
The CEIAG, employability skills and personal branding mix
Over the latest quarter the number of 16 to 24 year olds officially out of work increased to just less than one million, the highest total since comparable records began in 1992. Adding the inactivity rate and the jobless figures together, 50% of 16 to 24-year-olds are now unemployed. Include the fact that employers find too many young people lack employability skills for example customer awareness, self-management and problem solving, young people clearly need a strategy for employment success.
In addition to developing key employability skills that are highly sought after by employers, young people need to learn how to differentiate themselves from others to stand out from the crowd. Introducing students to the process of personal branding enables them to identify what they want to be known for and be proactive in changing the perception others have of them. Employability skills and career development can then be effectively based around their personal brand.
Simon Middleton, founder of Brand Strategy Guru and one of the UK’s best known brand experts wrote: “Buried in almost every CV that I've seen, there is a story of an achievement, or a skill, or an approach, which has the potential to help an individual stand out from the crowd.” Branding is an easy concept for young people to understand. Many tend to have role models who are celebrities or music artists and know big brands such as Apple and Nike. Students can learn a great deal from strong brands about the power of positive associations and communicating clear messages when it comes to job seeking.
Embedding student branding
John Cridland, CBI director-general, has urged educators, employers and the Government to work together so that "young people are able to shine in the jobs market." For this to happen young people need to know what they need to do in order to shine. The college careers service can help them with this and simultaneously rid the common student perception that the careers service is just there to help them to write a CV. Here are 10 suggestions of how to innovate the culture of career services and to engage more students more often:Some university careers services are already moving in the student branding direction adopting a more holistic approach to developing their students. Plymouth has adopted the word ‘employability’ in addition to ‘careers’ in their title. Durham University combines ‘careers’, ‘employability’ and ‘enterprise’, while other universities for example UEL, has removed the word ‘careers’ altogether. Should FE colleges’ careers service follow suit? With half of further education colleges reporting a drop in applications from 16 to 19 year olds, mainly due to the loss of EMA, an innovative careers service poses a great opportunity for colleges to stand out from the crowd and also entice more students to enroll on their courses.
Genevieve Knight is a student career branding specialist at MYPAL Ltd (Motivating Young People to Achieve through Learning). Author of Get the Skills Employers Want, an employability toolkit for schools and colleges