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MEDIUM TERM PLAN

MEDIUM TERM PLAN. Fully disburse in next 4 years Co-investment target from 7:1 to 0.5:1 Create / sustain 17,000 jobs for mainly youth 67% (vs 50%) of SMMEs - women-owned Successful mainstream micro-finance model Successful mainstream co-operatives model

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MEDIUM TERM PLAN

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  1. MEDIUM TERM PLAN • Fully disburse in next 4 years • Co-investment target from 7:1 to 0.5:1 • Create / sustain 17,000 jobs for mainly youth • 67% (vs 50%) of SMMEs - women-owned • Successful mainstream micro-finance model • Successful mainstream co-operatives model • Lower cost of financing for micro-businesses and co-operatives (partnership with SACCOL) • Gross portfolio return (>20%)

  2. CHALLENGES • Attracting private sector investment in SMME • Increased private sector investment vs UYF influence • Managing stakeholder expectations • Managing growth • Balance developmental & financial returns • Maintain focus (especially if seen as successful) • Balancing breadth / depth of programs • Improving outreach • Creating and strengthening partnerships • Lower operating costs of programs / projects • Lowering cost of financing to SMMEs.

  3. EntrepreneurshipEducation

  4. Client completes voucher applicationform • Undergoes assessment and identification of required intervention • Pays contribution (10%) into BDSVP account • Selects preferred SP from SP directory • Attends the approved intervention • Endorses voucher on completion of intervention • Provides continuous feedback to AA on the provision of services including final evaluation of the intervention How Voucher Programme Works

  5. BusinessDevelopment Services Voucher Programme

  6. 2004-2005 Plans • Formalise current projects into learnerships • Contract 18 public FET colleges (34 proposals received) • Increase provincial representation through FET colleges, parastatals & Setas. New projects in NW, NC, EC & FS • Increase participants to 3500 by March 2005 • Increase employment rate to 90% through BDS & Enterprise Finance • Increase partnerships • Conceptualise Career Development Programme with DoE

  7. Business Development Services Voucher Programme

  8. Future Plans2004/5 Entrepreneurship Education • Review of entrepreneurship education programmes (UWC) and finalisation of EE strategy • Hosting of National Entrepreneurship Conference (EE, BDS, access to finance) • 20 000 young people to be assisted to enhance their entrepreneurial skills. BDS Voucher Programme • Roll out of programme to remaining provinces : Free State, Mpumalanga, Northern Cape & North West (RFP for SPs & AAs already issued) • Provision of business support to 6000 young entrepreneurs • Approximately 9000 direct jobs to be created/sustained through programme.

  9. Role of Umsobomvu in NYSP • In 2003 Implementation Plan was developed and adopted by Cabinet • The Umsobomvu strategy was to ensure that there was a national framework which would ensure the implementation of NYS to scale • 5 000 young people will commence the project in 2004. • The responsibility for implementing this programme falls to many agencies. UYF’s responsibility is to resource the youth development components. • The National Youth Service Programme is an initiative of the Presidency and managed by a Project Partnership Team. Govt. dept. are resource agents.

  10. Role of Umsobomvu UYF will support the youth service programme in a number of ways, including: • Funding for the youth development components; • Assisting with exit opportunities; • Running capacity building for the institutions that are managing the programmes; and • Developing the training material and running the training programmes for the technical advisors and the programme and institutional assessors. • Many of these roles are likely to be particularly intense during the first phase of implementation. • In the immediate term UYF is developing the scope of the initial service projects with govt. departments.

  11. Areas of service2004 • Department of Health 3 000 • Department of Social Development 500 • Community Development Worker Support 250 • MPCCs 250 • Conservation and environment 500 • Agriculture 500 • Infrastructure: 1 000 • Construction: 1 000 • Additional 500 The Sector plans agreed by the EPWP are guiding the location and nature of projects.

