The Citizen (Gauteng)

Skills developmen­t is everything in the modern job market

- Khanya Okumu, Enterprise and Supplier Developmen­t Specialist at Old Mutual

I think we can all agree that the funding of small businesses is only part of the solution. What is possibly more important (as an enabler) is the initial assessment of the level and adequacy of skills existing within new or developing enterprise­s and to evaluate what further skills developmen­t or training is required to ensure a firm business foundation and sustainabl­e growth is achieved.

A study by StatsSA which surveyed households and obtained evidence relating to skills developmen­t and unemployme­nt between 1994 and 2014 showed the following:

During this time frame across the South African working population of households there was an increase in skilled labour (21% to 25%), with a shift away from semi and low-skilled labour. What is interestin­g to note in the growth of skilled labour is the disparity within the different race groups

*For the purpose of this analysis, the occupation types were used to infer skills levels based on the Quarterly Labour Force Survey. Skilled: manager, profession­al, technical. Semi-skilled: sales and services, clerk, machine operator. Lowskilled: domestic worked.

This is clear evidence that the role of enterprise and supplier developmen­t is a crucial one needed to up-skill and train the broader population. It is one thing to provide finance and access to markets, but without the appropriat­e skills developmen­t to make these investment­s sustainabl­e is would be a fruitless exercise.

The role that the private sector plays in post investment business support and capacity building is incredibly important. There is a requiremen­t to build both technical skills as well as overall business management skills. This in my view is when we will start seeing real impact. In order for the enterprise­s to be effective in the contracts that they are awarded a focus on skills developmen­t (by both parties) is required.

In an economy where growth has crawled to a near halt, SMMEs cannot be expected to be the holy-grail for job creation. Making an impact in increasing the potential salary earning or employable workforce is key and therefore skills developmen­t requires a multi-faceted approach:

1. From early education phase – where emphasis must be placed at school level for entreprene­urship training and opportunit­ies is a key enabler. Entreprene­urship should in essence become a career option to consider. Innovation must be incubated. The world is changing and the skills required to be productive are changing as well. 2. Clear regulation­s and commitment to quality interventi­ons should be stipulated at policy level to incentivis­e skills developmen­t/ skills transfer from large corporates to small businesses. 3. Without looking at the bigger picture these developmen­tal areas are without support – so a holistic approach to skills developmen­t – mentorship, networking and overall business acumen are skills that often distinguis­h between those who do well and those who don’t in business. It needs to all work harmonious­ly and as an effective and efficient ecosystem reliant on each other’s strengths and support and mutually beneficial objectives.

At the end of the day, an enterprise should leave an ESD programme empowered to stand and survive in the business world. We know that we are losing the challenge when time and time again we see developing enterprise­s moving from one ESD programme to another with nothing to show for it.

Monitoring and evaluation of these enterprise­s is therefore also essential to track growth and success – but also to identify areas of weakness or need for further interventi­on.

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