Both on The Apprentice and more widely, an apprentice is typically imagined as a younger person learning a skilled trade from an older employer. But as we have longer and more varied careers – changing roles, companies and sectors throughout our working life - this idea needs rethinking. We need to expand our concept of an ‘apprentice’ to include anyone starting a new path in the world of work, regardless of their age or experience. Jeremy Hunt’s proposal to introduce apprenticeships for over 50s looking to retrain or get back into work is a welcome one and should be a spark to rethink how the business world envisages this role.
To be fair, there are representations of older businesspeople on The Apprentice. They are Lord Sugar and his terrifyingly unimpressed advisors who like to point out younger colleagues’ incompetence and tear up their business plans. But is this the image we want to see of a multigenerational workforce? Why should the only older workers in The Apprentice have to occupy senior roles and not feel they have anything to learn from their younger colleagues?
Now there is a tiny possibility that over the past 18 years no one over the age of 50 in the UK has seen the show and thought “I could do that” or “I have a business idea that Lord Sugar would love.” But experience tells us that the reason we’ve never seen a contestant aged over 50 is because the ageist TV industry prefers younger faces and has a tendency to sideline older people on screen.
My sense is that TV producers have shown the same prejudice to older workers as many employers. They wrongfully assume that because this is a fast-paced show, with long, exhausting working hours, looking for ambitious, entrepreneurial candidates with get-go and energy then it must be a case of out with the old and in with the young. Our work at Ageing Better has taught us that there is certain language that older applicants feel excluded by, and which some employers may use to signal they are excluding older workers, such as innovative’, ‘technologically savvy’ and ‘recent graduate’. In reality it is the competency and quality of the candidate that should be the only criteria, not their age.
It is time for The Apprentice to embrace the potential that older workers have to be budding apprentices. The media plays a pivotal role in how we think about getting older. And we are currently facing a jobs market defined by both labour and skills shortages, and the mistaken notion that older workers are not dynamic or entrepreneurial. The Apprentice could help employers and the general public see that older people, just as much as younger workers, could be the next big success in the business world.