Karen McLauchlan

1,355 great reasons to celebrate
- Tags:
- apprenticeships
Posted by Karen McLauchlan on May 16, 2011 1:46 PM
Our drive to create new apprenticeships in the region has been a phenomenal success.
The 500 Apprentices in 100 Days initiative saw a final tally of 1,355 new opportunities - an incredible achievement and testament to the hard work of businesses and training providers across the region.
The Evening Gazette and The Journal have championed the campaign since it launched in January.
Run in association with the National Apprenticeship Service and supported by the North East Chamber of Commerce, the final total is an almost 14-fold increase on the original target.
Smashed within weeks of us starting out, we quickly raised the bar from 100 to 500 apprentices.
The final figure turned out to be so much more.
We'll be celebrating the campaign's success later this week with a special 500 in 100 supplement on Thursday, May 19.
Let's hope this campaign will also leave a lasting legacy for the North-east - showing that apprenticeships are great news for both employees and employers.
This page contains an archive of all entries posted to nebusiness by Karen McLauchlan. They are listed from newest to oldest.

James Mills is a web developer in the North East of England and founder of Refresh Teesside »
Mike Hughes is the Head of Business for the Evening Gazette. He will be blogging on all matters of importance to Teesside businesses - and some that are just worth knowing »
Jez Davison, business writer at the Evening Gazette, is a regular blogger on all things business - particularly finance, entrepreneurship and the state of the Teesside economy »
Jeremy Middleton is a venture capitalist and the co-founder of FTSE-200 company HomeServe »
Deloitte, which has 23 offices across the UK including Newcastle, is among the country's leading professional services firms »
ClimateNE & Climate Change Schools Project support the move to a low-carbon, resilient economy and help businesses avoid risk and realise commercial opportunities. Posts by Jen Atkinson, Krista McKinzey and Harriet Thew »