How Year Up CEO Gerald Chertavian is breaking open the college-to-career pipeline —?and how you can do the same
On LinkedIn’s video series, This is Working, I sit down with top figures from the world of business and beyond to surface what they've learned about solving particular problems.
This week, my guest is Year Up United CEO Gerald Chertavian .
How would American business change if companies could hire the best candidates versus how things work today: the best candidates who also went to the right schools? How would lives and generations be impacted by people getting into good jobs that were previously inaccessible to them??
Those are the the society-bending question Gerald Chertavian has been asking himself for more than two decades.?
The former Wall Street executive and tech founder set out to disrupt the college-to-career path after working closely with a New Yorker who was never going to get in the pipeline. Gerald, then a young executive, was a Big Brother in his free time, and paired with a pre-teen named David. His time mentoring and coaching David gave Gerald his first desire to solve America’s opportunity gap crisis.
“[David] had all the motivation, all the work ethic, all the ambition, but it was things like his ZIP code, the bank balance of his mom, the school system he attended, and indeed the color of his skin that was limiting his opportunity to reach his potential,” Gerald told me.?
Millions of youth have been left behind in today’s workforce simply because they didn’t attend college. And who gets left out is jaw dropping: As Gerald point out, by requiring four-year degree as a condition to apply for a job, companies exclude 83% of Latinos and 75% of African Americans.
“We do a disservice to folks by actually viewing it as a monolithic path, one way only, go to college, graduate at 22, when that is not the lived experience of the vast majority of Americans in our country,” Gerald says.
That’s where Year Up comes in. Gerald launched Year Up in 2000 to close the opportunity gap. The non-profit trains young workers, especially those from underrepresented communities, and helps place them in well-paying jobs.?But it only works if companies embrace the idea that most skills are learnable — and learnable anywhere.
Talent pipelines for workers without bachelors degrees can increase 9-fold globally when using a skills-first hiring approach, according to LinkedIn data. That number doubles in the US. A skills-first approach can also increase female representation in the workforce, especially in jobs where women are the minority. And these days, recruiters on linkedin are 50% more likely to search by skills than by years of experience. That number is only expected to rise in the coming months.?
Year Up works with some of the biggest companies in the country. My question was how executives and managers who wanted to do this on their own could make a difference. He had three pieces of advice that stuck with me:
Finally, I loved how much David, Gerald's student from the Big Brother program, is still with him. As he said, "I'm pretty clear that, often, changing your behavior first requires you to change your beliefs, and changing beliefs is about how you feel about something, it's not just what you think about it."
Sometimes a feeling — backed by conviction, data and, in Gerald's case, 20 years of pushing?— can change deeply held beliefs at some of the biggest companies in the world.
More: Stephanie Linnartz??? Bobbi Brown?? ?Toto Wolff ? Al Roker ? Vas Narasimhan ? Barack Obama ? Oscar Munoz ? Coltrane Curtis ? Sally Susman ? Gina Rometty ? Christine Lagarde ? Richard Branson ? Ray Dalio ? Corie Barry ? Ryan Gellert ? Everette Taylor ? Jesper Brodin ? Chrissy Taylor ? Niels Christiansen ? Terry Crews ? Tarika Barrett ? Bill Gates ? Toto Wolff? ? Kimberly Bryant ? Mark Cuban
Talent Developer | Culture Catalyst | Servant Leader | Coach, Mentor, & Partner | Chief of Staff | Strategy Architect | Customer-Centric Business Builder | Program & Product Manager
1 年In one sentence Gerald sums up the numbers behind reevaluating 4 year degree requirements. "We can now prove that, when you require a 4-year degree for a role that doesn't need it, you pay 11% to 30% more in salary, it takes you longer to hire the individual, you get less diverse talent, and they turn over more quickly," I highly recommend partnering with Year Up for any organization that is looking to diversify their team.
Cybersecurity Professional | BTL1 | CompTIA CySA+ | CompTIA Sec+ | Year Up Alumni
1 年Alumni and forever grateful!!!!
Senior Talent Program Manager at LinkedIn | Talent Leadership & Transformation | Removing barriers to economic opportunity
1 年Hearing Gerald Chertavian speak is always a joy, what a fantastic interview! Working with the Year Up team every day is a dream come true, so proud to support the LinkedIn partnership ??
Aspiring Marketing Analyst | Data-Driven Problem Solver | Passionate About Consumer Insights & Digital Marketing
1 年I believe that Year Up had a good mission to start with but they have left many people including myself after doing their 6 month program with wasted time and without an internship. I hope that they can improve in the future.