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1. The South African Breweries Limited
3.
The HRD team is the custodian of world-class development
of the Human Capital of the organisation,
thereby contributing directly
to business results and shareholder value.
4. To employ a disproportionate share of top calibre people who will enhance our high performance engaging and diverse culture, which, in turn, will allow the company to achieve spectacular business results.
5. Current Reality Global Trends
International talent mobility - opportunities
Shrinking labour force in developed countries – talent retained
International Technical skills crisis – increasing skills gap in SA
Scarcity of skills – competition / “brain drain”
Companies are “fishing in the same pool”
Economic growth
Unemployment levels – ASGISA Project
Artisan demand / supply
Decline in Apprentice numbers
6. Employment Outlook 1.2m jobs created over past 2 ½ years.
ASGISA – objective to half unemployment by 2014.
5m net new jobs to reach target.
500,000 jobs p.a.
Average 4.3% as opposed to 3.5% over the past few years.
Severe unemployment will probably persist? Problem too big for market forces to eradicate.
No option but to upgrade the skills of graduates and workers.
7. Supply of Skills in SA 8 million unemployed people in SA - shortage of 500 000 people in managerial and technical positions
8% of working population – post matric qualifications - unemployment rate 5%
46% unemployment rate – people with Grade 11
Required educational levels of recruits - 58% of companies indicated NQF 5
Confirmed by scarce skills research - 50% + of people required in occupations where the entry level is NQF 5 and above
8. Decrease in Apprenticeships Only 1 500 artisans on apprenticeship training (2007)
According to a study conducted by Mike Macrae of Sasol Synfuels:
+ 33 000 in 1975
+ 7 500 in 1990
+ 3 000 in 2000
1 440 in 2005
The average age of artisans in South Africa is 53 years
9. Demand - Artisan Nationally between 12 500 and 15 000 annually (ESKOM alone 12 000)
FoodBev Sector alone 1 900 by 2010 (sample size of 40%)
Supply? (current 1 500?)
International “brain drain”
10. Burning Platform - SAB SAB Ltd artisan turnover high
Technical Depth
Time to recruit within SAB Ltd
National focus on skills – significant reduction in apprentice numbers
Economic growth
11. Future Reality Re-introduction of Apprentice programme
60m budget over 3 years
May 2007 - 76 registrations (30 % internal appointments)
Current = 121 in system (45 first years)
Introduction of the Artisan Development Programme
7m budgeted over 3 years
Participation in FoodBev SETA initiatives
Apprenticeships: Section 13 & Section 28
Scarce skills development
Customised programme – curriculum linked to business results
Outsourced learning solutions
Facilitators up-skilled to deliver revised curriculum
14. Example - Instrument Programme
15. Career Opportunities?
16. Critical to success Business partnering / Supplier partnering
Recruitment – right calibre of people
Programme - aligned to business strategy
Skills set relevant to plant
Work-based learning – transfer and application of skills and knowledge
Facilitators’ functional expertise – current
Monitoring and QA
17. Benefits Technology investments in Manufacturing leveraged
Shortened time to competence
Increased technical depth
Pipeline development – matched skill set
18. Challenges Planning and scheduling of training
Administration – Central
Recruitment – right calibre of people
Benchmark centre for Skills development
Accreditation – Trade Test centre
19. SAB Ltd is …
Committed to skills development
Demonstrates best practice that often goes beyond compliance
A committed, loyal and proudly South African global company who truly lives the value that our people are our most enduring advantage