CERIC announces its 2018-2019 Board of Directors

The CERIC Board of Directors for 2018-2019 has been confirmed and will steer the charitable organization in advancing career development in Canada. A national volunteer board, its members reflect a broad cross-section of leaders across the career counselling and career development field. John Horn, who leads organizational learning and development at Vancity Credit Union, becomes Chair for a two-year term.

Horn has been involved with CERIC for more than a decade as a committee and board member as the organization has focused on its priorities of enhancing the knowledge, network and profile of career development professionals in Canada.

“There isn’t really an organization like CERIC because of the inclusive capacity-building and inspiring research that our organization achieves on behalf of Canadians,” says Horn. “We’ve grown incredibly and have transformed the way we engage our communities.”

Members of the 2018-2019 Board are:

  • John Horn, Vancity Credit Union, Vancouver, BC (Chair)
  • André Raymond, Laval University, Quebec City, QC (Vice-Chair)
  • Jennifer Browne, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St John’s, NL (Past Chair)
  • Barb Mason, United Church of Canada, Bracebridge, ON (Secretary/Treasurer)
  • Lorraine Godden, Queen’s University, Kingston, ON
  • Candy Ho, Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Surrey, BC
  • Cathy Keates, Queens’s University, Kingston, ON
  • Cynthia Martiny, Université du Québec à Montréal, Montreal, QC
  • Rosie Parnass, Coach and HR Consultant, Toronto, ON
  • Lisa Taylor, Challenge Factory, Toronto, ON
  • Iris Unger, YES Montreal, Montreal, QC
  • Donald G. Lawson, The Counselling Foundation of Canada, Toronto, ON (Honourary Director – Ex-officio)
  • Bruce Lawson, The Counselling Foundation of Canada, Toronto, ON (Executive Officer – Ex-officio)

Members of CERIC’s three Advisory Committees – Practical & Academic Research, Content & Learning and Marketing, Communications & Web Services – have been appointed by the Board for the next year. Members of these advisory committees play a central role in supporting the ongoing development of CERIC programs and initiatives.

Horn says he looks forward to building on the efforts of past CERIC Boards and collaborating with committee members as well as Executive Director Riz Ibrahim and the staff team. He expects over the next few years that CERIC will continue to produce innovative resources, create transformational learning experiences and fund thought-provoking projects that empower career development professionals. Horn would also like to see CERIC firmly at the centre of bold career conversations in this country and explore how career practitioners can have a positive impact on the future of work. He cites CERIC’s Cannexus National Career Development Conference as a key platform and a favourite personal experience.

“It inspires me every year with examples of the awesome work that career practitioners from around the world are achieving in service of advancing career development.”

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Announcing your Cannexus19 Mega speakers

Taking place January 28-30, 2019 in Ottawa, the Cannexus19 National Career Development Conference will feature this just-announced lineup of Mega Sessions with well-known presenters on highly pertinent subjects – from Indigenous youth to values-based leadership.

Mega Sessions:

  • Kofi Hope, Founding Executive Director, CEE Centre for Young Black Professionals – Values-based Leadership
  • Herky Cutler, President & CEO, Herkycutler.com – Non-Traditional Assessment Tools
  • Shari St Peter, Executive Director, Niagara Peninsula Aboriginal Area Management Board – Indigenous Youth

Mega Panel: Theories and Models at Work – Ideas for Practice

  • Nancy Arthur, Professor, University of Calgary
  • Louis Cournoyer, Professor, Université du Québec à Montréal
  • Mary McMahon, Honorary Senior Lecturer, University of Queensland
  • Roberta Neault, President, Life Strategies Ltd.
  • France Picard, Professor, Université Laval
  • Michel Turcotte, Career Counsellor, Psychologist & Researcher

Cannexus19 is expected to bring together 1,000 career development professionals from education, government, community and private sectors. The conference is designed to promote the exchange of information and explore innovative approaches in the areas of career counselling and career development.

Register by September 5 for the Super Saver rate. Pay only $450 for a full 3-day registration, a $125 savings off the regular $575 price. Special rates for presenters, members of supporting organizations, students and groups are also available.

