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Last year’s Apprentice of the Year winner: “I’d love to get into lighting design/ installation”

Last year’s Apprentice of the Year winner:  “I’d love to get into lighting design/ installation”

As we enter the second stage of the 2020 NICEIC and ELECSA apprentice of the year competition, Voltimum and Scolmore look back at the interview with last year’s winner, Richard Bradley, where we got his thoughts on winning the competition, what it has meant for his career since, and what the 2020 candidates can look forward to.

More than 650 apprentices from across the UK took part in the 2019 competition, which consisted of three stages, with Richard ultimately walking away with the title.

Congratulations on your title of 2019 NICEIC & ELECSA Electrical Apprentice of the Year. At 32 you’re slightly older than the ‘typical’ apprentice. Career-wise, what have you been up to until now?

 

I am joining the trade a little later in life than most. I've spent the last seven years in the Royal Marines and before that I was in and out of different jobs – from bar work around university, to lifeguarding on the local beaches. 

 

Why have you chosen a career as an electrician?

 

It was either electrics or carpentry I think. I'm quite technically minded; I enjoy working with my hands and working out how things work, building and fixing things. I've worked with electronics for the last couple of years in the Marines so electrical was the obvious progression.

 

What made you enter the Apprentice of the Year competition?

 

I was looking on the NICEIC website one day in work and clicked the link expecting to put some details in and find out some more information. Next thing I knew, the stage one test started! I wasn't really prepared, nor did I think I'd do well, I just saw it as a way to test what I knew off the top of my head.

How did it feel to progress through the various stages?

 

I was surprised at every stage to be honest. I knew I'd done OK in the first round but certainly didn’t think I'd make it through to the second, where I was convinced I'd messed up. I was in disbelief when I found out I was in the final. The practical work is what I enjoy most though so I just thought I'll turn up, try to enjoy the day and see what happens!

 

Did the pressure get to you on the day of the final, under the watchful eye of industry experts Darren Staniforth and Jake Green?

 

Yes, there was a lot of pressure to complete the tasks in quite short time scales, some of which I'd only done once before in college. I like to take my time and make sure everything is perfect, but you can’t take too much time on the day – you get one go at each task, so it has got to be perfect first time.

Were you expecting the big win? How did it feel?

Not at all – I knew I had the least job site experience there so I was in disbelief when they called out my name as the winner.

 

What's next for you? 

 

I've left the Marines now and hope to have my own business in the near future – I'd love to get into lighting design/installation on high specification projects. One step at a time though, I'm going to start by finishing all my qualifications and getting some decent experience under my belt.

What value do you place on apprenticeships and what advice would you give to anybody considering an electrical apprenticeship?

 

Apprenticeships are great, especially for the younger generation. When I was leaving school there wasn't a great focus on vocational careers and it was easy to lose direction. If the younger generation can get stuck into an apprenticeship then, after a few years, they'll be set for life. I think there’s a lot to be said for all ages and all paths. Every route has advantages; the key is a desire to learn – attitude and motivation will be what makes or breaks anyone.