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2001

FIRST FOR SEEDA AS IT SIGNS UP TO E-SKILLS CHARTER
SEEDA challenges South East companies to be the
solutions of their own problems.

17 December 2001

More than a million trained Information Technology (IT) professionals will be needed the next five years. Without UK wide industry action to address the need for IT professionals, the UK's position as a world leader in IT will be threatened. This will ultimately affect the long-term sustainable growth of the economy. Leading the drive to address this challenge, is the South East England Development Agency (SEEDA), the first Regional Development Agency (RDA) to sign up to the e-skills Employers' Charter. The charter is produced by the e-skills National Training Organisation (NTO) which has responsibility for the IT and Telecommunications industries and IT-related skills in other sectors.

SEEDA Chief Executive, Anthony Dunnett, was joined by SEEDA Head of Personnel, Helen Mead and e-skills NTO South East Project Manager, Helen Porter, at the signing of the Charter.
SEEDA Chief Executive, Anthony Dunnett said,

"This is an important step forward for our staff and I am delighted that we will be working with the e-skills NTO to improve the awareness and value of IT within our organisation. We do things well but there is no room for complacency in today's IT driven world. There are many ways in which we can improve our performance and this charter will help us.

"I am delighted that as the first RDA to sign up, SEEDA will be an exemplar in this area. I would like to challenge any company who wishes to set world class standards to join SEEDA in signing the charter. We will actively seek to encourage and influence our partner organisations and other businesses across the South East to work with the e-skills NTO to take immediate action to recruit and train IT professionals and promote careers in IT.

"The biggest problem facing the South East, and companies generally across the UK, is the shortage of IT skills, without these our economy cannot grow to meet its potential. By signing the charter, companies commit to being the solution to their own problems, investing in their staff and drawing on the best practice advice available through the e-skills NTO."

With its 140 employees, SEEDA will work to actively promote IT awareness and training with staff and seek to encourage others in the region to follow its example.

SEEDA has joined a growing list of companies backing the Charter. These include HP, BT and Dell and founding signatories IBM, Logica, Microsoft, Ericsson and ARM. The aim is to combat skills shortages for the information age.

SEEDA staff will benefit from this renewed commitment to good employment practice as the organisation examines and compares its personnel practices with other successful organisations and reviews its recruitment and retention practices to ensure that it attracts and retains the best staff available. The charter places strong emphasis on attracting and retaining women within the IT industry by challenging the negative image IT careers have and the way in which jobs are advertised. It will identify new and under used recruitment pools such as returners to work.

Project Manager at e-skills NTO, Helen Porter, said, "Jobs are being exported when employers fail to find the skilled IT professionals they need. Increasingly, through the Charter, employers are working together with us to address these skills shortages. We are delighted that such an influential organisation has become one of them."




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