Apprenticeships Are Vital But Small Firms Need Delivery, Not Another Slogan

           

By Liz Barclay Co-Founder of Business111.com

The new apprenticeship announcement is being hailed as a breakthrough for small and micro businesses. As someone who spent years inside the system as Small Business Commissioner and has gone back to working directly with owners through Business111.com I welcome it. But I also know that small firms have been promised “transformational” support before, only to discover the fine print doesn’t match the fanfare.

We’ve seen it with so-called simplification drives that ended up creating heavier admin burdens, as set out in The Paperwork Trap . We’ve seen worker-protection reforms that were vital in principle but applied without proportional support, leaving micro firms carrying risks designed for corporates as highlighted in Protecting Workers Shouldn’t Mean Punishing Small Businesses . And we’ve seen skills plans come and go while shortages continue to choke off growth, a reality laid bare in Labour Shortages Are Real – And Small Businesses Need Skills, Not Slogans.

The announcement has potential, but small business owners have learned to read beyond the headline.

They want apprentices. They want to train young people, pass on craft skills, build teams, and grow, but the current system is built for big businesses: heavy paperwork, rigid rules, confusing funding pathways and training providers who naturally prioritise large contracts. If you’re a three-person bakery or a one-van electrician, you simply don’t have the spare hours to decode a process that feels like a full-time job in itself.
If this new apprenticeship strategy is to succeed where others have stumbled, it must confront the real barriers small firms face:
Make the system genuinely simple with clear, plain guidance, one route in, one human point of contact. No jargon, no maze of portals, no guesswork.
Ensure money reaches micro employers, not just the big players. Small firms need meaningful financial support to take on an apprentice, not theoretical access that disappears in practice.
Build flexibility into every rule. No small firm can absorb the same rigid training schedules or administrative requirements as a large organisation. The reality has to drive the design, not the other way round.
Firms needs stability and follow-through. Small businesses plan week to week. If a policy launches with great noise and then shifts again within a year, confidence evaporates.

I’ve met countless owners who desperately want to grow but can’t find the skills needed to say yes to the offer of new contracts, or can’t navigate the system that’s meant to supply them. Apprenticeships could be a lifeline, but only if this strategy matches rhetoric with delivery.
At Business111.com, we hear from people every day, battling skills gaps, rising employment costs, paperwork overload and constant firefighting. They want to train and invest in others but that can’t be at the cost of sinking their own business. And without those small and micro businesses there is no innovation, job creation of apprenticeship places.

The announcement opens the door to real progress but unless government walks through it with the smallest employers at its side, we risk yet another big promise that melts away on contact with real life.

Small businesses are ready to play their part. Now the strategy must finally be built around them.

 


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