Title: Engaging Employers in the Skills for Life agenda
1 Engaging Employers in the Skills for Life
agenda
- Nigel Purkis, Employability Director
- Tracey Theo, Regional Manager - Skills for Life
2Aims of the session
- Understand the importance of Skills for Life to
business - Understand the relevance of Skills for Life to
each of the Equal themes - Consider how business can support your
Development Partnerships - Consider ways to engage business
3Business in the Community?
- A unique movement of 700 member companies (over
80 of the FTSE100) - The largest UK national organisation of its kind
with a presence in every region - Business led
- An independent charity
4Membership commitment
- Integrate, measure and communicate the companys
impact on society - Community
- Environment
- Marketplace
- Workplace
- Work collaboratively and focus on the most
disadvantaged communities - Inspire, lead and share
5Involvement with Skills for Life
- Mobilise the private sector through membership
and networks - Support business in getting involved
- Identify barriers to action
- Develop the business case
- Create an employer champions network
6 Engaging Employers in the Skills for Life
agendaWhat is it all about?
- Tracey Theo, Regional Manager - Skills for Life
7Skills for Life - what is it?
- Skills for Life are the ability to read, write
and speak English and use maths at a level
necessary to function and progress at work and in
society in general - Other phrases used -
- Essential Skills
- Valuable Skills
- Forgotten Skills
- Basic Skills
8The Challenge
- 7 million people with poor basic skills, 3.5
million in the workplace (Improving Literacy
Numeracy a Fresh Start - Moser Report) - Cost to UK business of 4.8billion per year
- Cost to UK taxpayer of 10 billion per year
- Poor skill levels compared to other European
countries - 28 of the UKs workforce has
intermediate skills, compared with 51 in France
and 65 in Germany
9The Facts - Individual
- The impact on the individual
- As many as one in five adults of working age
cannot look up a plumber in the Yellow Pages and
one in ten cannot understand the instructions on
a medicine bottle - An individual with good literacy and numeracy
could earn 50,000 more over a working life than
someone with poor skills - Half of jobs are closed to those with poor skills
- Unemployed people are twice as likely as employed
people to have poor literacy skills - 40 of adults in receipt of social security
benefits have poor literacy skills
10Government
- National Strategy 21st Century Skills, Skills
for Life (Dept for Education and Skills
2001) - Targets
- 750,000 adults will improve their literacy and
numeracy skills by 2004 - 1.5million adults by 2007
- Funding
- 1.5 billion dedicated to radical improvements
for engaging learners
11 Engaging Employers in the Skills for Life
agendaWhat does it mean to business?
- Tracey Theo, Regional Manager - Skills for Life
12What does it mean to business?
- Organisations will recognise that they have
problems with - Health and Safety regulations
- Quality systems
- New technology
- Modern communications systems
- Information and production systems
- Changes in work processes
- Customer service
- Absenteeism
13Improving skill levels can result in
- Better customer relations and fewer complaints,
through improved communication skills - Better quality assurance through quality
procedures being understood and followed - Fewer accidents due to better understanding of
health and safety notices hazards are easily
identified and understood - Increased productivity and cost efficiency,
through lower absenteeism, less wastage of
materials and forms accurately completed
14Benefits
- Business Benefits Individual Benefits
- Increased productivity Self confidence
- Increased quality of work Boost morale
- Reduced error rates Promotion opportunities
- Health Safety improves Problem solving
skills - Increased customer retention Use technology
- Increased employee retention Team working
- Reduced absenteeism Communication skills
15The BP Case Study
- Developing People
- Embed training for all forecourt staff
- 2500 people per year
- 1000 receive an NVQ each year
- Outcomes since 1999
- 42 reduction in attrition
- Shop sales growth
- HS days from work down to 0
- Change in employees perspective of organisation
- National Training Award
16 Engaging Employers in the Skills for Life
agendaWhat is the relevance for Development
Partnerships?
- Nigel Purkis, Employability Director
17Equal themes
- Helping people who have difficulty being
integrated or re-integrated into a labour market
that must be open to all - Combating racism and discrimination in relation
to the world of work - Opening up business creation to all by providing
the tools to set up in business .... new ways of
creating employment in urban and rural areas - Strengthening the social economy (third sector),
in particular the services which help the
community, with a focus on improving the quality
of jobs - Promoting lifelong learning and inclusive work
practices which encourage recruiting and
retaining people suffering discrimination and
inequality - Helping firms and employees to adapt to
structural change and the use of IT and other new
technologies - Reducing gender gaps and supporting job
desegregation - Helping asylum seekers to integrate
18 Engaging Employers in the Skills for Life
agendaWhat to do next?
- Tracey Theo, Regional Manager - Skills for Life
19Next steps for an employer
- Commit to action, talk to others within sector
- Agree strategy and develop a plan linked to the
plan for the business, with FREE help from, for
example - BITC, LSC - Consider integration in to current needs such as
recruitment, induction, supervisory/management
training, health and safety, NVQs, quality
procedures, customer service, food hygiene, IT
etc. - Involve people communicate to the senior team,
managers, supervisors, staff, unions, staff
groups to gain commitment and understanding - Agree policies including time off for staff ,
company facilities - Deliver to workforce
- Evaluate impact
- Share good practice with case studies
- Encourage suppliers to recognise the issue
- Become a champion
20What help is available?
- Business in the Community www.bitc.org.uk, KPMG
- Learning and Skills Councils - www.lsc.gov.uk
Business Links, Chambers of Commerce, IoD,
Federation of Small Businesses, CBI - Trade Union Congress (TUC) Union Learning Reps
- Learndirect www.learndirect.co.uk, Tel 0800
100 900 - Sector Skills Councils - www.ssda.org.uk
- Colleges Association of Colleges (AOC)
- Private Providers Association of Learning
Providers (ALP) - Get On www.get-on.org.uk
21What resources are available?
- Basic Skills Agency www.basic-skills.co.uk
- Job Centre Plus
- Move On www.move-on.org.uk, Tel 01223 470480
- Adult and Community Centres
- BBC www.bbc.co.uk/webwise
22THANK YOU www.bitc.org.uk/skillsforlife