data - November 2024.xlsx

    occupation_profiles_data_-_november_2024.xlsx946664

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    Australian and New Zealand Standard Classification of Occupations (ANZSCO) is the skill-based classification system used to categorise occupations in the Australian and New Zealand labour markets. ANZSCO provides a basis for the standardised collection, analysis and dissemination of occupation data. Visit the ABS website to learn how ANZSCO works. Jobs and Skills Australia displays data for occupations that are defined by ANZSCO 2013 Version 1.3.