The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

CR Smith’s owner wants to see more chances given to youngsters

- Gerard Eadie

As a consequenc­e of the pandemic a lot is now being said about “corporate purpose” and where and how a business can have a positive impact on society.

I can think of no greater act than to help a young person into a job.

The disruption caused by Covid-19 affects the current generation of 16 - 24- year- olds leaving school or college more deeply and more worryingly than any other.

There are far fewer jobs available as companies cut back, while the type of jobs being created are also changing as organisati­ons turn to greater automation and home working.

Moreover, the jobs we have been overwhelmi­ngly preparing our young people to do, and where many have “learned the ropes” of employabil­ity in the past, in hospitalit­y and retail, have been decimated.

Following this crisis, getting young people work-ready and into employment is a challenge with many new and different dimensions.

It is a situation that requires radical thinking about skills developmen­t and how we prepare young people for the workplace.

So far, the response we have seen has been a plethora of reports launching new initiative­s.

But when all require businesses to create jobs at a time when trading for most is likely to be unpredicta­ble for months ahead, I am yet to feel convinced.

The Advisory Group for Economic Recovery headed up by Benny Hi g g i n s warned that our young people could be “scarred” by the lack of opportunit­y and put forward plans

for a Scotland Guarantee scheme. Its programme for a two-year traineeshi­p was ambitious and the government has since published its paper, No One Left Behind, which builds on the original scheme to cover a university or college place, an apprentice­ship, a place on a volunteeri­ng programme and employment, including work placements.

The UK Government’s Kickstart scheme kicks in in November.

It wants individual or groups of employers to take on a minimum of 30 people aged between 16-24 for a six-month paid work placement.

In return the government

will pay 25 hours of their salary per week and fund training costs to the tune of £1,500.

The reality is that all these government-led work-based schemes rely on employers creating new jobs.

Right now, this requires c o l l a b o rat i o n b e twe e n government and the private sector on an entirely new level to make them work both in the short and long term.

Both are also not too dissimilar to Hand Picked, a jobs programme that I founded and which many forward-thinking Fife and Tayside-based companies have supported over the past eight years.

As part of the Hand Picked network, we ask our employer partners to give a young person a 12-week meaningful paid job so that they learn the expectatio­ns of the workplace and take that experience to their next job interview.

Our belief has always been that young people learn about a job best, in a job.

We work on shor ter timescales to those proposed by the Youth Guarantee and Kickstart schemes to encourage small businesses to get involved and last year we supported 118 young people through this programme, with a near perfect result for positive outcomes.

Our ambition now is to support the Kickstart programme as a gateway for employers that do not meet the minimum requiremen­t of 30 job placements but who can create one or two valuable opportunit­ies for these young people.

Youth unemployme­nt affec ts us all and the solution is in the hands of businesses of all sizes.

Hand Picked was developed in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis and we learned a lot of lessons about the practical needs of young people and businesses alike which can be adapted for the present circumstan­ces.

It is designed entirely from an e m p l o y e r ’s perspectiv­e to give young people a true sense of work expectatio­ns.

Moreover, it is a business to business initiative that builds on mutual understand­ing and motivation to create job opportunit­ies.

The backbone of most businesses is made of young people who have grown up with the company.

This approach makes Hand Picked unique among the many employabil­ity schemes that exist and we can evidence its overwhelmi­ng success and effectiven­ess.

At Christmas, around 150 young people will leave schools in Fife and in and around Dundee that number is about 60.

These young people have already had their education and exams disrupted, they will miss the opportunit­y for seasonal work and will face the very real possibilit­y of having no job and no training place to go to.

What to do? There is no easy answer except that all businesses can play their part.

Businesses create jobs. Business communitie­s help one another.

Whether it is simply giving someone a Kickstart or Ha n d Picked job opportunit­y or providing support to young people in our network, make that a corporate purpose and all the good intentions of government policy might just be turned into success.

Gerard Eadie is the chairman of Dunfermlin­ebased home improvemen­t firm CR Smith and the founder of the Hand Picked programme to give young people job opportunit­ies.

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 ??  ?? Gerard Eadie bought CR Smith when he was 22 and founded the Hand Picked youth employment programme.
Gerard Eadie bought CR Smith when he was 22 and founded the Hand Picked youth employment programme.

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