Improved access to training needed for micro-businesses

The UK's smallest businesses must be given their own Small Business Sector Skills Council that will focus on the needs of micro-firms, according to the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB).

Micro-firms – defined as organisations with fewer than five employees - are currently being excluded from Government-run training schemes, and are struggling to take advantage of the ‘Train to Gain' scheme, an FSB survey has found. Of the UK’s small businesses, the majority have less than four employees and 2.72million people in the UK are currently self-employed.

Train to Gain aims to help businesses develop the skills of their staff, but many small firms are not aware subsidised training is on offer and the majority of sole traders wrongly believe they do not qualify to apply for training, according to the new FSB survey.

Despite a £350m pot of money being announced in spring this year for the small businesses that are hardest to reach, 88% of respondents to the survey of FSB members said they had not taken up an offer of training through Train to Gain.

The majority (78%) said the scheme needed to be more flexible, and identified the need for training on issues specific to the smallest firms, including leadership and management for businesses with fewer than five employees, and specialised technical and business skills areas that micro businesses operate in. There was also interest in areas such as IT, health and safety, responding to tenders and sales and marketing.

Colin Willman, Federation of Small Businesses Education and Skills Chairman, said: "The Government must start to recognise the needs of the country's smallest businesses, especially during this crucial time when firms need to be investing in skills and training so that they can emerge stronger as they pull the economy out of recession.

"The FSB welcomes extra funding for, and the focus on, small and medium-sized enterprises, as well as the increased flexibility. But much of the Government's training offer goes over the heads of the hardest to reach small firms because the training available is inappropriate for the majority of the country's smallest businesses, and because it still isn't flexible enough. A small business with only two employees needs to be able to train its staff in a way that doesn't force them to be out of the office for days on end – especially during a recession when the business needs to be functioning on all cylinders. What we really need is dedicated training for the smallest firms, in the form of a new Small Business Sector Skills Council."

 

Sarah Wray

 

 

 


Jun 2, 2009
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