Employer Standards

The Careers and Enterprise Company has recently released its Employer Standards, aimed at giving business and industry a framework to help plan and execute careers work around.

Split into 3 distinctive sections (see below) the 9 standards range from inclusion to collaboration and evaluation, focussing how to best engage and connect with young people.

  • Inspire young people about your sector, business and the world of work.

  • Develop their skills and help set them up for success.

  • Collaborate with others to build sustained relationships.

Inspire young people for their best next step

Provide meaningful opportunities

  • Give young people a taste and feel of the working world.

  • Make experiences of work meaningful - ensuring young people meet a range of people, interact and receive feedback on a piece of work.

  • Be clear and transparent - setting clear aims and learning outcomes.

  • Prepare in advance - tailoring experiences to individual needs.

  • Involve a wide range of young people.

Be inclusive

  • Identify young people that need the most support.

  • Break down barriers - by engaging under-represented groups

  • Be relatable to build trust: involving employees who young people can easily identify with.

  • Actively challenge stereotypes and preconceptions.

  • Be adaptive and accommodating - shape your approach so all feel welcome and involved.

Evaluate and improve

  • Measure impact and adapt - to ensure your activities are having the intended impact and adapt where needed.

  • Ensure person-centred evaluation - ensure the feedback and perspectives of young people, teachers and schools are part of your evaluation.

  • Listen to others - welcome and action feedback from your employees involved in the programmes.

Prepare young people to be career ready

Build essential skills and explain their relevance

  • Improve the skills of young people - Supporting them to develop essential skills.

  • Embed essential skills in your career outreach - showing they're how they’re applied in every day working life.

  • Explain the relevance and importance of essential skills - Support young people, teachers and Careers Leaders in understanding why essential skills are invaluable in the workplace.

Prepare young people for application processes

  • Improve understanding & provide practice opportunities - so young people are more confident in application and selection processes like assessment centres, psychometric testing, online interviews, in person interviews.

  • Support with written communications - so they become better at describing their skills and experience in CVs, application forms, LinkedIn and cover letters.

  • Explain how social media presence could impact applications.

Raise awareness of pathways into work

  • Showcase existing opportunities - with information about opportunities in your organisation or sector and links to the local labour market.

  • Share knowledge of pathways - highlighting the subject and skills requirements to enter your organisation and sector.

  • Shape opportunities – share what you know about pathways and key transition points for young people to your sector.

Collaborate for success

Engage over the long term

  • Extend your engagement - work with the same school for more than one year to strengthen partnerships and promote continuous learning.

  • Repeat exposure - have multiple engagements with the same individuals and groups of young people over the course of their time in education.

  • Commit long-term - invest time with the same school over the long-term.

Partner with others

  • Identify areas of priority - learn what a school needs most in terms of careers education support.

  • Share your knowledge of job opportunities, local labour market, pathways and the future of work with teachers, Careers Leaders, parents, carers, Careers Hubs and activity providers. 

  • Relate classroom learning to the world of work - linking careers to the curriculum, developing teachers’ workplace knowledge, co-designing lesson content and supporting student projects.

  • Collaborate and share best practice - Connect and cooperate with other employers.

Value the engagement

  • Embed careers education within your business planning. 

  • Recognise and relay the impact on young people - becoming a community ambassador for the value of education outreach. 

  • Track the impact of your careers education support for young people against your business objectives.

 

Previous
Previous

Opening the School Gates

Next
Next

Understanding the School Golden Ticket