Apprenticeships That Make Money? Not As Impossible as it Seems-Part 1 of 2

Part 1 of 2: The European Difference

Dean Prigelmeier, President of Proactive Technologies, Inc.
I had dinner with a friend of many years, Günther Hauser, in his hometown of Neckarsulm Germany. I met Günther several years ago when Proactive Technologies, Inc. (“PTI”) was working on a project in South Carolina that required PTI staff to travel to the LÄPPLE manufacturing plant in Heilbronn, Germany where Günther was the manager of the apprenticeship program. During that dinner, our conversation naturally drifted to an area of shared interest; worker training and apprenticeships and the differences in the United States and European systems of workforce development.

LÄPPLE is a worldwide supplier of press parts, autobody shell components, standard parts and rotary tables as well as automation solutions. They employ over 2000 people and provide exclusive, sophisticated solutions in forming and car body technology as well as the engineering and design of automation systems, machines and tools. Some of their customers include many of the automobile manufacturing companies such as Audi, BMW and Volkswagen.

While working on the Heilbronn project, PTI staff performed job/task analysis on several job classifications that were being duplicated at a new joint venture in Union, South Carolina including Press Operator, Press Technician, Maintenance, Quality Control, Assembly Operator and Assembly Technician. Günther was kind enough to take me on a tour of the apprenticeship center at the plant. The center had around 100 apprentices at any one time at various stages of progression. Modeled after the manufacturing plant where it was established, the group of young workers were processing in each of their disciplines of choice; CAD-CAM Engineering, Tool & Die, Quality Control, Machining. It was like a mini-manufacturing facility with the LÄPPLE factory.

Those apprentices in their final 2 years of study, I was told, were treated like a part of a Tool & Die Manufacturing center. When an order came in for a die, either from LÄPPLE or one of its customers or suppliers, the process started with designing the die, machining the die components, assembling the die, inspecting the assembly and shipping the die to the customer. Instead of making “key chains and donkey carts” like apprentices are often asked to make in the US as their “hands on” training, these apprentices were producing an actual product that was sometimes priced as high as USD1 million!

Of course, these apprentices were paid while in their program. Much of the wage came from the government, while the company paid for the facility, equipment, instructors. But LÄPPLE, like many European apprenticeship hosts, learned how to leverage the work produced by apprentices in honing their skills for paying for the costs to host the program. And when an apprentice completes the program,  LÄPPLE gets first pick of the class. The other apprentices have proved their skills enough to be immediately hired by one of many manufacturing facilities in the area aware of the program and its high standards of apprenticeship.

For European-style apprenticeships, each apprentice continues through their “K-10” education before focusing on an apprenticeship area, after having narrowed the field with relevant courses 4 years prior. The apprentice focuses on rigidly supervised training to finish the apprenticeship in 2-3 years. Some may take an out-of-country assignment in their trade for another two years as offered by their apprenticeship host. Once completed, they would be eligible for continued training in management with some additional “college-level” courses.

The advantage of this rigid, yet flexible, system is in the continuity of learning. Europeans, I am told, tend to live and work in their hometown. If they are laid-off, which happens less often than in the United States, or the plant closes they might simply decide to retire earlier than expected rather than uproot their families and start all over with a new job, new employer. This stability builds a strong loyalty toward employers because of the longevity of employment and potential for advancement – something that used to exist in the United States decades ago.DPandGH

However, due to the success of their structured career training, Europeans have not seen the need, and consequently have very little experience with adult learners as in the United States, where it is a major source of specialty training as careers currently average 3-5 years at best for a large number of employees. The Europeans are finding that their system doesn’t have an easy access for individuals returning for retraining or career shifts later in life. Perhaps globalization will encourage the Europeans to think those scenarios through as the same pressures on worker wages, pensions, changes in demographics, influx of immigrant labor and changes in employment longevity become reality.

When I was told the story of how the LÄPPLE apprenticeship program worked in 2007, typical in many ways to European apprenticeships, I was amazed and overwhelmed by the contrast with those in the United States. Familiar to the state of apprenticeships at that time, I saw no similarities. The US version was a dreadfully ambiguous 7-8 year program modeled after obsolete templates. I remembered I knew a very few people who were in a US apprenticeship program, and even fewer people that ever finished them. I also knew many employers had no interest in hosting one.

When the U.S. Department of Labor – Bureau of Apprenticeships changed its guidelines in 2008 to allow “Competency” and “Hybrid” models as well as the old time-based model, an opportunity surfaced in the United States for more willing employers to host apprenticeships that are focused on actual work to be performed and training that can be completed in 4-5 years. For visionary companies, perhaps some of the subassembly work could be done by apprentices on company equipment rather than outsourced as in the LÄPPLE model.

