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Employers lack the skills that young people need

UK plc is being held back by a damaging disconnect between graduates and employers, according to a report published today by Demos and Orange.  

Talented graduates feel out of place in organisations as companies struggle to motivate and support a generation of young people with higher debt, different values and expectations of a better work life balance. Graduates in turn must develop a better understanding of the rapidly changing needs of their employers.

The report, Working Progress: How to reconnect young people and organisations, demonstrates that while today’s well qualified graduates need to improve their skills in creativity and communication, employers need to work on their cultural understanding of young people’s needs and lifestyles to ensure that they retain their best and brightest recruits.

The research of 539 graduates and 50 HR directors of FT250 companies or their equivalent revealed:

"The current focus on qualifications and university places has diverted attention from the changing cultural values of young people," say the report’s authors, Sarah Gillinson and Duncan O’Leary of Demos. "While graduates need to improve softer skills, employers need to go back to school to learn what motivates their future recruits."

The Demos and Orange research also reveals that this lack of understanding goes both ways – with graduates unclear about which skills employers are looking for:

"It’s not so much a gap in skills as a gulf between cultures," said Alastair MacLeod, Vice President, Orange Business Services. "The report shows that employers will benefit by going back to the classroom and reconnecting with young people by developing real working relationships with them.   Graduates in turn must develop a better understanding of the rapidly changing needs of their employers. We will then not only understand each other better, but will cultivate the social and creative skills our knowledge economy needs."

Sir Digby Jones, Director General of the CBI, said: "This report from Orange and Demos marks a departure away from the traditional skills-shortage debate. Understanding the personal and professional needs of today’s university leavers is essential for the growth of British business, as we cannot expect employers to connect properly with graduates when they are speaking in different languages.

"For too long the issue of the skills gap has been an exercise in finger-pointing and blame-avoidance. It is time to turn this around and create a positive sum game involving employers, government, the education system and of course the graduates themselves."

The report makes several recommendations for employers to reconnect with young people:

Demos also suggest a range of measures to develop creativity, entrepreneurial and initiative skills that are not covered by today’s curricula:

Working Progress: How to reconnect young people and organisations was launched today in London by Demos and Orange. The event was led by a panel of influencers including, Sir Digby Jones, Director General of the CBI, Alastair MacLeod, Vice President, Orange Business Services UK, Wes Streeting, VP of Education at NUS and Kevin Steele, Chief Executive of Enterprise Insight.

Notes

  1. Working Progress: How to reconnect young people and organisations by Sarah Gillinson and Duncan O'Leary, is published by Demos on 13th June 2006. Copies can be downloaded from www.demos.co.uk/publications/WorkingProgress or ordered from Central Books on 020 8986 5488.
  2. Sarah Gillinson and Duncan O'Leary are researchers at Demos.
  3. Demos is the think tank for everyday democracy. It has a long-running interest in learning and the future of organisations.
  4. Orange is one of the world’s largest communications companies and is the mobile, broadband and multiplay brand of the France Telecom group. Orange Business Services is present in 166 countries with network reach in 220. It serves one million businesses with mobile solutions: 3,750 multinationals with IP networks and services, and 400,000 SME’s and domestic organizations. Further information about Orange can be found on the Orange website at www.orange.com