Financial services urged to ‘stake claim’ for apprenticeship funding

-

The Chief Executive of the National Skills Academy for Financial Services is urging financial services employers to come forward and stake their claim for new apprenticeship funding announced by the Government.

In the Comprehensive Spending Review last week, The Chancellor promised to double the number of apprenticeships for the over-19s to boost skills and help generate economic growth. An additional £250m will be invested creating 75,000 more apprenticeships for adults in the workplace within four or five years time.

Sylvia Perrins, CEO, of the National Skills Academy for Financial Services, said that funding was dependent on companies coming forward to commit to apprenticeship training. Sylvia says: “It’s very pleasing to see the Government recognising the important benefits of apprenticeships for adults who are already in the workplace. However, the industry is at risk of missing out unless it is vocal about staking its claim on this funded training route. As a demand-led funding system, companies need to come forward if they are to have a hope of benefiting from this boost.

“Apprenticeships are a great solution for our industry’s needs.Undertaking an apprenticeship is an ideal solution for people to get their professional qualifications within a structured training programme that can be tailored to their company’s culture and business objectives. We want the industry to respond by using apprenticeships as a way to retrain and retain our people.”

HRreview Logo

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

 

Apprenticeship schemes enable an employee to gain a professional qualification and provides evidence of their competence to perform their job role. For many organizations this can map to their own training and competence schemes.

The NSAFS through its network of specialist training providers is able to create a solution for each employer’s needs. Companies interested in apprenticeships for their staff are advised to get in touch with Stephen Smith at NSAFS.



Latest news

Menopause support gaps push women out of jobs as ‘masking’ takes toll

Women consider leaving jobs as menopause symptoms go unsupported, with many hiding their condition at work.

Workers ‘ignore AI tools and stick with manual tasks’ despite heavy investment

Employees are avoiding workplace AI tools and reverting to manual tasks, raising concerns about trust, usability and the value of tech investment.

Victor Riparbelli on AI boosting the value of people

“AI will make great human communicators even more valuable than before.”

Up to 28,000 employees affected by paper-based data breaches

Thousands of workers affected by paper-based data incidents as organisations miss reporting deadlines and overlook offline risks.
- Advertisement -

Helen Wada: Why engagement initiatives fail without human-centric leadership

Workforce engagement has become a hot topic across the boardroom and beyond, particularly as hybrid working practices have become the norm.

Recruiters warned to move beyond ‘post and pray’ as passive talent overlooked

Employers risk missing most candidates by relying on job boards as hiring methods struggle to deliver quality applicants.

Must read

Deborah Frost: Prioritising health and financial wellness

"Alarmingly only 37 per cent of organisations make efforts to promote financial wellbeing."

Andrea Pattico: Is your L&D plan graduate ready?

Gen Y and Z want ‘continual development’, but what does a good development programme look like? Andrea Pattico discusses the future of graduate learning and development in 2018.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you