A practical employer toolkit for engaging and hiring NEET young people covering structured entry programmes, work trials, apprenticeships, mentoring, government funding, and measuring success.
Engaging NEET Young People: An Employer Toolkit
Why Should Employers Engage NEETs?
The Business Case
Labour shortages: Many sectors (hospitality, retail, logistics, care, construction) face persistent vacancies that NEET young people can fill with the right support
Loyalty: Young people given their first opportunity often become the most committed employees
Government funding: Significant financial support is available for employers hiring NEETs
Fresh perspectives: Young people bring energy, digital skills, and new ideas
CSR and social value: Hiring NEETs demonstrates genuine community impact โ increasingly important for public sector contracts (UK Social Value Act)
Structured Entry Programmes
Work Trials
Short-term (1โ4 weeks) unpaid or subsidised trial periods where the young person works alongside your team
Low risk for both parties โ the employer evaluates fit, and the young person experiences the role
In the UK, Jobcentre Plus can arrange work trials with continued benefit payments
Traineeships
UK: Government-funded programmes (6 weeks to 12 months) combining work preparation, English/maths, and work placements
The employer provides the work placement; the training provider handles education
No wage cost to the employer during the traineeship
Incentive payments of up to ยฃ1,000 per traineeship are available
Apprenticeships
Combine on-the-job training with formal qualifications
Government covers most of the training cost (for small employers, often 95%+)
Additional support available for apprentices with learning difficulties or disabilities
Minimum wage applies, but apprentice rates are lower in the first year
Supported Internships
For young people aged 16โ24 with an Education, Health and Care plan
Job coach support provided at no cost to the employer
A pathway to permanent employment
Working with Intermediary Organisations
You do not have to do this alone. Intermediary organisations specialise in preparing and supporting NEET young people:
Organisation
Country
What They Do
**Prince's Trust**
UK
Enterprise, employability, and team programmes
**Career Ready**
UK
Mentoring and paid internships for disadvantaged young people
**Youth Futures Foundation**
UK
Funds and evaluates youth employment programmes
**Year Up**
US
Training and corporate internships
**YouthBuild**
US
Construction training and education
**DWP/Jobcentre Plus**
UK
Referrals, work trials, and subsidy administration
**Local authorities**
UK/EU
Youth services and NEET tracking
Managing Expectations
For Employers
NEET young people may lack basic workplace norms (timekeeping, communication, dress) โ these are learnable, not fixed
Progress may be uneven โ mental health challenges, housing instability, or family issues may cause setbacks
A buddy or mentor is essential, not optional
Small accommodations (clear instructions, regular feedback, patience) go a long way
For Young People
Work may be harder and less exciting than expected โ honest job previews reduce early dropout
Behaviour that is acceptable among friends may not be appropriate at work โ explicit guidance helps
Career progression is possible but requires consistent effort
Measuring Success
Track these metrics to evaluate your NEET engagement programme:
Retention at 3, 6, and 12 months: How many NEET hires are still with you?
Progression: Are NEET hires developing skills and moving into more responsible roles?
Manager feedback: Are managers satisfied with performance after the initial adjustment period?
Cost per hire: Compare total cost (including support) against standard recruitment costs
Social value: Quantify the social impact for reporting (useful for public sector tenders)