Frontiers in Education (Feb 2024)

Maximizing employability and entrepreneurial success: a training program for highly skilled seniors transitioning into freelance consulting

  • Siavash Atarodi,
  • Siavash Atarodi,
  • Jean-Yves Ottmann,
  • Jean-Yves Ottmann,
  • Papa Alioune Meïssa Mbaye,
  • Papa Alioune Meïssa Mbaye

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2024.1199086
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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This paper provides insights into the impacts of a self-employment and entrepreneurship education program for high-skilled long-term unemployed workers aged 45–65 in France during the COVID-19 pandemic. The training program involves individual tutoring, synchronous online classes and lead generation workshops with a freelancing project to design and present to a committee. We studied the impact of the training through an adapted version of the CHEERS questionnaire sent to the trainees six months after the training completion. In contrast to the previous literature, we show promising results for this kind of training. Our results show that this training program not only helps people to start a freelancing career but also prepares many of them to find an employee position after a long period of unemployment. We have also been able to identify the main characteristics of the jobs obtained afterwards that matter to high-skilled senior workers and to describe five trainee profiles through a cluster analysis: (1) enthusiastic but not confident, (2) quick return to salaried employment, (3) focused on freelancing, (4) demanding and disappointed elders, and (5) struggling with business tasks.

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