  12. Programme DescriptionSchool to Work • The School to Work (STW) Programme is a strategic intervention aimed at improving the employability of youth in high growth sectors through the development of high level technical skills training and work experience • Targets unemployed matriculants & graduates

  13. Programme Model • Life & professional skills training for holistic development • Technical skills training & entrepreneurship education to assist youth to acquire sufficient preparation for the world of work • Structured work experience to develop learners’ occupational competencies & an opportunity to apply theory • Case management (counselling support, mentorship, follow-up and aftercare)

  14. Target Areas • Accounting • Agriculture • Banking and Financial Services • Engineering • Information Technology • Sport and Entertainment • New sectors under FETC RFP • Mining • Manufacturing • Agri-processing • Engineering

  15. Lessons Learnt (cont.) External integration Partnerships with Setas • Poslec Seta: Learnership for People with Disabilities • Chieta: Medical Sales Representative Learnership • Insurance Seta: Formalisation of the RAF Internship into a Learnership Benefits • Joint project design • Co-funding • Access to employers • Integration of life skills & entrepreneurship education • Integration of Enterprise Funding and BDS for self-employment exit opportunities

  16. 2004-2005 Plans • Formalise current projects into learnerships • Contract 18 public FET colleges (34 proposals received) • Increase provincial representation through FET colleges, parastatals & Setas. New projects in NW, NC, EC & FS • Increase participants to 3500 by March 2005 • Increase employment rate to 90% through BDS & Enterprise Finance • Increase partnerships • Conceptualise Career Development Programme with DoE

  17. The Public FET Colleges Programme • In line with our mandate, UYF has identified DoE as a strategic partner to deliver skills development interventions for unemployed youth. • UYF & DoE are currently finalising the operational plan which will guide the implementation of identified interventions, one of which is to support public FET colleges to deliver skills & learnershipprogrammes.

  18. The Public FET Colleges Programme The FET Colleges Programme began in February with the following investment from UYF: • Technical support to enable colleges to consolidate various capacity building interventions they have received. • Technical support to assist colleges to align their programmes with SETA requirements • R18 million direct investment into training programmes over the next 2 years.

  19. Purpose and Nature • CIC Project Purpose • Young people make informed decisions about their skills development, employment and self-employment and are linked to sustainable livelihood opportunities (What is CIC?)

  20. Achievements since 2001 • UYF Institutional Infrastructure and Capacity Developed • CDMP operational - Content Development and Management Project (CDMP), • YouthConnect operational as of March 2004 • YL (Call Centre) has serviced 60 000 callers in last year • Internet Portal now live! • SAY! to be launched in June 2004 • Service Provider Institutional Infrastructure and Capacity Developed • 13 YACs operational • YACs have serviced 86 554 direct beneficaries and benefited 408 indirect beneficiaries

  21. Achievements since 2001 - Continued • CDMP • 46 Information Products developed in key information areas and converted for the web (CDMP Information Products) • Database of 18 000 Youth Service Providers • Database of careers and 900 bursaries • 20 + Project Management Resources developed • IP has deployed an information site, corporate site and also systems for the development, management and dissemination of content (Internet Portal Screenshot) • SAY! is conservatively expected to reach 65 000 in Year 1 young people in 2004/5

