GREATER Manchester’s small businesses have benefited from boosts in apprenticeship opportunities thanks to a £1.9 million support package.

Since March, 2019, when the apprentice support package was launched in the city region, a total of 186 small businesses have received grants of £3,000 to help create new apprenticeship opportunities.

Greater Manchester’s #SeeDifferent Small-to-Medium Enterprise (SME) Apprentice Support package offers additional incentives to smaller employers and helps to remove barriers that often prevent them from creating apprenticeship opportunities.

Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham said: “This support package has already created a substantial number of opportunities for residents in the city-region and we hope to create even more as we move forward.

“Apprenticeships are crucial in bridging the skills gap and creating good quality employment opportunities which boost productivity. It’s vital that we continue to remove the barriers and make job opportunities in the city-region feel accessible to Greater Manchester residents, both young and old.”

Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA) commissioned the Growth Company to develop and deliver an online apprenticeship Levy Matchmaking Service that ensures as many levy payers as possible transfer unspent funds to non-levy payers – negating the need for them to pay five per cent co-investment costs.

Since the launch, in August ,2019, more than £2 million has been committed by Greater Manchester’s apprenticeship levy payers which could support over 300 apprenticeships.

Large businesses are encouraged to pledge their unspent levy to the matchmaking service and can do so by visiting the Levy Matchmaking Service website.

Oldham Council leader and GMCA lead for education and skills Sean Fielding said: “These results show just how important apprenticeships are to the city-region and that we are doing everything we can to help businesses make the most of them.

“Improving the quality and growth of apprenticeships is a fantastic way to get people into work, allowing them to have the support they need to enter and sustain employment and with the chance to up-skill and progress in their careers. Apprenticeships are an excellent route for anyone looking to start, change or develop their careers.”

Work has been carried out to deliver the Stimulating Employer Demand for Apprenticeships (SEDA) project which has provided 515 workforce development plans that have been implemented across the city-region. The plans aim to highlight any skills gaps or need for upskilling across businesses, then decide how to access training for existing staff or recruit new staff using the apprenticeship model and taking advantage to the funding available to them.

GMCA is continuously working to improve the quality and grow the numbers of apprenticeships in Greater Manchester with approximately 22,250 apprenticeships started in 2018/19.

Case study: People’s History Museum: Years of financial restraints meant that the People’s History Museum was unable to recruit people like - their social media and digital marketing apprentice.

For the museum hiring an apprentice, with the support from SEDA, is a cost effective way to invest in people and business growth.

Enthusiastic and proactive Sipho sees himself on a path to becoming an internal marketing manager shaping the business strategy in the next three years.