Toolkit for Developing High-Performing Industry Partnerships

Operational Capacity

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.

Operate with Knowledgeable Staff

Engaging employers and partners to discuss topics like job quality, equity and inclusion, and worker needs is important and requires expertise and competency in a variety of areas.

What success looks like

  • More employer relationships at multiple levels within an organization.
  • More employer champions speak with and recruit their peers.
  • Employer and partner participation that moves away from transactional interactions.

 Tools

  • Job Quality Competency Model (National Fund) – Use this model to better understand what skills and competencies are necessary for collaboratives to embark on job quality work with employers.
  • Collaborative Leadership – Learn what collaborative leadership is and how to practice it. Use this to develop an environment where stakeholders depend on collaborative problem-solving and decision-making.
  • Changing Systems Is Like Moving a Mountain: And Other Insights from Successful Workforce Leaders – Use this summary of lessons learned and key skills for system change leadership as a guide for identifying partners who reflect these skills and finding ways to develop them across partners and staff.
  • Core Skills for Public Sector Innovation – A beta model of skills to promote and enable innovation in public sector organizations. Industry partnerships can use as a guide to identify partners who reflect these skills and find ways to develop them across partners and staff.

Invest in Staff Training to Maintain Industry Knowledge

Staff must be equipped to research trends about regional partners, assets, and resources to stay relevant to industry and worker needs.

What success looks like

  • Partnership is responsive to market changes with staff who serve as a catalyst for change.
  • Staff have competencies related to emerging areas of expertise such as job quality, systems change and racial equity and inclusion.
  • Staff know how to act on employer feedback and how to include worker voice and perspective.

Tools

Align Partnership Priorities and Goals

Ensure that organizational funding, policies, structure, and staffing support strategic engagement across partners and activities.

What success looks like

  • Partnership goals and activities are formalized into organizational staffing plans.
  • Adequate funding and resources are available to support staff in meeting their objectives.

Tools

Identify and Communicate the Partnership’s Value

To attract funding from different sources and secure financial commitments from employers, partnerships must “pitch” the value-add of their work.

What success looks like

  • Sustainable funding from employer partners to support partnership initiatives.
  • An increase in total funding and mix of funding sources over time.
  • Aligned funding that supports partnership goals and impact broader systems.

Tools

Build Relationships with Policy and Funding Decision Makers

Relationships are key to developing a solid understanding of the environment that influences the partnership’s work and impacts equitable access to resources and outcomes.

What success looks like

  • A mechanism for communicating with employers and elevating employer and industry voices regarding policy decisions.
  • The infrastructure and opportunity to impact a system, such as transportation, that intersects with policy, workforce development, and economic development.
  • More legislative and administrative support for industry partnerships and strategies, such as work-based learning and apprenticeships.

Tools