Firms told to ‘take a bite’ out of new skills funding

1 min read

Manufacturers in the Black Country and Shropshire are being urged to take advantage of a major upskilling opportunity that aims to help improve productivity and deliver more efficient workforces.

In-Comm Training, which has recently been awarded ‘Outstanding’ status by Ofsted, is inviting firms in the two regions to benefit from more than 50 bite size courses that will be delivered at its state-of-the-art academies in Aldridge and Shrewsbury.

Companies can save up to £1,500 per employee by taking part in short courses in lean manufacturing, maintenance diagnostics, electrical engineering, CNC Machining, the three disciplines of welding and Six Sigma. There are also funded RTITB Forklift refresher licenses - with a bolt on NVQ.

All of the courses will be delivered by a team of 20 experienced trainers, who have more than 300 years’ combined experience in industry and access to some of the latest machinery, technology and automated solutions.

Explains In-Comm Training managing director Gareth Jones: “We are continually talking about generating the pipeline of future engineers, but that’s a dangerous game if we are not taking the same approach with upskilling our current employees.

“This is why we are really excited to be offering one of the largest selection of bite size courses in the UK and better still our clients can tap into them without having to spend any money. The uptake in the first few weeks has been impressive and I’m sure this will grow as more and more manufacturers find out about it.”

He continues: “It shouldn’t be seen as something to do because it is free. Management teams need to ask themselves…do you want multi-skilled maintenance engineers? How can you embed a continuous improvement culture? Do your staff understand value stream mapping and process flow analysis for example?”

In-Comm is one of a select number of approved providers that can deliver the short courses, which are funded by the European Social Fund (through Skills Support for the Workforce) and the Black Country Skills Factory.

The funding is restricted to companies employing under 250 employees and there is no maximum number of workers that can be put through the courses that tend to be 3.5 hours or half a day and delivered at the Aldridge and Shrewsbury academies.