What is Start, Grow, Transform?
A conversation (and collection of treasures) about change, hosted by CSW’s Community Initiatives Team: Kristin, John, Lewis, Lisa, Mel, Rebecca and Sandy. Join us?
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What we’re thinking at CSW…
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Content We Like- The American Forum: Climate Change, The American Forum, a production of American University, talks with panelists about climate change. auobserver on USTRE... March 8, 2010
- Content Analysis Tool | Gobbledygook Grader March 5, 2010
- We Are Media - "Video Storytelling for Nonprofits" March 5, 2010
- U.S. Loses Innovation Crown to ... Iceland - BusinessWeek March 5, 2010
- The Great American Paycheck Squeeze - CBS Sunday Morning - CBS News March 3, 2010
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Getting Strategic About Skills
Thanks to Cristóbal Cobo Romaní in Flickr.
NOTE: This is the third in our recent “let’s share the findings from all those OECD reports with each other (and the world)” series. Again, the content is not likely scintillating, but it’s important to us, and we’re happy to let you in on it.
The OECD Designing Local Skills Strategies Report (2009) focuses largely on questions of balance in locally designed workforce strategies: balance between short- and long-terms needs, balance between training and placement, balance between meeting the needs of people, firms, and communities, and balance between workforce players – private, non-profit, and a diverse collection of government agencies at different levels.
Authors Francesca Froy, Sylvain Giguère, and Andrea Hofer offer case studies of the following communities:
While, other communities are also cited in the narrative, these communities’ launched initiatives representing what the report calls balanced strategies, the authors’ recommended approach. Balanced strategies focus simultaneously on:
The report concludes by recommending that local workforce actors seeking to implement effective (and balanced) approaches focus on five key strategic issues:
Not rocket science, but it does take determination – people who do this work rely on persuasion and trust, not hierarchy.
Leadership and Governance Really Matter
While the report does not emphasize leadership and governance as a theme, the frequency with which the difficulty of this work is noted in the narrative is striking. Meeting many diverse public and private needs, balancing the short and longterm, collaborating with large and changing networks of partners absent a structure, meeting shared national policy needs and in a local (and sometime divergent) context, developing and allocating resources fairly and in ways that deliver results – this is complex work all over the world, and speaks to the level of management expertise and leadership talent it takes to do well.
What’s our strategy for developing the workforce workforce?