FLSP calls for greater career guidance to nurture future professionals

-

shutterstock_151691369

As confidence in the business and professional services sectors reach a fifteen-year high, and numbers employed show the fastest rate of growth since November 2007, young people need access to in-depth career guidance to avoid being left behind, says the Financial & Legal Skills Partnership.

The Confederation of British Industry’s quarterly Service Sector Survey reported that the business and professional services sector, which includes accountancy and legal firms, saw business volumes rise at their fastest pace since November 2007. Children’s charity Barnardo’s produced a separate report on the state of England’s careers provision, revealing that these services are not reaching young people.

Liz Field, CEO of the Financial & Legal Skills Partnership, says, “For young people to realise their future potential in sustainable employment, we must make sure they can easily access impartial, actionable careers advice, both in schools and through industry sectors. The correct advice, given at the right time, can open many doors for young people who may struggle to find ways into work beside traditional university routes.”

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

The Financial & Legal Skills Partnership proactively supports the development of a skilled workforce in the UK’s financial services, finance, accountancy and legal sectors. ‘Directions’ is a one-stop shop for up-to-date, expert information on careers in the finance sector. Information on careers and routes into the Legal sector is currently in development and is due to be launched next month.

Liz Field says, “Young people have concerns about their futures. We must make sure they can access all the tools and quality information they need to take the right steps for a rewarding and fulfilling career.

There is a breadth of entry points into a career in the finance, legal, accountancy and financial services, whether approached straight from formal education or after working in another industry.”

Her comments follow Barnardo’s call on the Government to revamp online careers guidance services so they are higher quality and better promoted amongst young people, and to guarantee face-to-face careers guidance for all young people who ask for it. In its ‘Helping the inbetweeners’ report, the charity revealed that young people report they can’t use the government’s remote online schemes – or don’t even know they exist.

Liz Field says, “In the finance and legal sectors, we work hard to ensure young people can access information on planning a career in the sector. That can include work experience, school leaver programmes, apprenticeships and graduate schemes such as the FLSP’s ‘GetInGetOn’ e-mentoring hub.  Directions isn’t just online – we also run a range of regional events for students and careers advisers and deliver careers workshops out in schools to promote the sector.”

According to the Confederation of British Industry data, numbers employed showed the fastest rate of growth since November 2007, with further growth in headcount expected in the next three months. Firms are expecting to expand their business to the greatest extent since February 2006.

Liz Field concludes, “Accessible, practical career guidance will encourage and motivate young people to embark on viable, exciting learning alternatives, and start on the path of a fulfilling career. The sector will benefit from fresh young talent that will help forge renewed UK economic growth.”

The Financial & Legal Skills Partnership is an industry partnership and also a UK Government-licensed skills organisation that works across the UK’s financial and legal services, finance and accountancy sectors.

Latest news

Superdry co-founder’s victim warns workplace power can silence abuse victims

A survivor's account raises questions about speaking-up cultures and accountability in organisations.

UK’s always-on work culture ‘driving employee burnout’

Nearly half of UK workers say they end most working days mentally exhausted as rising workplace pressure leaves employees and managers struggling to switch off.

Andrew Murray on why no two days look alike

A people development leader shares how travel, training and a passion for helping others shape a working day with little room for routine.

Lucy Standing: Older workers are back in the centre of the hiring debate – ready to lead the response?

For HR leaders, the argument is simple: the people being filtered out of your hiring process are not past their best.
- Advertisement -

One in 10 women quit work after pregnancy loss, report finds

Research suggests inconsistent workplace support following pregnancy loss and maternity leave is contributing to resignations and poorer mental wellbeing.

Fear of becoming obsolete grips workers as AI reshapes careers

More than two in five workers worry their skills could become outdated as AI reshapes hiring demands and increases pressure to keep learning.

Must read

Employee Engagement: Four key considerations for measuring what matters most

What do you want your employee engagement activities and programmes to achieve for your business? Better employee retention (reduced churn)? Improved alignment with corporate goals? An increase in desired behaviours? Or simply better company results?

Catherine Trombley: National pride or corporate identity?

A recent survey of Chinese employment trends carried out...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you