Harris Paints Remains a Champion in Building Careers across the Caribbean
August 24, 20152 min read
Harris Paints, the Caribbean Champions of Colour, is continuing its positive impact as a champion for career development with yet another cohort of tertiary level students benefitting from the company's annual Internship and Summer Employment Programme. Just over thirty high-achievers between the ages of 16 and 21 have been selected to participate in the programme which is currently being executed across the company's Caribbean locations. The interns are currently studying a wide range of subjects including Accounts and Economics, Management of Business, Computers and Aesthetics, and Ecology and Biology. Ian Kenyon, Chief Executive Officer, Harris Paints, said the goal was to provide students with an authentic working experience while challenging them to leverage their academic training and skills to add value to the workplace while advancing their personal career goals. "Our interns work under the guidance and supervision of our most experienced staff members and they are challenged to reach for Harris Paints' world-class operational and product standards. Our approach is one where participants receive detailed training and instruction, and can undertake tasks and projects with a level of responsibility akin to our fulltime employees," he said. Noting the significant potential for achievement which is again evident among this year's participants, Kenyon said he was also happy to see the wide cross-section of relevant study areas which they represented. "We are catering to some of our best and brightest students who will certainly benefit from the opportunity to demonstrate their potential. They will also be given the chance to exhibit a ready-for-work attitude such that their internship or attachment can lead to a meaningful career with Harris Paints, or indeed with other companies who are also leaders in their respective fields, Harris Paints' internship programme commenced in June and will run until August 31st, providing four to eight-week long attachments for students drawn from a wide range of science, technology and social science disciplines. (PR)