The conference is presented by CERIC and supported by The Counselling Foundation of Canada and a broad network of supporting organizations.

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Skills for successful job retention focus of new webinar series with Denise Bissonnette

CERIC and the New Brunswick Career Development Association (NBCDA) have partnered on a new webinar series 30 Ways to Shine: A Skillset for Successful Job Retention with popular presenter Denise Bissonnette starting this October.

Based on Bissonnette’s celebrated guide to job retention, 30 Ways to Shine as a New Employee, this webinar series empowers employment professionals to use the skills, ideas and concepts in the book to reinforce and strengthen workplace etiquette and behaviours in the people they serve, before and after they are in the workforce.

Those who are working to prepare and assist people for the world of work and/or support people once they are on the job should attend, including job developers, career counsellors, case managers, vocational rehab counsellors, job coaches, employment specialists, vocational instructors, job club leaders and employment preparation instructors.

This webinar series will include:

  • Webinar #1: Introduction to 30 Ways to Shine – Rethinking Retention
    Tuesday, October 16, 2018 | 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm ET
  • Webinar #2: 30 Ways to Shine – New Beginnings, Skills 1-5
    Tuesday, October 23, 2018 | 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm ET
  • Webinar #3: 30 Ways to Shine – Stepping Out and Habits for Success, Skills 6-20 Tuesday, October 30, 2018 | 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm ET
  • Webinar #4: 30 Ways to Shine – Taking the Bitter with the Sweet and Making the Job Work for You, Skills 21-30
    Tuesday, November 6, 2018 | 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm ET

Bissonnette is an internationally renowned writer, trainer and keynote speaker. She has inspired people and organizations to look beyond traditional concepts of job development and to craft livelihoods rooted in the individual genius of each person. She has authored several publications on creative job development, state-of-the-art job search techniques, the cultivation of the human spirit, and how to “shine” on the job. Her book Beyond Traditional Job Development: The Art of Creating Opportunity is considered the definitive text in employment programs and university classrooms throughout North America.

The cost for the full series is $159. A discount is available for NBCDA members.

CERIC partners with associations and organizations across Canada and beyond to present webinars that offer timely, convenient and affordable professional development. Previously, CERIC has worked with the Career Development Association of AlbertaOntario Association for Career ManagementBC Career Development Association, Canadian Association of Career Educators & EmployersNova Scotia Career Development Association and the US-based National Career Development Association.

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Free webinar will share new research on supporting senior entrepreneurs

In our current era of longevity the realities of aging have changed, but attitudes, especially about work and retirement, have not kept pace. Despite the growing number of older adults pursuing entrepreneurial activities, this cohort has been largely ignored in entrepreneurship research and by funders or service providers. A free webinar from the Sheridan Centre for Elder Research will be offered on Tuesday, September 18, 2018, and address these gaps in knowledge.

The webinar, Senior Entrepreneurs Matter: Who Are They, What They Need, and How You Can Help, is based on the results of a new CERIC-funded research study that investigates the experiences, needs and interests of entrepreneurs aged 50+ in Canada. It will share a snapshot of study results and key recommendations:

  • Common themes and trends relating to the entrepreneurship journey from the study’s 180+ participants
  • Gaps in service and support identified by older entrepreneurs
  • Challenges faced when engaging with this demographic and related stakeholders
  • Key recommendations about how to better serve and support older entrepreneurs

Webinar presenters are Pat Spadafora and Lia Tsotsos. Spadafora, a Professor at Sheridan College for nearly 25 years, founded the Sheridan Centre for Elder Research in 2003 as an interdisciplinary, on-campus applied research facility. In 2017, she left Sheridan to start Kaleidoscope Consulting, a company dedicated to changing the way we view aging. Tsotsos was appointed Director of the Sheridan Centre for Elder Research in January 2018 after nearly seven years as the Centre’s lead researcher.

Learn more about this webinar and register today.

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Senior entrepreneurs in Canada need greater access to funding, supports

Nearly four in 10 older entrepreneurs face gaps in the support they need to launch or develop their businesses, according to a new CERIC-funded study on The Status of Senior Entrepreneurship in Canada. The research report from the Sheridan Centre for Elder Research found that 37% of the respondents aged 50+ had challenges in accessing financial or government support and mentors.

