HP aligns with UK universities
Vendor wants to form strategic partnerships with up to six UK unversities as it aims to plug skills void
Ready for work: HP graduates will have a headstart in job hunt
HP partners are set to benefit from an influx of industry-ready graduates from 2015 following the introduction of HP-centric degrees.
The vendor last week announced that the University of West England (UWE) is to offer an HP Enterprise Computing Degree, as it is provisionally known, from 2011.
It will focus on technology from HP and its alliance partners, including Microsoft, as well as generic skills such as project management. Students of the four-year course will undertake internships at HP or its partners in their third year.
Brian Fenix, client principal for unified communications and collaboration at HP, said: “We are working with UWE to ensure the students are the type of people we and our resellers want to take on. They will have an industry-recognised professional certification. That is a cost of training that partners will not have to incur.”
Fenix said the degree will also teach soft skills, such as presentational styles and business acumen. Students will get a chance to network with resellers to help them secure jobs after they graduate, he said.
HP’s other strategic university partner, Bucks New University, is likely to launch a similar course in the future and Fenix revealed the vendor is also in talks with a number of other universities about forming further strategic partnerships. Some of these relationships may centre more on research and development, however.
Nick Grossman, corporate business development director at 2e2, said the degree could help to bolster the skills base behind HP’s more complex technologies.
“This can only be very helpful to integrators like us,” he said. “We see very few highly skilled people other than those who have gone through accreditation tracks in previous jobs.”
However, Paul Sweeney, managing director of ANS, argued that HP is playing catch-up to Cisco.
“As a channel player we welcome anything vendors do to make graduates more industry ready, but Cisco has been doing it for years with its Academies.”