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Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14, 2011

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Page 1: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Developing Partnerships with Employers

Briefing for the 4th Annual Plus 50 Conference

American Association of Community Colleges

Blair Forlaw • July 14, 2011

Page 2: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Premise:

Good partnerships start with a mile in the other’s shoes

The employers’ experience today- the economy- continuing uncertainty - how to find the right people with the right skills at just the right time

Page 3: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Let’s consider:

Three things about - the economy- uncertainty

- the talent marketplace Implications for community college /

employer partnerships (I have six suggestions; you’ll have more)

Page 4: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

About the economy:

It’s a knowledge-based, innovation-driven, globally-connected, digitized, dynamic, diverse, fast-paced, and highly competitive world out there.

Metropolitan areas are the engines of growth and vitality.

Human capital is the most important kind –but managing and measuring it is quite a challenge.

Page 5: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

About uncertainty:

Uncertainty is certain. “Companies rarely know what they will be building five years out and what skills they will need to make that happen; they also don’t know if the people they have in their pipelines are going to be around.” (Peter Cappelli, Wharton School)

Hiring managers avoid risk whenever possible.

College degrees are the ticket to get in the door with employers… but they do not assure good performance.

Page 6: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Beyond college credentials, the competencies employers value most:

People skills – 89% rated ‘extremely’ or ‘very’ important

Motivation to keep up with changes – 87% Applied skills – 68% Ongoing learning, skill development –

64% Entrepreneurial attitude – 48%

Results of a 2011 survey of 169 HR professionals conducted by the St. Louis RCGA and the Human Resource Management Association (St. Louis SHRM)

Page 7: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

People skills

Ethical behavior Customer orientation Teamwork / collaboration Oral and written communication Active listening

Page 8: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Motivation to keep up with changes

Positive attitude – enthusiastic for new opportunities

Committed and will ‘go the extra mile’ Engaged as a leader as well as team

player Loves what they do Initiates ideas for improving personal

efficiency

Page 9: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Applied skills

Problem-solving Strategic thinking / planning Critical / analytical thinking Decision-making Prioritization / focus

Page 10: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Ongoing learning and skill development

Initiates formal learning objectives as part of employee development plan

Participates in classroom-style training in the workplace

Pursues professional development credits Participates in online learning Has one or more mentors to provide

ongoing learning

Page 11: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Entrepreneurial attitude

Manages company resources as if they were their own

Willing to go ‘outside my job description’ with new approaches to get the job done

Demonstrates a passion for problem-solving

Initiates ideas to improve business operations

Is resilient when failure occurs

Page 12: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

About the talent marketplace:

Many employers use a supply chain approach. They ‘source’ the right people with the right skills at the right time by- developing from within - hiring directly from without- augmenting staff temporarily - outsourcing- off-shoring - more.

This is the future.

Page 13: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Employers search for people with up-to-date skills from a vast talent marketplace –community colleges, four-year universities, trade schools, non-profits, proprietary schools, professional associations, social networks, WIBs, edupreneurs, other firms.

Innovation and other good things can happen when there is communication, collaboration, coopetition, customer choice.

Page 14: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Implications for community colleges

Become a lifelong listener. Don’t just bring employers to your table – sit at theirs. Read their e-newsletters; join their associations. Stay awake at night worrying about their problems.

Learn to think from the demand side. Think work, not jobs. Think continuous change, not static state. Think minimizing risk vs. “doing the right thing.” Consider how innovative partnerships can solve business challenges.

Page 15: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Implications (continued)

Instead of long-term plans, establish long-term relationships. Business organizations and human resource groups like SHRM exist everywhere. Get to know them.

Consider how ‘alternative work arrangements’ align with business sourcing trends. Make it work from both sides.

Page 16: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Implications (continued) Help students assess and market skills in

terms of the competencies employers value most. Use existing research or – better yet – conduct your own.

Remember: employers are less interested in what a job candidate did for another employer yesterday, and more interested in what he or she can do for them today. Send graduates to work prepared to hit the ground running.

Page 17: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Your ideas.

Page 18: Developing Partnerships with Employers Briefing for the 4 th Annual Plus 50 Conference American Association of Community Colleges Blair Forlaw July 14,

Thank you.

Blair [email protected]