Birmingham Enterprise Community launches £50,000 scheme

Hannah Elsy

Birmingham Enterprise Community (BEC) has launched its latest programme to help unemployed young people.

‘Skills for Tomorrow’ is designed to help those aged 18-30 who have been the hardest hit by COVID-19 redundancies, with over 156,000 of them losing their jobs in between May and July this year.

To help get them back on their feet and into the workforce once more, BEC conducted research amongst businesses to find out what skills they need from employees.

The social enterprise has now used these findings to formulate a four-week course, which focuses on key areas: problem solving, leadership and creative thinking.

Geared towards students, graduates, and young professionals, the Skills for Tomorrow programme has been funded by Innovate UK, as part of a bid for companies to help solve economic and social issues caused by COVID-19.

Daniel Evans, the CEO of Birmingham Enterprise Community, said: “The impact of COVID-19 has already had huge and far-reaching effects for businesses, which are now facing problems that simply don’t have solutions yet. The key to solving them is the agility to adapt quickly, and in order to do this, companies are looking to retain and recruit those with the ability to think in new and creative ways. This is where we truly believe that young people present a huge opportunity for businesses.

“Through our work at BEC, we have seen first-hand the resourcefulness, innovative thinking, and creativity that young people bring to the boardroom. There’s already been a seismic shift in the way the world of work operates, and we’re eager to refine, train, and upskill young people to be able to use their skills to shape what it will look like going forward.”

The first cohort of the Skills for Tomorrow programme has now graduated and amongst them is Hannah Elsy. Hannah runs Hannah Elsy Productions, a theatre production company which was due to tour a show in April 2020, and had contracts with The Old Vic and in the West End. However, with the theatre sector facing an overnight curtain call when the lockdown was enforced, Hannah Elsy Productions lost 90% of its business.

Through the Skills for Tomorrow programme, Hannah’s self-perception was reframed, now seeing herself as a business owner and entrepreneur, rather than someone who simply ‘makes theatre’.

This mindset led to Hannah finding new ways of providing live theatre experiences for audiences, for example bringing shows into audiences back gardens.

She said: “The Skills for Tomorrow programme is a fantastically structured course, which takes you through the building blocks of entrepreneurship. This entrepreneurial knowledge has been incredibly empowering: I would highly recommend Skills For Tomorrow to everyone as essential professional development, whether you are looking to set up your own business or just looking to make a change in your employment.”

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