The Press and Journal is today proud to announce the creation of the Joe Watson Memorial Apprenticeship as part of our Apprentice 100 campaign.
The opportunity to work for the newspaper is being offered in memory of our late farming editor Joe Watson, who died at the age of 43 in March last year.
He was highly respected and much admired throughout the world of journalism and the agriculture industry.
As part of Apprentice 100 the Press and Journal wants to do its bit to create awareness of issues surrounding apprenticeships and boost employment prospects for young people in the north and north-east.
The Joe Watson Memorial Apprenticeship will give a young person a golden opportunity to gain experience at Aberdeen Journals.
The two-year apprenticeship will provide journalism training at the Press and Journal and its sister paper the Evening Express.
The successful candidate will also gain further experience in our advertising and newspaper sales departments.
Mr Watson’s mother, Mirren, welcomed the creation of the apprenticeship and urged more young people to take the vocational route to a successful career.
She said: “I think this apprenticeship is very fitting. Joe would have been in favour of being associated with this apprenticeship because that was how he did things – he learned on the job.
“He didn’t go to college and university which a lot of young people do. There are a lot of young people with degrees but more people should be going for apprenticeships. It’s something he would have advised.”
Press and Journal editor-in-chief Damian Bates said: “We are very proud to have created this apprenticeship in memory of Joe Watson, who was much admired and respected by not only colleagues but also the farming community throughout the UK and overseas.”
Ben Briggs, chairman of the British Guild of Agricultural Journalists, said: “Joe Watson was a passionate and pioneering journalist who was respected by his peers and the wider farming community.
“He was always keen to promote opportunities for young people within the organisation and loved to see the professional development of those starting out in journalism.”
The Apprentice 100 campaign has received widespread backing since being launched last week.
A number of firms have now indicated they will support the campaign by offering apprenticeships.
Aberdeenshire Council has already pledged five apprenticeships, while celebrity chef Nick Nairn has committed to creating one position.
The addition of the Joe Watson Memorial Apprenticeship means we have 93 pledges still to collect – so please support us now.
Look out for more details about the Joe Watson Memorial Apprenticeship in our Your Jobs in Scotland pull-out on Friday.