@ProverB et al.
Glad to hear someone shares the same concern. I've been considering this challenge for a while now. I honestly believe the solution is multifaceted and calls for a more proactive approach of key players....
At the company level -
1. HR policy that recognizes and incorporates the various levels of education. I've seen companies where majority of staff don't have a degree, but the ideas that are generated are amazing! Allocate a percentage of all posts to cater for degree, diploma, certificate level.
2. Vibrant internship program
It's a shame for a company not to take this seriously. Interns can be re-hired where there's a heavy influx of work to be done. Or where an employee is absent.
3. Change in recruiting strategy
Depending on a recruitment agency to fill in your posts is easy and faulty in the long-run. Stop depending on CV's alone. Have a mix of interview and vetting procedures e.g. CV, telephone interview, one-on-one/group, written essays. Use the company website to develop a generic format for all applicants.
4. Concerted efforts at training and orientation
If you don't properly orient the newly hired employee, they won't assimilate well. No/Low sense of ownership causes pple to look for a job elsewhere. And you'll be back to recruiting again. Simple really.
- At the individual level
Volunteering, volunteering, volunteering!!! I can't stress this enough for job seekers. Find an organization that's within walking distance of where you live and offer to help for a couple of months. There's no such thing as irrelevant experience, only individuals who don't know how to connect the dots!!!
- Recruitment firms/Colleges and other tertiary institutions
Offer to teach students how to carry themselves during an interview/what to expect without charging extra/too much. You'd be SHOCKED to hear how job-seekers respond to a telephone interview.
- Professional Associations offer a great networking opportunity, however, the cost is prohibitive. They already make money from corporates and professional members, it wouldn't hurt them to allocate a percentage of their overall membership to unemployed, job-seeking individuals with no experience but an interest in the field. Free membership, free attendance to meetings and conferences...etc.
CSR isn't always about painting a building or handing out stationery to a rural school in front of the cameras!!
Généralement, les gens qui savant peu parlent becoup, et les gens qui savant beaucoup parlent peu.
- Rousseau.