Essential Questions for Employment: Local Workforce Systems

Employment Playbook: Chapter 8

Overview

Overview

When young people secure work that pays a living wage, offers benefits, builds skills and provides purpose, they gain a trajectory toward long-term stability and opportunity. Communities can make this possible by aligning workforce systems, expanding access to internships and apprenticeships, engaging employers and ensuring every young person has the support and connections they need to launch a rewarding career.

This is part 8 of StriveTogether’s Cradle-to-Career Outcomes Playbook: Employment. The playbook synthesizes research and practical guidance communities can use to improve postsecondary completion.

When local workforce systems partner with postsecondary institutions and CTE pathways, they ensure education and training are aligned with real job needs and opportunities. This collaboration helps employers hire skilled local workers while supporting individuals in career growth and advancement. The result is stronger local economies and more inclusive opportunities for long-term success.

Question 11

Question 11: Are workforce intermediaries working to bring together partners in the workforce system to develop and coordinate workforce strategies, policies and provide funding and capacity to support a cohesive, aligned workforce system? 

Why it matters

Effective workforce intermediaries make local talent systems deliver real results — accessible, high-quality jobs for workers and reliable pipelines for employers. By convening employers, education providers, government and philanthropy, they coordinate policies and services, improve job quality and access and align efforts to local demand (Urban Institute). They also braid Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) and non-WIOA resources in a shifting funding landscape — where state investments rose even as some federal training dollars declined — to target dollars where they have the greatest impact (Education-to-Workforce Framework). Finally, high-performing partnerships use data for continuous learning to remove structural barriers and they sustain impact through strong leadership, dedicated staff, clear roles and diversified funding (National Fund for Workforce Solutions).

Expenditures on workforce development programs: Workforce development programs, such as apprenticeships and job training programs, benefit both job seekers and employers. For instance, apprenticeship programs offer valuable training and skills development for participants while providing employers with a reliable talent pipeline. However, workers of color and women historically have received lower-quality training and had insufficient connections to the labor market. Information on the level of government expenditures is critical to assessing whether states can provide high-quality workforce development programs for those who need it. The amount of state funding allocated to workforce development more than doubled between 2011 and 2020, though federal spending to support employment and training declined during this time (Education to Workforce).


Although federal programs under WIOA and other legislation support the public workforce system through funding distributed by state and local WDBs, local systems also leverage other resources to sustain workforce programs and initiatives prioritized by leaders and other stakeholders. National and local foundations may support local workforce efforts. State and local government funding may also contribute to local workforce development. Four strategies to provide funding and resources are listed below (Urban Institute, Understanding Local Workforce Systems).

Data-Informed Strategy and Continuous Learning: A data-informed strategy will ensure that employer and worker needs are met. Partnerships must gather and analyze labor market information and program data to learn more about what works and why and to understand the demand in the local workforce. Armed with this information, employers and partnership staff can develop continuous learning and improvement plans and identify the system changes needed to overcome the structural barriers to accessible employment and labor market mobility (National Fund for Workforce Solutions, Toolkit for Developing High-Performing Industry Partnerships).

Operational Capacity of Workforce Development Organizations: Effectively managed industry partnerships need committed partners at all levels. Strong leadership and dedicated staff, with the knowledge and skills to engage in the work and plan for sustainability, can help the partnership achieve long-term success. Dedicated funding from diverse funding streams and partners are essential to meeting the goals and objectives of the partnership and workforce investment in cross-sector approaches to meet labor market demands (National Fund for Workforce Solutions, Toolkit for Developing High-Performing Industry Partnerships).

Contributing factor | Key source: E-W Framework

Expenditures on workforce development programs

Contributing factor

Data-Informed Strategy and Continuous Learning

Contributing factor

Operational Capacity of Workforce Development Organizations

Contributing factor

Adaptive and Innovative Work Culture

Contributing factor

Funding Sustainability

Contributing factor

Investment in Experience of Workforce Development Program Teams

Question 12

Question 12: Are local workforce systems coordinating with regional education and training partners (e.g., education providers, training providers, community-based organizations) to help young people acquire career skills and credentials, find apprenticeships, jobs and access supportive services?

Why it matters

When local workforce systems coordinate with regional partners — community colleges, employers, unions, K–12 and human-services agencies — they can align training with real labor-market demand, so the skills and credentials young people earn actually translate into “good jobs.” Evidence is strong that employer-linked, sector partnerships boost earnings and advancement: randomized and long-term studies of programs like WorkAdvance/Per Scholas, Project QUEST and Year Up show sizable, sustained gains in participants’ earnings, often 14–30% per year and persisting for 7–14 years after enrollment (MDRC; Per Scholas Employment Program; Project Quest). Coordination also expands paid work-based learning — such as Registered Apprenticeships — which literature reviews link to meaningful lifetime earnings gains (Review of the Literature on Registered Apprenticeships). Crucially, regional partnerships make it feasible to braid in supportive services (transportation, childcare, advising, case management) that research shows double community-college graduation and improve longer-run outcomes when delivered at scale (e.g., CUNY ASAP and its Ohio replication). Together, these coordinated approaches help more young people — especially those facing systemic barriers — earn credentials of value, connect to quality jobs and persist with the wraparound supports needed to thrive in the workforce that regional economies are projected to reward most (Urban Institute).

