Fast Track your career with an Apprenticeship in Finance and Accounting

This Apprenticeship could find you working in an accounts department, helping a business or organisation manage their money properly. Running a business involves a lot of financial activities, from expenses and bills to taxes and payroll. Accountants keep track of all these things and more, to make sure that businesses – both large and small – manage their money properly. Having a business brain, as well as a way with numbers, is a good start if you want to work in accounting.

 

  
Entry requirements:
  • Minimum of 4 GCSEs A-C including Maths and English

 

Application deadline: Rolling Application 

 

  
Here are some of the roles you could find yourself in after completing a Finance and Accounting Apprenticeship:

  • Accounts Clerk
  • Credit Control Assistant
  • Finance Assistant
  • Purchase Ledger Clerk
  • Financial Adviser
  • Independent Financial Adviser
  • Insurance Clerks 
  • Customer Service Staff
  • Bank and Building Society Counter Clerks
  • Investment Administrators
  • Pension Administrators/Advisers
  • Payroll Supervisor
  • Assistant Payroll Manager
  • Deputy Payroll Manager
  • Payroll Team Leader
 

 

Click on the links below to find out more about the specific Apprenticeships we offer:

 

Accounting

This progression can lead to a specialist role in accounting. It’s also possible to enter a higher education course in a subject related to accounting, banking, insurance, or other financial services. If you’re interested in a finance career, an Apprenticeship is a great way to get into the market.

 

Providing Financial Services

This Apprenticeship is about working in the financial services sector and helping customers make transactions.

There are more than 60 million people in Britain, and most of them have at least one bank account. Lots of these people will also have loans, mortgages, insurance policies and credit cards, which result in hundreds of transactions happening every minute.

This is a big sector that requires many people to keep things ticking over: cashiers, who perform withdrawals and deposits for customers; customer advisers; insurance brokers, who sell and manage insurance policies; insurance and investment administrators, who keep records and reports up to date, and others.

 

Payroll

Large companies employ lots of employees. It’s up to the payroll team to make sure that everyone in the company gets the right amount of money, at the right time.

It’s not an easy job: payroll clerks are responsible for figuring out how much employees should get paid by adding up all their overtime, deducting enough to cover tax and national insurance payments, and taking into account things like holiday, sick pay and expenses.

 

  
Fast track your career now and apply for a Finance and Accounting Apprenticeship!