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Through education partnerships, Johnson Controls looks to get its ‘fair share’ of technical talent

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Johnson Controls International opened its second Johnson Controls Academy campus near Denver on October 7, complementing a Columbia, Maryland outpost that provides six-week training bootcamps to future frontline technicians, a company spokesperson said. Johnson Controls aims to train 320 technicians annually between the Maryland and Colorado campuses, with the Colorado location set to graduate its first cohort on Nov. 15, the spokesperson said.

Established to onboard new electrical and electronics technicians, Johnson Controls Academy is one of the company’s workforce development initiatives targeting community colleges and technical schools. 

The company also announced a renewed slate of grants to 30 North American community colleges through its Johnson Controls Community College Partnership Program. CCPP began in 2021 and is on track to donate up to $15 million to schools through 2026, the company said.

Johnson Controls Academy and CCPP both aim to reduce the burden on Johnson Controls and its clients from the skilled labor shortage that company leaders believe will persist for many years. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics expects about 10,100 job openings per year for electrical and electronics installation and repair technicians on average through 2033.

“We think we need to scale our apprentice workforce by 15% to 20% to offset retirements over the next 5 to 10 years,” said Mike Schade, vice president of human resources for North America, global digital and IT at Johnson Controls.

A direct pathway to employment

The pandemic exacerbated the industry’s talent woes and laid bare the need for an initiative like Johnson Controls Academy, Schade said. 

The academy grew out of a preexisting partnership with Lincoln Tech, a for-profit technical college with around two dozen campuses, said Alison Neuman, workforce development program manager for Johnson Controls. The partnership has steadily deepened, with 18 Lincoln Tech campuses set to train students on Johnson Controls fire safety equipment and four campuses on its HVAC equipment by next year, she said.

“When I was in my fire service business, half of my field technicians were Lincoln Tech grads,” John Prusak, general manager for Maryland-Delaware-D.C.-Northern Virginia at Johnson Controls, said in a video highlighting the hands-on training that students receive at Lincoln Tech. 

Johnson Controls Academy combines two weeks of online coursework through the JCI Learning Hub with four weeks of onsite, hands-on instruction at Lincoln Tech’s Columbia, Maryland campus, Bryan Feilen, senior partnerships account manager for Lincoln Tech, explained in another video

The academy’s talent pipeline begins with three Lincoln Tech recruiters working on Johnson Controls’ behalf to identify and build relationships with students at the technical college’s 14 — soon to be 18 — training campuses, Feilen said in an interview. Students who meet the program’s GPA and attendance standards are referred to a Johnson Controls hiring manager, who typically considers three or four candidates for each open position, Feilen added.

Successful candidates are hired at Johnson Controls and graduate from Lincoln Tech before they begin at the academy, Neuman said. That distinguishes Johnson Control Academy from corporate talent development programs that don’t guarantee employment after completion, she said.

“[Academy participants] are full-time employees eligible for benefits before they even get started in the field,” Neuman said. 

Each academy cohort has a maximum of 16 interns working alongside four full-time instructors. These instructors hold office hours after class time to answer interns’ questions and reinforce key concepts, Neuman said. 

After graduation, interns relocate to Johnson Controls branch locations throughout North America to begin their careers with the company, with about 90% moving to a new city, Feilen said. Over the following year, graduates check in once or twice a month with a career coach who makes sure they’re adjusting well and set up for success, he said.

“If [an employee] comes to us six months after relocation and says they need to move back, we’ll work to keep them, maybe [by placing] them in another role closer to home,” Neuman said. 

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