Manufacturing entrepreneurs across the country create wealth and jobs, generate taxes, and improve life for millions. This blog is devoted to their story. It is based on the work of a dedicated team of WIRE-Net staff and volunteer board leaders that care deeply about the future of American communities and our national interest, and who have worked together since 1988 to strengthen US manufacturing. See our website at www.wire-net.org
Monday, May 22, 2006
Partnership Pays Off
Partnership Pays Off
AN INNOVATIVE PARTNERSHIP
BETWEEN Max Hayes and WIRENet’s
School-to Career Program is
providing students with preapprenticeships
and for some, full-time
jobs upon graduation.
Students interested in careers in
manufacturing are recruited for preapprenticeships
and job shadowing
opportunities at area manufacturing
companies and are also offered academic
support through tutoring. WIRE-Net
connects with member companies to
develop appropriate pre-apprenticeship
opportunities for students, then works
with Max Hayes instructors to identify
those best suited for the preapprenticeship.
WIRE-Net staff meets
with the prospective employer, the
student, and his/her instructor to
develop an appropriate training
program.
Besides spending 100 hours in their
pre-apprenticeship position, which
allows the student and the company time
to determine whether the pairing is a
‘good fit,’ students are paid $7 an hour
by WIRE-Net. Last year, 16 students
were placed in pre-apprenticeships and
more then half were hired as regular
employees. One student, now attending
North Carolina Agricultural &
Technical State University, returns to
Cleveland to work for the company he
was paired with during school breaks.
WIRE-Net’s School-to-Career
Program Manager, Jessica Malloy, says
the program’s growing success can be
attributed to a large base of member
companies, which allows for better
matches with student interests and trades.
A concerted effort is made to make the
pre-apprenticeships relevant to the
student’s future career. Max Hayes
Principal David Volosin says the WIRENet
partnership helps the school train the
workforce for the manufacturing skills
they will need in the 21st century. Volosin
added, “If we can teach the soft skills,
such as punctuality and hard work,
students will leave here so far ahead of
the game.”
Wednesday, May 03, 2006
BODYSTORMING AND UNFOCUS GROUPS...
...are just two of the unusual techniques IDEO uses with its clients. IDEO is perhaps the world’s leading industrial design and innovation firm.
Tom Kelley, IDEO's managing partner, will not be just another innovation guru at WIRE-Net's Innovation Celebration on June 22 at Jacobs Field’s Terrace Club in Cleveland.
As someone whose firm helps their clients build a culture of innovation (this is what Kelley's latest book, "The 10 Faces of Innovation", is all about), Kelley – originally of
As Kaiser's Adam Nemer (a IDEO client) put it, "Consulting firms usually come in, go away, and return with heavy binders that sit on the desk. With IDEO, we partner up and work side-by-side. We are internalizing their methodology to build our own culture of innovation."
Another reason to sign up for WIRE-Net’s Innovation Celebration…Tom Kelley has TWO books in Business Week’s Top Five Business Innovation Books (“The Ten Faces of Innovation”, and “The
Our thanks to Kaiser Permanente for joining WIRE-Net as our “Grand Slam” Sponsor for the Innovation Celebration.
For more information, give Pamela Holmes a call at (216) 588-1440, ext. 104.