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Employment

Business Focus >>

The new manufacturers The new manufacturers

A great British renaissance has been taking place. From Aberdeen to the West Country, the zing is back in manufacturing. It’s about time this spectacular story was told.

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McDonald's to award A-levels

by Matthew Rock - Monday, 28th January 2008 -

McDonald's is to become the UK's first big-name employer to be given the authority to award nationally recognised qualifications. But companies as teachers is nothing new.

The news that McDonald's, the fast-food restaurant, is to be allowed to hand out qualifications - so-called McDonald's A-levels - is bound to provoke "McJobs" protests.

Whether or not criticism is justified, the best private and public-sector organisations have long regarded the provision of education as part of their core duty. Philanthropy wasn't the only motive of the great Quaker companies, such as Cadbury's; rather, the knowledge that a well-educated and trained workforce would inevitably lead to greater productivity and results.

Among growing businesses, education is a key ingredient for success. “We run a sponsored student programme,” Philip Feibusch, co-founder of Bourne Business Consulting, told Real Business recently. “We take a focused and intelligent A-level student with plans to study at university, give them a structured placement within the firm and sponsor them through university.”

Our own Human Capital Awards, where we recognise high-performance people and organisations, last year unearthed the hugely positive story at Northern Ireland's largest poultry manufacturer, Moy Park. There, the business faced tricky issues around staff literacy and numeracy. Improving such skills has been a Moy Park mission across all its sites for some years now and the Human Capital award was recognition of the strides made to effectively help employees gain these skills which were invariably not learned at school.

The Moy Park solution was to introduce employees lacking in these skills to on-site tutors who over a period of months effectively and sensitively brought the individuals up to speed in the workplace.

A McEducation may not be the answer for everyone but, as usual, there are plenty of angles to this story.

BUSINESS NEWS >>

ASOS cashes in on the young pound

By Charlotte Burn-Callander - November 18, 2008 3:49pm GMT

On-line fashion retailer ASOS reported an impressive 68 per cent increase in pre-tax profits to £4.1m. Bucking the downward trend on the high street, its sales in the first half of the year have more than doubled to £67.5m.

Stelios's wrangle with directors continues

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - November 18, 2008 11:47am GMT

Stelios' row with the EasyJet board has yielded new headlines. In the wake of arguments over the future of the company, the millionaire founder has refused to sign off the firm's accounts.

Laying the bait: How to hook customers

By Kate Pritchard - November 18, 2008 10:05am GMT

Darren Tilley knows a thing or two about customer service. The founder of £8m-turnover chauffeured transport firm Driven Worldwide hasn’t lost a single client in the past few years.

Toni & Guy makes big bucks with franchising model

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - November 17, 2008 5:21pm GMT

“McDonalds was the first franchise on the high street. We were the second,” says founder Toni Mascolo.

Stelios fights for control of EasyJet

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - November 17, 2008 2:38pm GMT

The entrepreneur behind the Easy brand uses strong-arm tactics to regain control of the airline when faced with opposition from the board.


BUSINESS COMMENT >>

Global Entrepreneurship Week begins...

By Matthew Rock - November 17, 2008 9:50am GMT

And, boy, do we need it...

Hold onto your sides: it's the Friday funnies

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - November 14, 2008 3:44pm GMT

Take five and have a little chuckle at the best business humour around.

The entrepreneur's Shakespeare

By Kate Pritchard - November 14, 2008 3:09pm GMT

We're happy for you to vent your grumbles and groans about the economic downturn on our website. So when Nick Redford, managing director of recording studio Unit58, sent us a poem about the credit crunch, we couldn’t resist sharing it with the rest of you.

Can you bottle entrepreneurial spirit?

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - November 13, 2008 3:39pm GMT

The scientists say we can. But who wants to pop “risk pills”?

The Last Millionaire explodes onto our screens

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - November 13, 2008 12:16pm GMT

It’s a familiar format: a gaggle of businesspeople are thrown together to meet a series of challenges. But the entrepreneurs on this show have already made their millions. They’re being forced to start from scratch with no money and no help in unfamiliar territory. RB’s already hooked.


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