business – vet innovation in northern ireland copenhagen 25 th april 2012 michael gould

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Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

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Page 1: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland

Copenhagen 25th April 2012Michael Gould

Page 2: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Overview

• Introduction• The Northern Ireland Economy• The Northern Ireland Policy Environment

- Programme for Government

- Northern Ireland Economic Strategy

- Northern Ireland Skills Strategy

- Examples of Innovation between business and the VET system

• Questions and Answers

Page 3: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Northern Ireland

• Constitutionally part of the UK; geographically part of island of Ireland

• Land area – 13,843 sq km• Population 1.8 million; 60% under 40 years• 50% participation in HE• 14 Years on still a post conflict society?• Industrial Heritage

Page 4: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Northern Ireland Economy

• GDP £28.2 bn/year - €34.1 bn• Services 74% v. manufacturing 26%)• Employment – 803,000 individuals• Unemployment – 61,970 (6.8%) but LTE 27%• Productivity Challenge (-24% below UK)• Economic Strategy – “Rebalance and Rebuild”• Priority Sectors

Page 5: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Northern Ireland Policy Environment

• Programme for Government • Northern Ireland Economic Strategy• ‘Success Through Skills – Transforming Futures’

Page 6: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

‘Success Through Skills – Transforming Futures’

• The Northern Ireland Skills Strategy• Supports economic development• Qualifications used as proxy for skills• Demand led – i.e. business/employer led• Second regional skills strategy• Developed through a “skills forecast”

Page 7: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Skills Strategy Policy Headlines

• To meet productivity and social inclusion goals, need to:- Encourage higher level skills- Up-skill the current workforce- Improve management and leadership skills- Reduce subject imbalances- Attract small amount of skilled labour

• Government, business, education and training sectors need to work together to deliver.

Page 8: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Innovations to Address Skills Issues

• Future Skills Action Groups• Skills Solutions Service• Assured Skills Programme• Connected Fund

Page 9: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Future Skills Action Groups (FSAG)

• Purpose to identify skills issues and actions in a sector and deliver solutions over two year period

• FSAG is business led, with education, training and government actors in Group

• Focus is on action through Action Plan with three themes – skills provision; sector attractiveness; communications/stakeholder engagement

• FSAGs in ICT; Hospitality & Tourism; Financial Services; Food Processing; Engineering

Page 10: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Future Skills Action Group

http://www.delni.gov.uk/index/publications/pubs-successthroughskills/future-skills-action-plan-financial-services.htm

http://www.delni.gov.uk/index/publications/pubs-sectoral/hospitality-and-tourism-action-plan.htm

http://www.delni.gov.uk/ict_future_plan.pdf

Page 11: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Skills Solutions Service

• Government intervention• Team of trained skills brokers• Work with SMEs to match skills needs with skills

provision• Three functions – Signposting; Bridge to Employment;

Customised Training• Successes in up-skilling the current workforce for

employers• VET are “providers of first choice”

Page 12: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Skills Solutions Successes

Page 13: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

“Assured Skills”

• Government intervention to “assure” investor or expanding indigenous company the skills they need will be present

• Based on North Carolina model• Very flexible model – high or low skills• Early successes – 33 projects, 1100+ new jobs

supported

Page 14: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Assured Skills – “Early Wins”

Page 15: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Connected Fund

• Collaboration between Business; HE and VET• “One Stop Shop” for business to access knowledge

and technology capital• Whole process from problem definition through to

solutions• £1m per year €1.21m for 4 years

Page 16: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Critical Success Factors

• Employers must lead• Openness and willingness of “partners” to work

together• Mutual benefits identified• Apply resources – financial and human to address

issues• Action orientated – not rhetoric • Responsibility “migrates” from government to

business

Page 17: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Characteristics from Successful VET-Business Partnerships

• All recognise need for change• All are flexible in approach and open to new ideas• All are “curious” to solve problem• All are prepared to resource• All motivated to implement and review

Page 18: Business – VET Innovation in Northern Ireland Copenhagen 25 th April 2012 Michael Gould

Thank You

For further information contact:Michael [email protected]