  22. Information Stream Titles Employment • You and the Workplace: A Guide for Young People • Using Labour Market Information: A Guide for Young People • Fact Sheet: Special Public Works Programmes • Industry Profiles Entrepreneurship • From Idea to Opportunity: A Guide for Young People • Getting Business Finance: A Guide for Young Entrepreneurs • Starting Your Own Business: A Guide for Young Entrepreneurs • Writing a Business Plan: A Guide for Young Entrepreneurs • Starting a Co-operative: A Guide for Young People • Networking Your Way To Business Success: A Guide for Young Entrepreneurs Education and Training • Career Planning and Development: A Guide for Young People • Education and Training Options in South Africa: A Guide for Young People • A Learner’s Guide to Higher and Distance Education • Careers and Occupations Directory for Young People Citizenship • Fact Sheet: Establishing and Running Community Committees • Fact Sheet: Types of Organisations Working In and With Communities • Fact Sheet: How to Raise Funds • Fact Sheet: Public Participation – Getting Involved in Decision-Making that will Affect Your Community • Fact Sheet: What are My Right s and Responsibilities as a Volunteer? • Fact Sheet: Why Should I Volunteer? • Fact Sheet: Making Use of Volunteers • Is My Community Project Working? A Basic Guide to Evaluation • Let’s Get Involved with Our Communities: A Guide • Understanding My Community’s Needs: A Guide • Developing Life- Skills for Citizenship: A Guide • Get Active! You’re A South African • My Rights and Responsibilities as a South African Citizen • What Does Democracy Mean for Me? • The Nuts and Bolts of Volunteer Programmes and Policy • Understanding Volunteering: A Guide for Young People Health and Wellbeing • Coping with Teenage Pregnancy: A Guide for Young People • Dealing with HIV/ AIDS in the Workplace: A Guide for Young People • Fact Sheet: Substance Abuse and Addiction • Fact Sheet: Do I Have a Substance Abuse Problem? • Fact Sheet: How Substance Abuse Affects Your life • Fact Sheet: Sexually Transmitted Infections • Fact Sheet: Preventing HIV/AIDS • Fact Sheet: Voluntary Testing and Counselling • Fact Sheet: Positive Living • Fact Sheet: Healthy Eating • Fact Sheet: The ABCs of Good Health • Fact Sheet: Leisure and Fitness • Safe Sex Revolution: A Guide for Young People CDMP Information Products back

  23. Lessons Learned • UYF Investments • UYF investments are skewed to infrastructure, labour, capacity building and operational costs • Currenty the average YACs costs are: • ± 45% on Infrastructure and Operations • ± 40 % on Labour and Capacity Building • ± 15% on Direct Programme Related (some programme costs are built into Labour costs) • Scale and Sustainability will be achieved through Partnerships (to be covered later)

  24. Partnerships, Sustainability and Scale • Key Principles of Sustainability • Working through Infomediaries • Deploying innovative dissemination tools – Internet Portal, Community Print Media, Radio, On-demand Print, On-demand Mulit-media Datacasting • Through Partnerships with: • GCIS – 2000 Points of Presence (POPs), databases of 5000 + government services • MPCCs – projected 50 sites nationally • USA Telecentres – projected 100 sites nationally with internet connectivity • DoL Labour Centres – approximately 150 sites nationally • Local Governments - approximately 290 local governments • LoveLife Centres – as sites for info dissemination • Strategic partnerships with Youth Formations and Bodies – SAYC, NYC, etc. • Network of Municipal Libraries • Network of Higher Education and FET Institutions Libraries/ Student Centres • Mindset Livelihoods Channel – 800 000 households, 2000 schools • Community Radio – average of 80 000 listenership per station • Use Youth Advisory Centres for learner recruitment & reference purposes

  25. CIC going forward Key to CIC Impact: • Move Information Content to where Young People are – focus less on physical infrastructure and more on creating access • Use ICT to effectively develop, manage and disseminate content • Target UYF investments to information content development and training of infomediaries • Ensure integration with partners who share common purpose

  26. Performance • UYF pioneering almost all the initiatives in South Africa • 2 years of programme experience. Growing i.t.o geographic coverage & scale • Received R855 milliion, committed R500 million to 88 projects. More than 100 000 young people have participated in UYF projects

  27. Challenges • Risk of being perceived as a panacea • Improving access especially for rural areas • Launch of the “Take it to the People” concept • Recruitment of Prov. Coordinators • Dependancy on partners • Youth development agenda not mainstreamed • Diminishing resource base (sustainability) • Capacity (internally & externally)

  28. Challenges • Capacity of Service Providers – OD, accreditation, partnerships & job development • Formalise partnerships with the public and private sector institutions = sustainability

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