The eight-month study used online surveys, in-depth interviews and focus groups to investigate the experiences, needs and interests of 180 senior entrepreneurs around career guidance and support. The study comes at a time when the number of Canadians 50+ represents 37.8% of the total Canadian population as of 2017 and continues to rise. Meanwhile, a 2012 CIBC study found that individuals 50+ make up the fast-growing demographic for start-up founders in Canada, accounting for approximately 30% of the total. Despite these numbers, there has been limited previous research on the “seniorpreneur” trend.

Sheridan’s research explored the differentiated paths that senior entrepreneurs take. The top three reasons entrepreneurs surveyed started a business after 50 were:

  1. Interest in continuing to use their skills,
  2. Needing or wanting to generate a new source of income, and
  3. Wanting greater ownership and control of their work and lifestyle.

The report notes that when asked to rate the importance of the statement “I had to leave my previous employer/career (for any reason),” 48% of respondents identified this as “not applicable,” suggesting that for nearly half of the respondents it wasn’t a push from a previous position that prompted the journey into entrepreneurship but, rather, a pull from a new opportunity.

Sectors and type of business represented by the respondents also varied widely. A quarter of respondents described their business as “consulting,” but other areas represented included technology, social entrepreneurship, communications, arts/design, healthcare, education, community/social services, finance/banking, manufacturing, entertainment, e-commerce, food industry, energy/environment, agriculture, real estate, legal, marketing/branding, pet services, tourism, transportation, fitness and retail. These businesses conducted their operations both online and face-to-face. A key finding was that more than half of respondents (58%) had launched, or actively explored, another business prior to their current business, suggesting the transition to entrepreneur is very much a journey.

The top service providers that senior entrepreneurs engaged with to assist them were small business enterprise centres, banks, chambers of commerce and economic development offices. The study highlights that most individuals reported accessing multiple service providers as part of their search for support. Researchers also flag the respondents who reported that they accessed no services or were completely on their own, speaking to the unique needs of senior entrepreneurs with locating or identifying the best source of assistance.

Respondents, when asked to select which factors most contributed to their success, indicated that what helped them the most was:

  1. Their accumulated work experience and expertise,
  2. Their knowledge of customer needs/service, and
  3. Their perseverance and determination.

Tied for fourth most common response was their willingness to take risks, their reputation and network of contacts, showing that it is a mix of personal characteristics and accumulated skills or resources to which older entrepreneurs credit their success.

Many respondents (40%) reported not facing any age-based discrimination along their entrepreneurial path, instead feeling valued because of their experience. When they did experience discrimination, the two most common scenarios encountered were that services they would have liked to access were only available to youth entrepreneurs, and the process for navigating the “system” as an older entrepreneur was less defined than it was for younger entrepreneurs. When asked how older entrepreneurs could support each other, the top response was that it shouldn’t only be older entrepreneurs supporting each other, but that there should be opportunities for intergenerational mentoring.

Specific recommendations from the report to enhance that state of senior entrepreneurship in Canada include:

  • Standardize programs and services available to support this group and how they are advertised across the country.
  • Design, implement and evaluate innovative models of, and support for, intergenerational mentorship.
  • Consider changing the label “senior entrepreneurs” and, instead, provide supports for all entrepreneurs regardless of age.
  • Enhance communication between various stakeholders who have a vested interest in supporting this group (i.e., policymakers, career development professionals, funders) to ensure consistency of messaging and easier referrals between groups.
  • Advocate for funding and other supports that do not restrict access to resources based on age.
  • Provide career transition services for older workers who are leaving traditional jobs and are considering entrepreneurship as a viable alternative.
  • Design training materials and resources for career development professionals and other service providers to enable them to more effectively support their older clients.
  • Promote the skills, wisdom and experience of older individuals and senior entrepreneurs to all members of our society and work to change the negative perceptions of aging through education.

