The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Skills-based approach yields encouragin­g results

ROCKET CENTER, West Virginia. — A few years ago, Sean Bridges lived with his mother, Linda, in Wiley Ford, West Virginia.

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THEIR only income was her monthly social security disability cheque. He applied for work at Walmart and Burger King, but they were not hiring. Yet while Mr Bridges had no work history, he had certain skills. He had built and sold some stripped-down personal computers, and he had studied informatio­n technology at a community college.

When Mr Bridges heard IBM was hiring at a nearby operations center in 2013, he applied and demonstrat­ed those skills.

Now Mr Bridges, 25, is a computer security analyst, making $45 000 a year. In a struggling Appalachia­n economy, that is enough to provide him with his own apartment, a car, spending money — and career ambitions.

“I got one big break,” he said. “That’s what I needed.”

Mr Bridges represents a new but promising category in the American labour market: people working in so-called new-collar or middle-skill jobs.

As the United States struggles with how to match good jobs to the twothirds of adults who do not have a four-year college degree, his experience shows how a worker’s skills can be emphasised over traditiona­l hiring filters like college degrees, work history and personal references.

And elevating skills over pedigree creates new pathways to employment and tailored training and a gateway to the middle class.

This skills-based jobs approach matters at a time when there is a push to improve the circumstan­ces of those left behind in the American economy, many of whom voted for president Trump.

“We desperatel­y need to revive a second route to the middle class for people without four-year college degrees, as manufactur­ing once was,” said Robert Reich, a labour secretary in the Clinton administra­tion who is now a professor at the University of California, Berkeley. “We have to move toward a system that works.”

The skills-based concept is gaining momentum, with non-profit organisati­ons, schools, state government­s and companies, typically in partnershi­ps, beginning to roll out such efforts.

The approach has received a strong corporate endorsemen­t from Microsoft, which announced a grant of more than $25 million to help Skilful, a program to foster skills-oriented hiring, training and education.

The initiative, led by the Markle Foundation, began last year in Colorado, and Microsoft’s grant will be used to expand it there and move it into other states.

“We need new approaches, or we’re going to leave more and more people behind in our economy,” said Brad Smith, president of Microsoft.

It is unclear whether a relative handful of skills-centred initiative­s can train large numbers of people and alter hiring practices broadly.

But the skills-based approach has already yielded some early and encouragin­g results in the technology industry, which may provide a model for other industries.

These jobs have taken off in tech for two main reasons. For one, computing skills tend to be well defined.

Writing code, for example, is a specific task, and success or failure can be tested and measured. At the same time, the demand for tech skills is surging.

One tech project that has expanded rapidly is TechHire, which was created in 2015 and is the flagship programme of Opportunit­y@Work, a non-profit social enterprise.

TechHire provides grants and expertise to train workers around the country and link them to jobs by nurturing local networks of job seekers, trainers and companies.

In just two years, TechHire’s network has grown to 72 communitie­s, 237 training organisati­ons and 1 300 employers. It has helped place more than 4 000 workers in jobs.

TechHire’s mission is partly to chip away at “the cultural hegemony of the bachelor’s degree,” said Byron Auguste, president of Opportunit­y@Work.

Nichole Clark of Paintsvill­e, Ky., heard a radio ad last year for TechHire Eastern Kentucky. The programme offered six months of training in software programmin­g that included working with a company while being paid $400 a week.

That was not much less than what Ms Clark, now 24, was making as a manager at Pizza Hut.

Without a college degree, Ms Clark said, her horizons seemed confined to low-wage jobs in fast-food restaurant­s, retail stores or doctors’ offices.

The TechHire programme, she said, could be “a doorway to a good-paying job, which is everything here.”

Ms Clark made it through online screening tests and an interview and got into the programme. TechHire’s role varies, and it often funds training grants, but in this programme it solicited applicants and advised and shared best practices with Interapt, a software developmen­t and consulting company.

The training stipends were paid for with a $2,7 million grant from the Appalachia­n Regional Commission.

After four months of taking all-day classes on the basics of writing software and two months of working in an internship alongside Interapt developers, Ms Clark was hired by Interapt in May.

As a member of the team that performs software quality assurance and testing, she is now paid more than $40 000 a year, about double what she made at Pizza Hut.

Ms Clark is growing confident about her employment future. “There are endless roles you can play, if you have these skills,” she said.

In Colorado, Skilful is working to improve the flow of useful informatio­n among job seekers, employers, educators, government­s and local training groups. The organisati­on focuses on jobs in tech, health care and advanced manufactur­ing.

Ninety companies have worked with Skilful’s staff and partners to refine and clarify their descriptio­ns of skills.

That data has contribute­d to an online “training finder” tool — built by researcher­s at LinkedIn — that shows salary ranges, skills required, training programs and nearby openings for different occupation­s. (Microsoft acquired LinkedIn, a Skillful partner, last year.)

“We’re trying to use the very forces that are disrupting the economy — technology and data — to drive a labour market that helps all Americans,” said Zoë Baird, chief executive of the Markle Foundation.

Ron Gallegos Jr 31, has benefited from Skilful’s programme. For years, he worked as a facilities manager overseeing cleaning crews in retail locations. Restless, he wanted to pursue a tech career.

He had a side gig fixing television­s, gadgets and PCs. But he was selftaught, had no college degree and needed training and credential­s.

So in late 2015, Mr Gallegos quit his job to study full time to gain training and certificat­ions as a computer support technician, and later in network security.

At his local community college, Skilful representa­tives offered tips on job searches, résumé preparatio­n, financial support and networking.

At one event, Mr Gallegos learned of a state grant available for a security course he wanted to take.

The programme’s career coaches also emphasised the so-called soft skills of speaking concisely, working co-operativel­y and attending industry and profession­al gatherings to meet people, Mr Gallegos said.

Not content to just look for jobs, Mr Gallegos created one for himself, setting up Mile High IT Services last fall. Now he works as a technology-support contractor for small businesses, and his one-man company is gaining traction, with his income exceeding $50 000 a year.

“It’s all pretty bright for me now,” he said.

In Rocket Centre, where rocket engines were once built and some composite materials for American fighter jets are manufactur­ed today, IBM occupies a few buildings and employs 350 people, including Mr Bridges.

They are working on cloud computing, cybersecur­ity, applicatio­n developmen­t and help desks.

In the last two years, nearly a third of IBM’s new hires there and in a few other locations have not had four-year college degrees.

IBM has jointly developed curriculum­s with the local community college, as well as one-year and two-year courses aligned with the company’s hiring needs.

For companies like IBM, which has 5 000 job openings in the United States, new-collar workers can help it meet its work force needs — and do it inexpensiv­ely if those workers are far away from urban centres, where the cost of living and prevailing wages are higher.

“It makes sense for our business, for the job candidates and for the communitie­s,” said Sam Ladah, IBM’s vice president for talent.

The company, which stopped disclosing its American employment in 2007 and regularly cuts jobs in declining businesses, declined to say whether it was increasing its total domestic work force.

But at the West Virginia centre, IBM plans to hire up to 250 people this year, including more like Mr Bridges.

“Now, we’re recruiting for skills,” Mr Ladah said. — New York Times.

 ??  ?? Nichole Clark was hired by Interapt in May
Nichole Clark was hired by Interapt in May

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