After Cluster Analysis: Engaging the Community, Aligning Systems, Rewriting the Rules Scott Sheely...
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Transcript of After Cluster Analysis: Engaging the Community, Aligning Systems, Rewriting the Rules Scott Sheely...
After Cluster Analysis:After Cluster Analysis:Engaging the Community, Engaging the Community,
Aligning Systems,Aligning Systems,Rewriting the Rules Rewriting the Rules
Scott SheelyExecutive Director
Lancaster County (PA) Workforce Investment Board
Industry Cluster AnalysisIndustry Cluster Analysis
Involved with industry cluster analysis since State-mandated strategic planning in 2000;
Used Porter’s theoretical model and mostly anecdotal information to focus workforce investment planning;
Never enough public money to do everything that needs to get done;
Industry Cluster AnalysisIndustry Cluster Analysis
Five industries chosen as priority targets for workforce investment in Lancaster County;– Health care;– Construction;– Food processing;– Communications;– Advanced manufacturing;
Industry Cluster AnalysisIndustry Cluster Analysis
In spring 2001, received a Community Audit Grant from the US Department of Labor to further study and develop metrics to validate the choice of clusters;
Engaged Lee Munnich and the State and Local Policy Program at the HHH Institute at U of MN as consultant;
Adopted the “Understanding Your Industries” model for analyzing ES 202 data;
Industry Cluster AnalysisIndustry Cluster Analysis
Gathered a Steering Committee to do local analysis;– Academic economists;– Economic development planners and
statisticians;– Private sector planning professionals;– State economic and workforce development
staff;
Industry Cluster AnalysisIndustry Cluster Analysis
Used closely supervised student interns from local universities to do the “number crunching”;
Hired local “business calling program” from economic development to do qualitative follow-up to the statistical analysis;
Steering Committee met three times to examine quantitative and qualitative information
Sharing the ResultsSharing the Results
Began sharing information as developed with representatives from key systems;– Important organizations that are business
intermediaries;– Lancaster Chamber of Commerce and Industry;– County commissioners and staff;– Economic Development Company;– Higher education programs operating in County;– Sixteen local school districts in County.
The ResultsThe ResultsOriginal five clusters retained but enhanced;
– More broadly conceived;– Detailed data to support conclusions;– Cluster snapshots to use with the general
public.New clusters in automotive and
biotechnology addedThirteen other clusters studied and rejected
as priority – hospitality, education, transportation, and others
The ResultsThe Results
Research took the next step of identifying the career ladders that support each cluster and the skills, knowledge and abilities that support the various career ladders;
This work is underway and should be finished by the end of 2003.
During the YearsDuring the Years
As the information was shared and analyzed,
As people felt more and more comfortable with the common sense nature of the process,
As consensus built around cluster priorities,Things began happening…Things began happening…
Among our Business PartnersAmong our Business Partners
Our planning partners from business began suggesting some specific interventions that would be helpful in their industries;
In 2001, began a major regional (ten county) initiative with 35 partners from the health care industry to increase the supply of trained health care workers using the CareerLink system as a primary broker for people needing a connection to education and employment;
Among our Business PartnersAmong our Business Partners
In late 2002, responded to the need for more skilled tradespeople in the construction industry by forming a regional initiative with Associated Builders and Contractors, six local homebuilder associations, and the PA Homebuilders’ Association by putting together a regional consortium to recruit people for the construction industry using a television media campaign;
Among our Business PartnersAmong our Business Partners
In 2003, used a Stay! Invent the Future grant to study the needs of the manufacturing community for more skilled workers to fill the technology jobs being created in that sector;
Major regional initiative being planned with three workforce investment boards, two manufacturers’ associations, five Chambers of Commerce, and seven training institutions
In Economic DevelopmentIn Economic Development
Local economic development planners began using the locally-developed industry cluster priorities in business attraction and investment programs;
Lancaster County Planning Commission wrote priority clusters into County plan;
Local workforce and economic development partners working on common measures of economic development progress.
In EducationIn Education
The Lancaster County Career and Technology Center (vocational-technical school) aligned its curriculum into clusters paralleling those of the Board;
The School District of Lancaster retooled its Small Learning Communities format for curriculum organization into programs that align with the Board priorities.
In Local GovernmentIn Local Government
In early June, the Lancaster County Commissioners called all of these groups together to announce publicly that the five (now six) industry cluster priorities identified by the Workforce Investment Board would be priorities for the County for the next five years.
What Happened?What Happened?
By having the five major systemic players – business and industry, workforce development, economic development, education, and local government – involved in the analysis of the industry cluster data, we engaged key people and developed allies in systems beyond our own;
What Happened?What Happened?
By sharing the results of our analysis broadly, we allowed policymakers from all five systems to contribute to the development of a shared vision;
By communicating that shared vision throughout the community with the data to back it up, we developed area-wide consensus about the common sense of the vision;
What Happened?What Happened?
As consensus developed, changes began happening….– At the policy level
Endorsement of Commissioners Changes in State policy around funding Local Board priorities into contracting processes
– At the planning level Regional approaches where clusters replace
geography Curricula are realigned and plans change
What Happened?What Happened?– Most importantly, service delivery systems
have changed In Lancaster County, everything we do in the
delivery of workforce and economic development services now has a cluster emphasis;
Cooperative projects among systems; Planning drives service delivery; Service delivery is responsive to the needs of our
customers in the business community; Industry-led consortia have changed the way we
deliver service.
What Happened?What Happened?
Who would have thought that…– Data could drive policy development;– Policy could drive planning;– Planning could drive a rethinking of the
structure and content of service delivery systems in workforce development, economic development, and in education.
A ModelA Model
Run the numbers and process the data;Engage actors from the five system players
in the analysis of the data…– Business and industry– Workforce development– Economic development– Education– Local government;
A ModelA Model
Share the analysis broadly and listen to the response;
Develop a shared vision and talk about it with all of the involved parties;
Push for bringing this vision into the planning that drives changes in the service delivery system and look for opportunities that develop;
Listen to your business and community partners; Drive changes in your own system.
ContactContact
Scott Sheely
Executive Director
Lancaster County Workforce Investment Board
313 W. Liberty St., Suite 114
Lancaster, PA 17603
717-735-0333