The immediate goal of the research is to provide career development professionals, financial advisors, life coaches, regional business leaders and others with greater insight to more effectively guide senior entrepreneurs. The researchers hope the broader ramifications of this work on aging and entrepreneurship will help improve current services and supports provided to older entrepreneurs and motivate the creation of new tools that empower older entrepreneurs to achieve success for themselves and contribute to the broader Canadian economy.

CERIC and the Sheridan Centre for Elder Research will host a free one-hour webinar on Tuesday, September 18 to further outline the research findings and their implications. Watch ceric.ca/webinars for further details to be posted.

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Cannexus19 Super Saver registration now open!

Registration for Cannexus19, Canada’s National Career Development Conference is now open with both 3-day ($450) and 1-day ($225) packages available! Take advantage of special rates for members of supporting organizations, students and groups. Super Saver deadline is September 5, 2018.

Cannexus is designed to promote the exchange of information and explore innovative approaches in the areas of career counselling and career development. We expect to welcome 1,000 participants from Canada and internationally to the Shaw Centre in Ottawa, January 28-30, 2019.

Conference delegates can listen to three inspirational keynote speakers and choose from over 130 education sessions. Topics will include effective counselling techniques, labour market information, post-secondary employment, talent management, job search strategies, working with diverse populations and more. An Exhibitor Showcase will also bring together organizations highlighting their valuable career development programs and services.

We are also pleased to announce this year’s optional pre-conference workshops, each providing in-depth professional development. Workshops take place on Sunday, January 27, 2019. Choose among the following:

  • Trina Maher, Chief Creative Spirit, Bridging Concepts – Helping Indigenous Talent Tap into Their Potential
  • Elaine Newman, Founder & CEO, Global Learning – Unconscious Bias: Understand, Define, Mitigate
  • Graham Donald, Brainstorm Strategy Group – Employer Engagement to Increase Hiring on Your Campus
  • Rob Straby, Co-ordinator & Professor, Career Development Professional Program, Conestoga College – Use the Power of Stories to Find Gigs!
  • Kristen Klassen, PhD, Founder, Brickstorming – Building Insights and Confidence for Career Development Professionals Using LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY®

The conference is presented by CERIC and supported by The Counselling Foundation of Canada and a broad network of supporting organizations.

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New CERIC literature search examines challenges and promises in the digital economy

Digital technologies are transforming the way we live and work. The potential of our emerging digital economy presents a lot of opportunities as well as challenges. CERIC’s latest literature search Digital Economy and Career Development examines the today’s digital economy and what it means to your future career.

Topics covered in the literature search include:

  • Research, trends, facts and implications of the digital economy
  • Future world of work in the digital economy
  • Information technology and productivity
  • Canadian workforce in the digital economy
  • Digital economy and entrepreneurship

There are 48 literature searches available, including Career Development Theory and Career Management Models, Economic Benefits of Career Guidance, Parental Involvement in Career Development, Labour Market Trends, Mental Health Issues in the Workplace, and more.

Featuring comprehensive listings of key research and articles in career development, literature searches highlight critical points of current knowledge.

As a student, academic or practitioner in the field, literature searches are helpful if you are researching the latest thinking or proven best practices. They are also valuable if you are considering a submission to CERIC for project partnership funding in order to gain an overview of major work already done in your area of interest.

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A Journey of Collaboration: CERIC’S 2017 Annual Report

Along its 13-year journey, CERIC has come to be known as an enabling organization, a convening body, a research hub and a knowledge mobilizer. CERIC’s 2017 Annual Report captures how that journey continued in 2017 with an emphasis on collaboration, whether it was project funding partnerships, co-development of learning opportunities, community building through supporting organizations for the Cannexus conference, or “Knowledge Champions” who contribute to the development and dissemination of our resources.

In the Annual Report, Board Chair Jennifer Browne and Executive Director Riz Ibrahim discuss the many ways that CERIC has been advancing career development in Canada in order to enhance the economic and social well-being of Canadians. Throughout the year, CERIC sought to expand and deepen the knowledge of Canada’s career development professionals as they prepare Canadians of all ages and backgrounds for the future of work and the challenges and opportunities of both today and tomorrow.

