Marks & Spencer, that venerable bastion of British retail, has just thrown a lifeline to a generation drifting in the gig economy’s shallows. The company’s announcement of a 1,000-place traineeship programme is more than a PR move. It is a deliberate, bricks-and-mortar counterweight to the creeping precarity of our digital-first labour market.
Let me be clear about what we are not seeing. This is not another corporate diversity quota tick-box. It is a recognition that the high street still has a role to play in social mobility. In an age where every retail transaction is being optimised by algorithms and automated checkout systems, M&S is betting on human capital. They are offering paid work experience, mentoring and a guaranteed interview for young people aged 16-24 who are not in education, employment or training (NEET).
The programme's ambition is modest by Silicon Valley standards. One thousand places against the 760,000 young people classified as NEET in the UK. But scale is not the only metric. What matters is the signal it sends. At a time when the dominant narrative is that the future belongs to coders, data scientists and AI ethicists, M&S is saying there is still value in learning how to manage a supply chain, understand customer service, and run a shop floor. These are the tacit skills that no large language model can replicate.
I have to call out the irony here. The tech industry, my own ecosystem, has spent two decades romanticising disruption and the death of the high street. We built platforms that automated away jobs and centralised wealth in a few coastal hubs. Meanwhile, companies like M&S are left to clean up the social fallout. This traineeship is a rebuke to the idea that all solutions must be delivered through an app.
Of course, we need to look at this with clear eyes. A traineeship is not a career. It is a bridge. The real work lies in ensuring these young people do not end up back in the precariat after six months. M&S has promised to connect trainees with further opportunities, including apprenticeships and full-time roles. That is the crucial upgrade. We have seen too many schemes that are little more than workplace tourism.
The tech sector should take notes. For all our talk of ethical AI and responsible innovation, we have done a poor job of creating accessible on-ramps for the majority of young people. Our obsession with four-year degrees and GitHub portfolios creates a filter bubble that excludes precisely the demographics M&S is targeting. Perhaps the future of work is not purely digital. Perhaps it is a hybrid model where physical retail, with its emphasis on interpersonal skills and logistics, becomes a training ground for a more resilient workforce.
The company is also addressing the digital divide implicitly. These trainees will not just be stacking shelves. They will be learning to use the inventory management systems, the customer relationship databases, the omnichannel retail platforms that are now standard. It is a pragmatic digital literacy programme wrapped in a job opportunity.
But I worry about the long-term. What happens when M&S inevitably automates more of its operations? The retail sector is already experimenting with autonomous checkout and AI-driven demand forecasting. The company must be transparent with these trainees about the trajectory of the industry. Otherwise, we risk training them for jobs that will be partially automated within a decade. The ethical obligation here is to prepare them for constant adaptation, not a static career.
This traineeship is a small step. But it is a step in the right direction. It recognises that the user experience of society is not just about seamless digital interfaces. It is about giving every young person a sense of agency, a chance to build a future in a world that often feels engineered to leave them behind. M&S is betting on human potential. That is a bet worth taking.
Let us hope other high street names follow. And let us hope the tech industry pays attention. The algorithm can optimise a supply chain. It cannot replace the dignity of a paid opportunity.








