In Conversation With Lindokuhle Ndlovu- Marketing officer at The Skills Development Corporation (SDC)

Loading player...
South Africa continues to face a persistent youth unemployment crisis, with young people between 18 and 34 years old disproportionately affected. Learnerships remain one of the most practical interventions to bridge the gap between education and employment, offering structured training combined with workplace experience.

Skills Development Corporation (SDC), an accredited training provider with campuses in Johannesburg and Cape Town, works at the intersection of youth empowerment and corporate compliance. The organisation partners with companies to help them meet their B-BBEE Skills Development targets while simultaneously creating opportunities for unemployed youth — including persons living with disabilities.

Through accredited programmes aligned with the QCTO curriculum, SDC offers learnerships in high-demand and future-focused fields such as Marketing Coordination, Project Management, Cyber Security, Cloud Administration, Supply Chain, Insurance Underwriting, and more. Their model includes 70% workplace exposure and 30% theoretical learning, ensuring learners gain practical, industry-relevant skills.

Importantly, SDC also introduces the concept of a “Placement Partner” — companies that host learners for workplace experience while SDC covers the learner stipend. This model aims to reduce financial barriers for employers while increasing youth employability.

For 2026, eligible applicants must be between 18–28 years old, reside in Gauteng, and meet B-BBEE criteria. A vetting process takes place at their recruitment offices in Paulshof, Sandton.

This conversation matters for students, recent graduates, unemployed youth, and even families of current Wits students who may be seeking structured skills pathways.
25 Feb English South Africa Entertainment News · Music Interviews

Other recent episodes

In Conversation With Razia Saleh – Head of Archives & Research

All of these conversations — the praise, the criticism, the questions — they all come back to one thing: how we remember. Because history is not just about what happened — it’s about what we choose to preserve, what we highlight, and sometimes… what we leave out. At the Nelson…
21 Apr 6 min

In Conversation With Nomahlozi Ramohloki – Dialogue & Advocacy Coordinator

We’ve been talking about legacy — but now let’s bring it into the present. Because for many young South Africans, the question isn’t just who Mandela was — it’s whether his legacy still speaks to their reality today. In a country facing unemployment, inequality, and growing frustration, does the idea…
21 Apr 10 min

In Conversation With Verne Harris – Former Archivist to Nelson Mandela

Let’s get into it — because this is where the conversation starts to get uncomfortable. We often speak about Nelson Mandela as a symbol — a global icon of peace, reconciliation, and forgiveness. But today, more and more young South Africans are asking difficult questions about that legacy. Was he…
21 Apr 12 min

In Conversation With Joseph Mashigo - FEDUSA Chief Negotiator for the Public Service,

South Africa’s healthcare system is once again under scrutiny, following confirmation from the Health Minister that the current healthcare financing model is too expensive and unsustainable. This acknowledgment, made during a Section 77 hearing at NEDLAC, aligns with long-standing concerns raised by organised labour and various stakeholders about the rising…
21 Apr 7 min