Just some of the many highlights for CERIC from the past year include:

The 2017 Annual Report takes you through the full range of key activities from the past year across CERIC’s three strategic priorities: Research & Learning, Community Hub & Collaboration and Advocacy & Profile, as well as provides an overview of financial performance in 2017 and a look ahead to other exciting projects that CERIC is working on. Special thanks is also given to CERIC’s funder The Counselling Foundation of Canada, volunteers, staff and partners.

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Webinar series will explore changing the way we prepare people for the future of work

CERIC and the New Brunswick Career Development Association (NBCDA) have partnered on a new webinar series Looking Beyond Job Titles: How to Prepare People for the Future of Work with SparkPath founder JP Michel, starting this fall.

Economic, technological and societal changes are making the concept of job titles obsolete. To prepare people for the new world of work, career practitioners need to move away from considering only the traditional list of jobs and careers, and direct their attention to the challenges, problems and opportunities that exist in the world. One approach that moves us away from focusing on jobs is the Challenge Method. This approach helps people see the bigger picture: the challenges, problems and opportunities that exist in society and the world of work.

This webinar series will include:

  • Webinar #1: A New Approach to Career Development
    Tuesday, September 25, 2018 | 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm ET
  • Webinar #2: Transforming Your Clients into Challenge Researchers
    Tuesday, October 2, 2018 | 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm ET

A French webinar Au-delà des titres d’emplois : comment préparer les gens pour l’avenir du travail is offered separately. More information at ceric.ca/fr/webinaires.

Michel founded SparkPath to change the way we prepare people for their careers. His work in human resources consulting helped him learn about career success from some the world’s largest organizations. He has an MSc in industrial-organizational psychology from the University of Manchester and is the recipient of the 2017 Outstanding Career Professional award from the Career Professionals of Canada. He developed the Challenge Method to integrate a market-driven, problem-solving approach into career development. It has been used by companies, elementary schools, high schools, colleges and universities, and employment centres across North America.

The cost for the full series is $97. A discount is available for NBCDA members.

CERIC partners with associations and organizations across Canada and beyond to present webinars that offer timely, convenient and affordable professional development. Previously, CERIC has worked with the Career Development Association of Alberta, Ontario Association for Career ManagementBC Career Development Association, Canadian Association of Career Educators & EmployersNova Scotia Career Development Association and the US-based National Career Development Association.

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New Retain and Gain Playbook will help non-profit employers to keep and engage staff

CERIC will publish a non-profit edition of its popular Retain and Gain Playbook that addresses the challenges faced by charities and non-profits in attracting, retaining and engaging staff. Authored by Lisa Taylor of Challenge Factory, the bilingual publication, to be released this fall, will enhance capacity building across the non-profit sector, which employs close to two million Canadians. The project has the support of multiple “Knowledge Champion” partners, including The Counselling Foundation of Canada, The Lawson Foundation, The Muttart Foundation, Imagine Canada and the Ontario Nonprofit Network.

The first edition of the Playbook focused on small business and was released in early 2017. There was immediate interest from the non-profit sector to have a Playbook of its own that addressed the unique environment in which non-profits operate, in terms of funding mechanisms, community stakeholders and reliance on volunteers. At the same time, many non-profits and charities meet the criteria of being a small business, having fewer than 500 employees (and often fewer than 50), with the same limited time, resources and opportunities for “traditional” linear career advancement.

Written in an innovative “travel guide” format, the Retain and Gain: Career Management for Non-Profits and Charities Playbook is intended for executive directors and people managers to use as a practical career management tool with their employees. It will apply to both small grassroots non-profits from arts to health to human services as well as larger federated charities. The publication is being shaped based on interviews with managers across Canada where an emerging theme has been that they have never received training focused on how to manage or motivate teams and, yet, it is a significant part of their job.

The Playbook will feature strategies to engage full-time and part-time staff in ways that advance, develop and support thriving careers within the sector. The concise publication will include 40+ practical, low-cost tips, activities and actions that can be implemented in as little as 10-minutes a day. It will also feature several special sections exploring human resource issues of interest to non-profits, including precarious employment and gender-based career patterns.

Like all CERIC resources, this Playbook will be available for free download and also available for sale in hard copy as well as ebook formats.

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