Shima Seiki

Free membership

Receive our weekly Newsletter
and set tailored daily news alerts.

Education/​Training

Knitwear company encourages youngsters with new training school

Hawick knitwear firm Johnstons is aiming to secure the future of the industry by setting up an innovative new training school. The facility will be based at Innerleithen where the company has the space, resources and staff and will not only take Johnstons trainees, but those from other Hawick knitwear firms.

13th May 2014

Knitting Industry
 |  Hawick

Knitwear

The facility will be based at Innerleithen where the company has the space, resources and staff and will not only take Johnstons trainees, but those from other Hawick knitwear firms.

Ideal opportunity

Johnstons managing director Nick Bannerman told reporters: “This is an ideal opportunity, not only for us to secure the future of our own business through training but also to the smaller players the chance to have staff trained at our premises.”

Bannerman also added that large-scale industry pay-offs in past decades had fostered a feeling amongst many youngsters that knitwear wasn’t a viable career choice. He added: “In recent years this has changed. We have work to do and we have to encourage youngsters to view what we do he as a good career choice.”

Future plans

The company is set to advertise for young apprentices later this summer. Youngsters will spend part of the week training at Innerleithen and the rest working in the Mansfield Road factory.

The training will focus on the finishing side of the operation and will include linking, mending and sewing. Volunteers signing up for the government-sponsored Modern Apprenticeship scheme will eventually receive a recognised industry qualification.

Supporting young generation

Bannerman commented: “At Johnstons we invest £1million per year in technology and machinery. This new initiative is about people and it is about having the best people on board through training.”

“This really is a good news story. We sat down with other manufacturers and although some are doing their own thing, others are pleased to be part of this and that can only be encouraging for the future.”

Read the original story

Latest Reports

Business intelligence for the fibre, textiles and apparel industries: technologies, innovations, markets, investments, trade policy, sourcing, strategy...

Find out more