One challenge might be that the quality of the apprenticeship program is sacrificed for the urgency in increasing the number of apprenticeships. Another might be that until the U.S. apprenticeship programs are functioning efficiently and clearly display that the benefit far exceeds the cost, they may remain vulnerable to economic shifts. For example when employers are paying the wages of apprentices, this might be a problem during industry slowdowns like we often see in cycles. Accountants might be swayed to treat the hosting of an apprenticeship as a “cost” not a “long-term investment.”

I learned from my dinner with my friend Günther and his wife, Irene, that towards the end of his 49 year career with LÄPPLE and right before his retirement, the company had a lot of pressure on the apprenticeship program to perform like the other profit centers of the company. With a 4 million Euro budget and revenue goals to match, it seemed the priority drifted from training skilled workers and more towards meeting budget goals.

Maybe a balance can be reached by innovative United States business leaders, and the temptation to sway from the primary purpose of an apprenticeship resisted. New metrics detailing the value-added and the opportunity costs eliminated would be a better measurement of a successful apprenticeship.

Come to think of it, maybe it is too early to worry about that in the United States. We have a long way to go to catch up to European-style apprenticeships. There is no time like the present. For more information on how to set up a cost-effective, high return on investment apprenticeship, click here.

Coming in the next issue: Part 2 of 2 – Setting Up an Apprenticeship Center

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    PTI1005 - Adding Employer-Specific Structured On-The-Job Training to Your Apprenticeships

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    (Mountain Time) The philosophy behind, and development/implementation of, structured on-the-job training; how any employer can benefit from the PROTECH© system of managed human resource development in more than just the training area; building related technical instruction/structured on-the-job training partnerships for employers across all industries and how it can become an cost-effective, cost-efficient and highly credible apprenticeship. Program supports ISO/AS/IATF compliance requirements for “knowledge(expertise)” capture, and process-based training and record keeping. When partnering with economic development agencies, public and private career and technical colleges and universities, this provides the most productive use of available grant funds and gives employers-employees/trainees and the project partners the biggest win for all. This model provides the lacking support needed to employers who want to easily and cost-effectively host an apprenticeship.  Approx. 45 minutes

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    (Mountain Time) The philosophy behind, and development/implementation of, structured on-the-job training; how any employer can benefit from the PROTECH© system of managed human resource development in more that just the training area; building related technical instruction/structured on-the-job training partnerships for employers across all industries one-by-one. How this can become a cost-effective, cost-efficient and highly credible workforce development strategy – easy scale up by just plugging each new employer into the system. When partnering with economic development agencies, and public and private career and technical colleges and universities for the related technical instruction, this provides the most productive use of available grant funds and gives employers-employees/trainees and the project partners the biggest win for all. This model provides the support sorely needed by employers who want to partner in the development of the workforce but too often feel the efforts will not improve the workforce they need. Approx. 45 minutes

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    (Mountain Time) The philosophy behind, and development/implementation of, structured on-the-job training; how any employer can benefit from the PROTECH© system of managed human resource development in more that just the training area; building related technical instruction/structured on-the-job training programs and supporting them for employers across all industries. This approach uses the “accelerated transfer of expertise™” to quickly and completely train each incumbent worker to full job mastery. When change settles and growth returns, new-hires can be quickly developed to full job mastery to support expansion and cross-training of each worker conducted and controlled. Program supports ISO/AS/IATF and Nadcap compliance requirements for “knowledge(expertise)” capture, and process-based training and record keeping. Approx. 45 minutes

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    The Crash of 2008 and the Covid-19 Pandemic have caused disruptions to not just businesses, but the entire economy. Changes in company ownership can change in business strategy and training project support. During these disruptions, several Proactive Technologies projects were set-up for employers and ready to implement, or implementation started but paused temporarily, some indefinitely, as internal project knowledge and advocacy dissipated. Employee and management contacts were either laid-off, reassigned or retired. The significant value of what was established remains and Proactive Technologies saved each company’s data set up that point. Here is a chance to discover what was established, where we left off and what it would take to restart the program. The philosophy behind, and development/implementation of, structured on-the-job training; the many benefits from the PROTECH® © system of managed human resource development in more than just the training area; examples of projects with manufacturing and manufacturing support companies (aerospace, Tier-1 and 2 automobile suppliers, chemical companies, facilities maintenance companies, rubber/polymer manufacturers); compliance support provided by the system for ISO/AS/IATF and Nadcap quality programs as well as OSHA safety requirements; and how many structured on-the-job training programs were, or can be, unregistered apprenticeships or registered as apprenticeships.

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