Stakeholder Engagement: Industry partnerships have two major types of constituents: employers and regional partners. Regional partners can include workers, workforce investment boards, economic development entities, education and training providers and community-based organizations. Regional partners are essential to understanding worker needs and designing programs and strategies that improve outcomes for workers and businesses.

Provide Employment Services: Unemployed and underemployed people, as well as workers seeking career changes or advancement, often need help finding and retaining good jobs or advancing in their careers. Additionally, youth often need help finding and navigating information about careers and the labor market. People with little or no work experience may need to learn “soft” skills such as teamwork, critical thinking and communication (Urban Institute, Understanding Local Workforce Systems).

Provide Education and Training: Various education and training providers contribute to the local workforce system by preparing workers for successful careers. They may collaborate with employers and industry on content, instruction and hiring students. Programs that provide individuals with employable skills include high school and college career and technical education, adult basic education and certificates and degrees from two- and four-year colleges (Urban Institute, Understanding Local Workforce Systems).


Offer Supportive Services: Many people experience personal challenges to preparing for and securing employment and adults and youth often need help meeting their education and employment goals. Supportive services help remove barriers to employment and may include assistance with child care, transportation and housing; financial and personal counseling; academic support; and mentoring (Urban Institute, Understanding Local Workforce Systems).

Contributing factor

Stakeholder Engagement

Contributing factor

Provide Education, Training and Employment Services

Contributing factor

Offer Support Services

Contributing factor

Participant experiences in workforce development programs

Question 13

Question 13: Are local workforce systems engaging employers and industry groups to address local talent needs (e.g., hiring and training workers, helping develop and deliver career and technical education, providing resources for workforce development activities)?

Why it matters

Engaging employers and industry groups is essential for local workforce systems because it aligns training to real demand, reduces skills mismatches and coordinates actions across education, economic development and human-services policies. Evidence on sector partnerships — formal collaboratives among employers, training providers and community organizations — shows they help workers secure better jobs and earnings while helping firms fill critical roles and align work-based learning to current needs (Maguire et al., 2010; Hendra et al., 2016). Employer participation also advances job quality and access: federal “Good Jobs” guidance encourages boards and partners to incorporate practices such as transparent pay, safe scheduling and clear advancement pathways and to embed these in partnership design (U.S. Department of Labor & U.S. Department of Commerce, 2022). WIOA further reinforces employer engagement by requiring states and regions to plan for employer services and by tracking “effectiveness in serving employers,” which promotes collaboration across systems and policies.  Finally, sustained dialogue with industry clarifies HR priorities — recruitment pipelines, onboarding and upskilling — so that local strategies address real talent needs and improve retention.

Develop and Coordinate Workforce Strategies and Policies: Part of what makes a local workforce system a system is its ability to coordinate across stakeholders, programs and organizations that may perform similar functions or serve similar populations. A successful system also requires strategies and policies that reflect the needs of stakeholders with different goals and agendas. Coordination and collaboration among organizations in a local workforce system is vital to ensuring scarce resources are used to address priorities effectively and efficiently (Urban Institute, Understanding Local Workforce Systems). Employers often engage in industry partnerships to address talent needs. They begin as a coalition of the willing. Workforce intermediaries work to build trust with employers and industry. As additional employers become involved and the industry partnership develops, members recognize their roles for investing in workers and creating quality jobs. (National Fund for Workforce Solutions, Toolkit for Developing High-Performing Industry Partnerships).

Improve Job Quality and Access: Local workforce systems seek to not only get people into jobs, but improve working conditions and connect people with positions that provide a living wage and benefits, as well as safe and nondiscriminatory working environments. In many local areas, the workforce system plays a significant role in economic development to ensure that residents, especially the economically disadvantaged, can take advantage of the job opportunities created by new employers and industry (Urban Institute, Understanding Local Workforce Systems).

Support Employer’s HR Needs: Although local workforce systems often focus on directly serving adults and youth, they also support the human resources needs of local industry. Local workforce systems help employers identify job candidates through prescreening, train new workers and provide post-placement services to retain skilled employees (Urban Institute, Understanding Local Workforce Systems).

Contributing factor

Develop and Coordinate Workforce Strategies and Policies

Contributing factor

Improve Job Quality and Access

Contributing factor

Strengthen workforce talent pipeline

Question 14

Question 14: Are employers creating the conditions for employee success and career advancement, improving job access and job quality?

Why it matters

Creating the conditions for employee success and career advancement is essential to improving job quality, retention and overall organizational performance. Research consistently shows that employees value opportunities for growth and development more than any other factor when deciding whether to stay or leave a job — “career growth opportunities” is the No. 1 reason people change jobs (Gallup). When employers provide structured pathways for advancement, access to training, mentoring and cross-departmental projects (American Psychological Association; Great Place to Work) and clear systems for feedback and recognition, employees report higher satisfaction, stronger performance and longer tenure (Oracle; Great Place to Work).

At the systems level, organizations that invest in quality professional learning, talent marketplaces and upskilling programs build more resilient workforces capable of adapting to changing labor demands (American Psychological Association; Workforce Edge; World Economic Forum). Effective policies include transparent internal mobility platforms, individualized career development plans and formal coaching programs, all of which help employees map out and pursue growth within their organizations. Evidence from Workforce Edge and the APA finds that these practices not only expand job access but also foster loyalty and engagement — key drivers of both economic mobility for workers and long-term organizational success.

Contributing factor

Working conditions for employee success

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