Chamberlink June 21

Page 52

2. Chamberlink June 29-56.qxp_Chamberlink 28/05/2021 10:21 Page 52

Feature

Charitable Causes, Promotion & Partnership

How businesses can support youth unemployment By Tom Clarke-Forrest, founder and CEO at Sport 4 Life UK t’s been well reported that young people have suffered some of the biggest economic impacts from the coronavirus pandemic. But there is hope and with the right support in place, businesses across Greater Birmingham can make a real difference. To my mind, there are four key ways in which they can do this:

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1. Embrace the KickStart Scheme We’ve all heard of the World War II campaign ‘Dig for Victory’ in response to the conflict-induced food rationing. Similarly, as we combat the pandemic we should ‘Employ for Victory’ to help our young people secure the future they deserve. Businesses can do this by taking part in the Government’s KickStart Scheme, which provides funding for new jobs for 16 to 24-year-olds who are on Universal Credit and are at risk of long term unemployment. Employers of all sizes can apply. Further funding is also available for training and support while on the scheme. Sport 4 Life UK can help with setting up placements, as well as delivering and supporting the training and employability for the young people, to ensure companies and young people optimise the benefits of participating in this scheme.

2. Employ more young people There’s a compelling business case for employing more young people. With young people, businesses are able to shape their workforce to suit existing and emerging needs especially if cohorts of their clients include younger generations. This is particularly pertinent when it comes to technology, whose adoption is now critical to the survival of many businesses those who don’t innovate risk being left behind. But as digital natives, tech-savvy young people bring a wealth of knowledge, understanding, creativity, 52 CHAMBERLINK June 2021

innovation and energy that many organisations may not have known they needed. Additionally, an increasingly young workforce gives businesses a competitive advantage. Consumers exercise choices in favour of those organisations with positive social values - which includes those responding to the challenge of youth unemployment. In addition to this, there is strong evidence that recruiting and investing in young people encourages loyalty and reduces attrition - key longterm indicators of workforce success.

3. Make recruitment as youth friendly as possible The way organisations recruit can sometimes hinder young people’s employment chances. Recruiting informally, through networks often less accessible to young people - can create a real barrier to finding work for the next generation. Without a doubt, there’s scope for employers to do more to ensure that their recruitment practices are youth friendly. Critically evaluating

internal recruitment processes and policies is vital to making progress in this area. In particular, the use of qualifications should only be used as filters when absolutely necessary and when essential to jobs in question. Business can also sign up to the ‘Good Youth Employment Charter’ with our friends at Youth Employment UK: youthemployment.org.uk/thegood-youth-employment-charter/

4. Offer ‘encounters’ within the workplace Young people need support to compete with older jobseekers, and action must be focused on improving young people’s relative job prospects. Part of this solution includes hiring apprentices, allowing young people to gain work experience while still learning. Training apprentices from scratch is often far more cost effective than bringing in and hiring already skilled staff, which in turn reduces overall training and recruitment costs. In addition, businesses can promote a positive culture of

exposing local young people (both current jobseekers, and those still in education) to the workplace through mock interviews, career days, mentoring schemes or workplace tours. This will dramatically improve job prospects and increase earning potential for the young people involved.

Sport 4 Life UK can help your business Employers have a fundamental contribution to make in tackling youth unemployment. They can provide key job opportunities which enable young people to enter the labour market, as well as engage with young people in other ways to help them prepare for the world of work. Not only is this socially and ethically progressive, it makes business sense. And it’s the solution we need for a speedy economic recovery.

To find out more about how Sport 4 Life UK can help your business make a difference to young people across the West Midlands, go to: sport4life.org.uk/work-with-us


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4min
pages 74-76

Member Profile

2min
page 71

Sport: Wasps stadium renamed

3min
page 70

Manufacturing: Transformation of car factory

4min
page 69

Technology: Tech start-ups on the rise

4min
page 62

Property: Slow quarter for office market

7min
pages 66-68

Legal: New rules for freelancers come into force

10min
pages 64-65

Retail: Long-awaited return of the high street

3min
page 63

Finance: Sustainability-linked loans launched

8min
pages 60-61

Business Travel: Call for hard shoulders to be reinstated

5min
pages 58-59

The future of events in a post-Covid landscape

2min
pages 54-55

Solihull: Town primed for an employment boom

6min
pages 46-47

How businesses can support youth unemployment

3min
pages 52-53

Tackling poverty in our communities

3min
page 51

Covid-19 events checklist 74

3min
pages 56-57

ABCC: Festival celebrates saint

6min
pages 48-50

Sutton Coldfield: Sale of innovative firm

4min
page 45

Lichfield & Tamworth: New chief at council

4min
page 44

Future Faces: Award sponsors revealed

4min
page 41

Burton & District: Bosses join committee

3min
page 43

Transatlantic: Canada’s new envoy

3min
page 40

International Trade and Commonwealth

8min
pages 38-39

Call to boost trade links with Germany

4min
pages 32-33

Aston student wins scholarship

8min
pages 34-35

Fleet firm strikes deal with racing car club

4min
pages 30-31

Growth for innovative firm

2min
page 29

Touchwood shopping centre is sold

2min
pages 27-28

Plastic packaging tax to come into force

4min
page 26

Work starts on smart-enabled building

3min
page 25

Welcoming new deputy lieutenants

2min
page 18

Major milestone for clean energy firm

2min
page 19

Support ahead of Clean Air Zone

4min
pages 22-24

The Griffin Report

5min
pages 20-21

Where do you fancy?

2min
pages 16-17

Optimism in the region is on the rise

6min
pages 6-7

Language skills vital for SMEs

5min
page 14

UK railways prepared for ‘shake-up’

4min
pages 8-10

Director role for former apprentice

2min
page 13

President’s Focus

3min
page 12

New sponsor joins Birmingham 2022

2min
page 15

Editor’s View

2min
page 4

Hotel will put Birmingham back on the map

2min
page 11
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