A
contract signing ceremony between Kamata Pakistan and Punjab Vocational
Training Council (PVTC) was organized at the PVTC Head Office today. On
behalf of Kamata Pakistan, Mr. Muhammad Junaid Saleem, CEO Kamata
Pakistan signed the contract with, Mr. Faisal Ijaz Khan, Chairman PVTC. Under
the contract, PVTC will share data/profiles of its vocational trainees
with Kamata Pakistan for exploring job opportunities. Kamata Pakistan
will link these potential employees with employers, thus offering
matchmaking services. The collaboration is one of its kinds to open new
avenues for the unemployed and new labour market entrants who lack
social and informal networks for securing jobs.
Studies
reveal that workers skilled in vocational trade have limited access to
employment networks restricting their ability to find relevant jobs. On
the other hand, employers sometimes face immense difficulties in finding
the right worker. Kamata Pakistan has provided a platform for blue collar workers to get access to job opportunities and blue collar
employers to choose the best worker from a pool of job seekers. In
pursuing its aim, Kamata Pakistan has joined hands with PVTC to open job
opportunities for its graduates.
Kamata Pakistan (http://www.kamatapakistan.com)
is a web and mobile based start-up dedicated to bringing better job
opportunities to the blue-collar (informal) job sector (cooks,
technicians, welders, helpers, office boys, factory labour, sales
persons etc.) by appropriately connecting with the right employers and
job seekers via various digital mediums - website, SMS and social
networks. It hence aims to generate livelihoods and reduce unemployment
by facilitating the flow of information between the workforce and the
employers.
PVTC
is an autonomous body established by Government of Punjab through the
PVTC Act of 1998. PVTC aims to serve its mission of poverty alleviation
through Muslim Charity (Zakat) and participate in private sector through
communicating demand driven skill training and enhancing employability
for deprived youth. At present, PVTC operates around 172 Vocational
Training Institutes (VTI’s) with annual pass out capacity of 35,000.
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